| Literature DB >> 35080755 |
Ella Robinson1, Rachel Carey2, Anita Foerster3, Gary Sacks4.
Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: The aim of this paper is to summarise current trends and new developments with regard to institutional investor actions related to nutrition and obesity prevention. RECENTEntities:
Keywords: Nutrition; Obesity prevention; Responsible investment; Sustainable finance
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35080755 PMCID: PMC8942889 DOI: 10.1007/s13668-021-00389-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Nutr Rep ISSN: 2161-3311
Fig. 1Summary of responsible investment strategies and definitions
Non-governmental Environmental Social Governance (ESG) reporting standards and frameworks that include relevant ‘social’ or nutrition-related topics1
GRI Standards [ | The GRI Standards are one of the most prominent and commonly used sustainability reporting frameworks, providing standards for companies to report on environmental, social and economic impacts. The GRI Standards include a set of universal standards and topic-specific standards that are selected by the company based on materiality | Any organization | Companies, investors, policymakers, capital markets and civil society | GRI 401–419 includes 19 ‘social’ topic specific reporting standards. Standards that may be relevant to nutrition include: • GRI 414: supplier social assessment • GRI 415: public policy • GRI 417: marketing and labelling | |
| G4 Sector Disclosures (superseded by GRI Standards) [ | The GRI previously developed the G4 Sector Disclosures, which provided sector-specific reporting guidelines. The G4 Sector Disclosures were superseded by the GRI Standards and are not required for preparing a report in accordance with the GRI Standards, however can still be used to provide additional sector-specific guidancea | Airport operators, construction and real estate, electric utilities, event organizers, financial services, | Companies, investors, policymakers, capital markets and civil society | Relevant topics under the • o Public policy o Healthy and affordable food • o Customer health and safety o Product and service labelling o Marketing communications | |
| The Sustainability Accounting Standards Board (SASB) provides sustainability accounting standards for companies to disclose financially material environmental, social and governance information to investors. Includes qualitative and quantitative metrics to measure performance across ESG topics | Consumer goods, extractives and minerals processing, financials, | Investors | Relevant topics for • o Meal options/children’s meal options consistent with national dietary guidelines o Advertising impressions made on children o Promotion of products that meet dietary guidelines for children Relevant topics for • o Revenue from low/no calorie beverages o Revenue from products labelled and/or marketed to promote health and nutrition o Process to identify and manage products/ingredients related to nutritional and health concerns • o Advertising impressions made on children o Non-compliance with labelling and marketing codes o Monetary losses (due to legal proceedings) associated with labelling and/or marketing practices o Revenue from products labelled as genetically modified organisms (GMO)/non-GMO Relevant topics for • o Revenue from products labelled and/or marketed to promote health and nutrition o Process to identify and manage products/ingredients related to nutritional and health concerns • o Non-compliance with labelling and marketing codes o Monetary losses (due to legal proceedings) associated with labelling and/or marketing practices o Revenue from products labelled as genetically modified organisms (GMO)/non-GMO | ||
| Business reporting on the SDGs is an initiative aimed at companies that leverages the GRI Standards and the Ten Principles of the UN Global Compact to embed the SDGs within existing business and reporting processes. The initiative publishes guidelines for companies to integrate SDGs within corporate reporting | All businesses, regardless of size, sector or operating location | Shareholders and other stakeholders: governments, civil society, consumers and academia | • Respecting access to safe and nutritious food • Recognizing businesses’ own influence on hunger and people’s access to food • Educating the public on the principles of nutrition • Improving the availability of nutritious food • Recognizing businesses’ significant influence on people’s diets and access to food • Providing food that contributes to a healthy and balanced diet • Pricing nutritious food options fairly to enable people to afford it considering their purchasing power • Providing sufficient information about products, including nutrition information • Raising the awareness of employees on health issues • Encouraging healthy lifestyles • Providing decent working conditions, such as access to affordable nutritious food for mothers in the workplace • Combatting disease and malnutrition by providing adequate nutritious foods and clean drinking-water • Supporting access to preventative health care • Taking responsibility to protect consumers and end-users from any potentially negative health impacts from ingredients, products, services and marketing activities • Supporting governmental efforts to reduce non-communicable diseases | ||
| The CDSP offers a framework for corporate reporting of environmental information in | Organisations, including single companies or entities and corporate groups | Investors | The CDSP is working to expand the scope of its reporting framework to include financially material | ||
| The purpose of the < IR > Framework is to establish principles and elements of an integrated report.An integrated report is a concise communication about how an organization’s strategy, governance, performance and prospects, lead to the creation, preservation or erosion of value over the short, medium and long term | Private sector, for-profit companies of any size. Can also be applied, adapted as necessary, by public sector and not-for-profit organizations | Providers of financial capital | The IR Framework defines various forms of capital (resources and relationships used and affected by the organization), including financial, manufactured, intellectual, human, |
1ESG reporting standards and frameworks that only include topics related to environment/climate change are not included in this table. The most prominent of these are the Taskforce on Climate related Financial Disclosures (TCFD) and the Climate Disclosure Project (CDP). Only nutrition and nutrition-related non-communicable disease relevant business actions/opportunities were extracted and reported. Table 1 includes a summarized version, a full list of nutrition-related business actions/opportunities can be found in Table S1.
aThe GRI is working on new ‘Sector Standards’ which will describe a sector’s most significant impacts from a sustainable development perspective. As at 2021, standards have been developed for the ‘Oil and Gas Sector’ and ‘Agriculture, Aquaculture and Fishing Sector’.
bIn November 2020, the International Integrated Reporting Council (IIRC) and the Sustainability Accounting Standards Board (SASB) announced their intention to merge into the Value Reporting Foundation, which was officially formed in June 2021. The SASB Standards are now maintained under the auspices of the Value Reporting Foundation.
cFood and beverage includes 8 industries: food retailers and distributers, meat, poultry and dairy, alcoholic beverages, non-alcoholic beverages, processed foods, restaurants, tobacco and agricultural products.
Food industry benchmarking and accountability initiatives that include nutrition as a key focus area
| Food and beverage manufacturers | Global indices; spotlight indices in India, the USA | Labelling, marketing, governance, accessibility, lifestyles, engagement; product profile assessment; breast milk substitutes and complimentary foods | ATNI benchmarks major global food and beverage manufacturers on their nutrition and undernutrition related policies and practices and assesses the healthiness of their product portfolios. ATNI also conducts in country assessment of food company breast milk substitute (BMS) and complimentary foods (CF) marketing practices and policies. The results of the BMS assessment are also used by the FTSE4Good Index* The ATNI publishes its flagship global index every 2–3 years, the most recent being 2021 [ | |
| Food retailers | UK | Governance, nutrient profiling, product formulation, in-store promotion, responsible marketing, labelling, engagement, infant and young child nutrition | ShareAction, a UK-based charity, leads a Healthy Markets Initiative aimed at leveraging institutional investment to improve the obesity and nutrition-related performance of food retailers and manufacturers in the UK [ | |
| Agricultural inputs, agricultural products and commodities, animal proteins, food and beverage manufacturers/processors, food retailers, restaurants and food service | Global | Social inclusion, governance and strategy, environment, nutrition | WBA (a non-profit organisation that assesses influential companies on their contribution to the SDGs) has developed the Food and Agricultural Benchmark to assess 350 of the world’s largest food and agricultural companies on their commitments across three key domains of food systems: environment, social inclusion and nutrition [ | |
| Supermarkets, quick service restaurants, contract caterers and food service, casual dining and restaurants and wholesalers | UK | Nutritious products and services, encouraging healthy diets, climate change, biodiversity, sustainable food production, water, food waste and loss, plastics, animal welfare and antibiotics, human rights | Plating Up Progress is an initiative by the Food Foundation, a registered charity in the UK, to assess and measure food industry performance across 10 major topics related to healthy, sustainable and just food systems. The intended end users are investors, businesses and governments. In 2020 and 2021, Plating Up Progress assessed the commitments, targets and performance reporting of major UK supermarkets and caterers, quick service and casual dining restaurant chains [ | |
| Food retailers, quick service restaurants, food and beverage manufacturers | Australia, New Zealand, Canada, Malaysia, Thailand, Europe | Product formulation, nutrition labelling, corporate strategy, relationships with external groups, promotion practices, product accessibility | INFORMAS is a global network of public‐interest organisations and researchers that aims to monitor and benchmark food environments, active in more than 60 countries [ |