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Forced labor
To PepsiCo:
As one of the world's leading convenient food and beverage companies, we aspire to do our part to help prevent and eradicate forced labor and aim to positively impact the communities we serve. Recognizing the scale of our supply chain and the inherent complexities involved in global agricultural supply chains, we continue to take steps to mitigate potential human rights impacts on workers within our business and supply chain.
To the World:
Modern slavery remains one of the most severe global human rights challenges facing society and occurs across every region of the world. The International Labor Organization currently estimates that nearly 50 million people are victims of modern slavery worldwide, including nearly 28 million people trapped in forced labor.1 Of the forced labor victims, over 17 million are exploited through forced labor in the private sector.1
Approach
We prohibit the use of all forms of forced labor, including involuntary prison labor, indentured labor, bonded labor, military labor, slave labor and any form of human trafficking. No employee may be coerced to work or subjected to physical punishment or threats of violence or other forms of physical, sexual, psychological or verbal abuse as a method of discipline or control. All workers must have freedom of movement, and the conditions of employment must not restrict their movement through the retention of identity papers, holding of deposits, accommodation requirements or any other action aimed at restricting worker mobility. Furthermore, in line with the Employer Pays Principle, no worker should be required to pay recruitment or other similar fees to secure or retain their employment. These standards are embedded in our Global Human Rights Policy and Global Supplier Code of Conduct (SCoC), which outline the expectations for our employees and suppliers.
We conduct ongoing due diligence on our business operations and business-critical, direct suppliers to help assess, identify and address potential human rights impacts within our operations and supply chain. Please see our Human rights page for more information on this process.
Progress
In 2023, we launched a dedicated Combating Modern Slavery training to nearly 2,000 PepsiCo employees across key global functions aimed to help build capacity and provide targeted guidance on how to proactively identify and mitigate modern slavery risk. We also launched intermediate and advanced in-person and virtual trainings on the same topic tailored to key functional groups and sector teams.
Progress
In 2023, we launched a Combating Modern Slavery training, co-sponsored the Ganapati Project to improve responsible recruitment practices and co-sponsored the U.S. Forced Labor and Child Labor Initiative.
Challenges
Modern slavery occurs across every region of the world and can materialize in any global supply chain. Different segments of supply chains, types of raw materials and geographies require unique approaches and navigating complex systems.
We aim to drive responsible recruitment practice in our supply chain by engaging with multi-stakeholder groups and collaborative initiatives. In 2023, we deployed targeted training to our business-critical suppliers on priority topics, such as forced labor and ethical recruitment, and continued to provide open-access online training to help our suppliers better understand our SCoC principles. We deployed responsible recruitment training to our business-critical suppliers located in high-risk countries to clarify our policies, expectations and supplier obligations. Based on the insights and feedback gathered from these sessions, we will continue to focus on building suppliers’ capabilities and management systems to proactively address forced labor and child labor risks. For more on our efforts to support human rights standards in our operations and supply chain see Human rights and Sustainable sourcing.
Through our due diligence process, we continue to assess potential human rights impacts in our supply chain and integrate the learnings and insights into our internal processes. In 2023, we conducted a review of our global human rights due diligence process, which led to the implementation of actions to reinforce our risk-based approach, strengthen our management systems and enhance our assessment methodology.
Insights from country and commodity risk assessments and our due diligence programs have been used to identify our target supply chain segments, raw materials and priority geographies, such as Southeast Asia and Latin America. In recent years, we have continued to expand our due diligence programs to cover these areas of our supply chain; to strengthen our ongoing sustainable sourcing initiatives for palm oil and cane sugar; and to deepen our engagement in regional and local collaborative initiatives to address systemic forced labor challenges at a country-level.
Additional detail on our progress on our journey aspiring to eliminate forced labor in our supply chain can be found in our annual Modern Slavery and Human Trafficking Statement.
Strategic partnerships
We regularly engage in a variety of multi-stakeholder groups and collaborative initiatives to enhance our knowledge of specific issues, drive industry-wide progress and help address systemic challenges. In 2023, initiatives included:
- Co-sponsoring the Ganapati Project with several other AIM-Progress member companies to improve the implementation of responsible recruitment standards and practices by suppliers in Thailand and Malaysia through in-person training and in-depth coaching.
- Co-sponsoring the Tackling Forced Labor and Child Labor Initiative with several other AIM-Progress member companies to strengthen the capability of our co-manufacturers, co-packers, suppliers, labor providers and service providers to adhere to applicable labor laws, recruit labor responsibly and minimize risks of forced- and child labor in the United States.
- Implementing forced labor-focused due diligence systems in our own operations and supply chains as a member of the Consumer Goods Forum Human Rights Coalition of Action.
What's next?
We plan to continue to strengthen our policies and commitments and evolve our programs as we continuously strive to ensure forced labor is not used in our supply chain. To this end, we will:
- Continue ongoing stakeholder engagement and industry collaboration efforts through Consumer Goods Forum and AIM-Progress to develop industry guidance on key issues such as responsible recruitment and fee payment.
- Publish our revised Global Supplier Code of Conduct and Supplier Training to provide additional clarity and guidance on our expectations.
- Update our supplier risk segmentation analysis to determine if other supply chain segments, raw materials and sourcing geographies should be re-prioritized due to the evolving external landscape.
- Advance action plans to mitigate our salient human rights issues, thereby deepening our engagement across key business models and supply chain segments.
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Last updated
October 9, 2024