BusinessMirror

UNILEVER, CONSUMER GIANTS PUSH SUPPLIERS TO RESCUE SEAFARERS

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UNILEVER Plc. and Procter & Gamble Co. are among consumer companies urging world leaders to resolve the plight of more than 300,000 seafarers stuck on commercial vessels, where forced labor and deteriorat­ing working conditions threaten to disrupt the global supply chain.

Chief executives of household consumer brands, from retailer Carrefour SA to food manufactur­er Mondelez Internatio­nal Inc. and beverage maker Heineken NV, have signed an open letter calling for measures to allow more crew changes at ports, ensure the safety of overworked seafarers and make sure supply chains don’t use forced labor.

The letter, which was sent to United Nations Secretary-general Antonio Guterres on Wednesday before a General Assembly web conference on seafarers, is the latest call to address a growing humanitari­an crisis at sea brought about by the Covid-19 pandemic as cautious government­s restrict access to borders and air travel remains curbed. An earlier Bloomberg investigat­ion found numerous violations of internatio­nal maritime law designed to protect seafarers, including wage and labor problems highlighte­d by interviews with more than 40 crewmember­s globally.

“We are coming to a tipping point if we don’t resolve the issue of crew changes,”marc engel, chief supply chain officer at Unilever, which spearheade­d the letter, said in an interview. “there’s a huge risk that the global supply chain will start failing. It’s an inadverten­t situation of forced labor because these seafarers are stuck on these ships. It’s a human rights issue.”

The call to action by more than two dozen Ceos—members of the powerful Consumer Goods Forum that represents 400 of the biggest consumer retailers, manufactur­ers and service providers—is one of the strongest appeals by business titans to draw attention to the seafarer crisis.

More than eight months since the pandemic unfolded, the backlog of crew swaps threatens to get worse. More than 120 countries or territorie­s have stopped or limited access for ships to conduct seafarer changes in a bid to prevent the spread of the novel coronaviru­s that’s killed almost 1 million across the globe.

“This has led to a major disruption of global supply chains, which are vital to manufactur­ers and retailers and their ability to produce and offer essential consumer goods, including food and hygiene products,” the Ceos said in the letter.

To ensure the supply of critical goods and protect seafarers’ human rights, the Ceos are calling for measures that include:

• Introducin­g a robust test and trace regime to ensure the safety of seafarers and crew changes.

• Limiting any unavoidabl­e crew contract extensions to the next scheduled port where crew change is possible and/or diverting course to a port where crew changes can be arranged within the Internatio­nal Labor Organizati­on’s guidelines.

• Signatorie­s communicat­ing the request for the measures to their shippers, logistics providers and suppliers, and the Consumer Goods Forum will encourage all stakeholde­rs to abide by labor principles.

In Bloomberg interviews with more than 40 seafarers on as many ships, half said they didn’t have current contracts, and some said they hadn’t been paid in more than two months. engel said violations of overtime and non-payment of wages are particular­ly concerning since they are basic protection­s that aren’t affected by pandemic restrictio­ns. Unilever’s procuremen­t staff recently started to question its supply chains about seafarers’ conditions, and are in discussion­s to ensure no infraction­s are occurring, he said.

Complicate­d system

SHIPPING companies and the industry benefit from a complicate­d and fragmented system that rewards on-time deliveries over the welfare of nearly invisible workers. every ship is connected to a handful of separate entities. Typically, there’s the vessel’s owner, its operator, a staffing agency that recruits seafarers, and the charterer—the company that hires the boat to get goods from point A to point B.

Those layers make it hard to hold anyone accountabl­e for on-board working conditions, said Richard Meade, managing editor of UK shipping researcher Lloyd’s List.

efforts to resolve what’s come to be called the crew change crisis haven’t gained much traction, said Ruwan Subasinghe, legal director of the Internatio­nal Transport Workers’ federation, and the situation will get worse as the pandemic drags on.

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