UK
group expanding campaign to curb antibiotics in meat production
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[March 22, 2017] By
Lisa Baertlein
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - A shareholder
coalition founded in the U.K. is recruiting investors for a campaign to
convince KFC parent Yum Brands Inc and other food companies to protect
public health and corporate profits by reducing the use of antibiotics
in the meat they serve in the United States and around the world.
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Scientists warn that the routine use of antibiotics to promote
growth and prevent illness in healthy farm animals contributes to
the rise of dangerous infections from antibiotic-resistant bacteria
known as superbugs, which kill at least 23,000 Americans each year
and pose a major threat to global health.
"It's the kind of risk that doesn't discriminate. An illness that is
resistant to antibiotics could happen anywhere, poor or rich,"
Natalie Beinisch, engagement manager at Aegon Asset Management, said
by telephone from the Hague.
Members noted that chains like Chipotle Mexican Grill Inc and
McDonald's USA have used strict antibiotic policies to elevate their
brands.
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"There is the potential for significant opportunity for those food
companies that get the recipe for sustainable food production
right," said Jeremy Coller, founder of the Farm Animal Investment
Risk & Return Initiative (FAIRR) and chief investment officer at
Coller Capital in London.
This year the coalition plans to keep up the pressure on Yum, whose
policy lags those of major chains such as McDonald's Corp, whose
U.S. restaurants last year stopped serving chicken raised with
antibiotics important to human medicine.
The coalition also is pressing large food companies to set clear
timelines for phasing out the routine use of antibiotics in chicken,
pork and beef in all markets where they operate.
ShareAction and the FAIRR Initiative lead the group, whose members
include Aviva Investors, Aegon Asset Management and Green Century
Capital Management. The mostly European and U.S. coalition debuted
last year with 54 investors representing about $1 trillion under
management. It since has added 17 new members and doubled assets
under management.
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A broad campaign to curb antibiotics has been gaining steam in
recent years with help from rising consumer interest, pressure from
doctors and non-profit groups, and meaningful responses from
companies such as McDonald's and Tyson Foods Inc, the world's
second-largest poultry company.
"It's a domino effect. Once suppliers move ... there's no excuse not
to move," said Leslie Samuelrich, president of Boston's Green
Century Capital Management, who spoke at a coalition event for
investors at BlackRock's New York City offices on Monday.
(Reporting by Lisa Baertlein in Los Angeles; Editing by Cynthia
Osterman)
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