Three listed Chinese firms used endangered animal parts as ingredients-
report
Send a link to a friend
[October 23, 2023]
By Andrew Silver and Selena Li
SHANGHAI/HONG KONG (Reuters) - Three publicly traded Chinese drugmakers
which count global banks such as UBS and HSBC as investors have used
parts of endangered animals as ingredients in their products, an
environmental group said.
In a report published Monday, the London-based Environmental
Investigation Agency urged global investors in the three firms - Beijing
Tong Ren Tang group, Tianjin Pharmaceutical group and Jilin Aodong
Pharmaceutical Group - to divest their stakes.
The three companies are among a list of 72 firms the environmental
non-profit organization (NGO) said used body parts of threatened
leopards and pangolins as ingredients in at least 88 traditional Chinese
medicine (TCM) products.
The group said it focused on the pharmaceutical companies because they
are publicly listed, and display products that include leopard or
pangolin parts on their websites.
TCM products are known for using a wide variety of animal parts as
ingredients, and manufacturers often publicly tout the efficacy of such
ingredients and list them in on their product packages.
"It’s particularly disappointing to see so many major banks and
financial institutions effectively endorsing this damaging
exploitation," said Avinash Basker, a legal and policy specialist for
the NGO, in a media release.
"They need to divest from TCM manufacturers using threatened species at
the soonest opportunity."
Beijing Tong Ren Tang and Tianjin Pharmaceutical group did not respond
to several emails and calls from Reuters asking for comment. Jilin
Aodong Pharmaceutical Group could not be reached for comment.
[to top of second column]
|
A rescued pangolin bought off a wildlife seller is seen resting at
the Green Finger Garden in Lagos, Nigeria July 29, 2020. REUTERS/Seun
Sanni
The NGO said 62 financial
institutions have invested an unspecified amount in at least one of
the three firms, and include UBS, Deutsche Bank, HSBC Holdings,
Citigroup and BlackRock.
Some investors, including Wells Fargo & Co said they had either sold
the funds which were invested in the TCM firms or had sold their
shares in the companies, the agency said.
HSBC Global Asset Management Canada and Royal Bank of Canada told
the agency their investments in the companies were limited to
passive or tracker funds, while UBS told the agency its
shareholdings were held on behalf of clients.
The environmental group said Deutsche Bank, HSBC Holdings, Citigroup
and BlackRock did not respond to its queries.
Citigroup,Deutsche Bank, BlackRock declined to comment when asked by
Reuters.
The activist group urged the Chinese government to prohibit the use
of parts of endangered animals for all commercial purposes in its
domestic markets.
China's National Medical Products Administration did not respond to
a Reuters' request for comment.
China's amended Wildlife Protection law, which came into effect in
May, bans trade in most wild animals for consumption as food, but
permissions for breeding and utilisation can still be issued for
certain circumstances.
(Reporting by Andrew Silver in Shanghai and Selena Li in Hong Kong;
Editing by Miyoung Kim and Miral Fahmy)
[© 2023 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |