NGOs' Confrontation Risks

British American Tobacco PLC 28 April 2005 The risks of confrontation in place of co-operation Jan du Plessis, British American Tobacco's new Chairman, has challenged the NGOs who commit their resources to attacking multinational companies - often the very companies working hardest to address their concerns - yet refuse to engage constructively with business for progress. Speaking at his first Annual General Meeting as the company's Chairman, he said of such NGOs: "To those who criticise yet refuse to engage, is your insistence on confrontation rather than co-operation really the best way to achieve your own goals?" And he warned of the real risk that "frequent and sometimes ill-founded attacks on large and committed companies will scare off those companies with limited resources and who fear that they can only lose by embracing CSR. Yet it is often smaller businesses, and local businesses in developing countries, that should focus most on raising standards." Mr du Plessis added: "Some of these criticisms seem to stem from an ideology that big business can rarely, if ever, do any good. Yet as Kofi Annan, the UN Secretary General, said about achieving sustainable development: 'It is only by mobilising the corporate sector that we can make significant progress.' "Alienating business is not the pathway to sustainable development," he said, " and I speak as someone with a fair understanding of - and passionate interest in - the development issues facing Africa." Mr du Plessis said it is right and necessary to tackle the huge problems facing many developing countries: poverty, lack of skills, lack of social infrastructure and lack of opportunity. But this "vast and complex challenge" needs constructive inputs from governments, communities, NGOs, development organisations and business. He championed the real contributions of multinational businesses to local development goals. "The presence of multinationals in developing nations is helping governments to build on all three pillars of sustainable development - economic, social and environmental. A lasting way to address poverty is by steadily creating employment, economic security and self-sufficiency. Ultimately, only economic growth can provide the means to pay for environmental improvements and social progress." "It is frequently multinational companies," he added, "that introduce skills, training and international standards, for example in labour practices, reducing environmental impacts, improving workplace safety and providing community support." His remarks came as Friends of the Earth, Action on Smoking and Health and Christian Aid - amongst the NGOs most reluctant to engage in dialogue with business - criticised the Group's commitment to CSR. All three NGOs frequently attack multinational companies' corporate responsibility work as 'greenwash'. Mr du Plessis thanked the NGOs who do come to dialogue and work alongside Group companies in projects on the ground. The key point, he said, is that few companies seeking to embrace today's changing ideas of corporate responsibility can do so without constructive engagement, dialogue and partnerships. He added that he found it ironic that companies embracing CSR are not only criticised by some NGOs, but by serious business commentators who argue that companies' only proper goal is the honest and legal pursuit of profit. The case had been strongly put that business achieves far more for society by being left to pursue enlightened commercial self interest than by attempting to embrace any other ways of serving society. "Getting CSR right is not easy," said Mr du Plessis, "especially for businesses like ours in controversial sectors. However, criticisms will not deter us. Our door is open, including to our critics. We genuinely want to listen and find solutions. Like any large organisation, I am sure we deserve criticism from time to time. We take well-founded rebukes seriously and work to put right things that really are wrong, and where we have a mandate to do so." "There may be some anti-business campaigners whose agenda is not served by business acting responsibly," he said. "But I cannot believe that this is what those who really seek progress actually want." ENQUIRIES David Betteridge, Teresa La Thangue, Emily Brand British American Tobacco Press Office +44 (0) 20 7845 2888 (24 hours) Notes to editors: • British American Tobacco p.l.c. will publish its fourth Social Report in July. • The Group's approach to accountability and responsibility continues to be endorsed by independent external bodies: British American Tobacco is the only tobacco business included in the Dow Jones Sustainability Indices. The UK's Business in the Community has ranked the Group amongst the ' Top Companies That Count' in its most recent Corporate Responsibility Index. The United Nations Environment Programme and the SustainAbility organisation last year ranked the Group fourth best in the world in non-financial reporting. • British American Tobacco is the world's most international tobacco group. It does business in over 180 markets, employs over 90,000 people and works with some 250,000 supplier farmers worldwide. In 2004, the Group had a global volume of 853 billion cigarettes and its business enabled governments worldwide to gather over £22 billion a year in taxes, some 15 times the Group's profit after tax. • Through its Business Principles, Mutual Benefit, Responsible Product Stewardship and Good Corporate Conduct, British American Tobacco is committed to defining and living by principles of corporate responsibility for a controversial industry. This information is provided by RNS The company news service from the London Stock Exchange
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