Resistance to antibiotics has been flagged as a major risk to public
health and economic growth by policymakers and the investor action
formed part of global efforts to fight back by curtailing their use
in the foodchain.
Since launching its engagement in 2016, the Farm Animal Investment
Risk and Return (FAIRR) coalition said it had engaged with 20
companies worth a combined $280 billion.
The companies were asked to establish a policy to phase out routine,
non-medical use of antibiotics across their supply chains; specify
clear targets and timelines for implementation; and report more
transparently on their activities.
All the companies engaged now had a formal policy in place or were
expected to release one soon, and some were even outpacing the
demands of increasingly tougher local regulations, the report from
FAIRR seen by Reuters showed.
While they recognized the need to limit antibiotics use and were
working to collect data on usage and supplier compliance with their
policies, there remained more to do, it said, with little
transparency on implementation, including poor disclosure around
antibiotics use and auditing practices.
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While formally ending the group engagement, FAIRR said it would
continue to track performance and could restart the group effort if
companies stall on reform. Individual members of the group may also
continue engaging directly with companies.
"FAIRR will be looking at each company's reporting and disclosure on
how they are implementing the policies and commitments they have
made. If we see no progress in terms of implementation that could be
grounds to re-engage formally," Jo Raven, engagement manager at
FAIRR, told Reuters.
"We also want to explore the issue in other ways. For example FAIRR
will be actively looking at the pharmaceutical companies that make
antibiotics for animal feed."
(Reporting by Simon Jessop, editing by Louise Heavens)
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