Virtual Seminar · 2 There are three ways to ask questions during the virtual seminar: 1. Ask a...
Transcript of Virtual Seminar · 2 There are three ways to ask questions during the virtual seminar: 1. Ask a...
Virtual Seminarof the German Initiative on Sustainable Cocoa (GISCO)
Efforts and Ambitions to Eliminate Child Labor
in the Cocoa Supply Chain
2
There are three ways to ask questions during the virtual seminar:
1. Ask a question in writing via the chat.
2. Write the word "question" in the chat or lift your hand by
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3. Participants who are connected via telephone can ask questions
by e-mail to [email protected], which will then be read
out loud by the moderator.2
All participants are muted.
TECHNICAL NOTES
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Speakers
Efforts and Ambitions to Eliminate Child Labor
in the Cocoa Supply Chain
Speaker:
Manuel Schuh,
Public Affairs
Specialist Nestlé Deutschland AG4
Speaker:
Nick Weatherill,
Executive Director
International Cocoa
Initiative (ICI)
Moderation:
Beate Weiskopf
Executive Secretary GISCO
1. Welcome and IntroductionBeate Weiskopf, Executive Secretary GISCO
2. ICI Strategy for 2021-26 and the new Public-Private Partnerships to Eliminate Child LaborNick Weatherill, Executive Director International Cocoa Initiative (ICI)
3. Q&A-SESSION
4. Implementation of the Child Labor Monitoring and Remediation System (CLMRS) on the ground Manuel Schuh, Public Affairs Specialist Nestlé Deutschland AG
5. Q&A-SESSION
6. Wrap-up and Closing Beate Weiskopf, Executive Secretary GISCO
AGENDA
5
6 GISCO Background paper on child labour in the West African cocoa sector
Child labor (See ILO Convention No. 138)
Work that is mentally, physically, socially or morally dangerous and harmful to childrenand interferes with their schooling.
Worst forms of child labor (See ILO Convention No. 182, Article 3)
• All forms of slavery or practices similar to slavery• The use, procuring or offering of a child for prostitution, the production of
pornography or illicit activities such as ttrafficking of drugs• Work which, by its nature or the circumstances in which it is carried out, is likely to
harm the health, safety or morals of children – corresponding to hazardous childlabor
Definition of child labor
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Child Labor in Agriculture:
GISCO Background paper on child labour in the West African cocoa sector
Child Labor in the West African Cocoa
Sector:
Prevalence of child labor in the cocoa sector
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Tackling the root cause of child labor
Country Actual Income* World Bank Poverty Line
Living Income Benchmark**
Ghana 0.92 / day 1.90 / day 2.55 / day
Côte d‘Ivoire 1.04 / day 1.90 / day 2.17 / day
Lack ofeducation
Poverty
Gender disempowerment
Socio-cultural factors
*KIT 2018. Demystifying the Cocoa Sector in Côte d‘Ivoire and Ghana
**KIT 2018. Analysis of the Income Gap of Cocoa Producing Households in Côte d‘Ivoire and Ghana
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The members of the German Initiative on Sustainable Cocoa advocate for….
GISCO Specific Goal GISCO indicators
Specific goal 6
„…the abolition of worst forms of child labor in cocoa
production.“
By the end of 2025, 100 % of reached communities in GISCO
member projects/programs are covered by a strategy or system
for the prevention, control, monitoring and remediation of the
worst forms of child labor.
Specific goal 8
„…enforcing compliance with human rights (implementation of
the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights) and
environmental aspects by all actors in the cocoa supply chain
and contributing to the discussion on possible regulatory
measures at EU level. “
By the end of 2025 all GISCO members implement human
rights and environmental due diligence.
Specific goal 1
„…improved farm-gate prices, minimum price and premium
systems as well as other income-generating measures as
contributions to a living income(1) of cocoa farming
households.“
1. From 2020 onwards, GISCO members report on the price
sustainability premiums/ton paid by them to their suppliers
and/or farmers for the cocoa purchased/processed
2. By 2025, at least 80 % of reached farmers in relevant GISCO
member projects/programs** have increased**** their net
household income*** by at least 35 % (Baseline KIT, 2017)
TOWARDS SECTOR-WIDE IMPACTIntroducing ICI’s 2021-2026 Strategy
Nick Weatherill – ICI Executive Director
GISCO Virtual Seminar October 1st 2020
THE INTERNATIONAL COCOA INITIATIVE
Advisor
Advisor
Media
Consumers
Certifiers
Other Sector Industries
Cocoa Industry
Development Actors & Donors
Cocoa-Producing Governments
Farmers’ Associations & Cooperatives
FarmingCommunities
Civil Society
Academia
Unions
GAWU
DIVERSITY OF SKILLS & EXPERTISE
COLLECTIVE LEARNING & DEFINITION OF GOOD
PRACTICES
DIALOGUE & COLLABORATION
INDEPENDENCE & CREDIBILITY
INFLUENCE
SHARED RESPONSIBILITY
SECTOR-WIDE CHANGE
ICI Board10 companies / industry reps
8 civil-society organisations / experts
ICI
Advisor
PROGRESS TO-DATE2015-2020
• 380,000+ children positively impacted since 2015 through ICI’s direct operational work and projects with our partners.
• ICI’s influencing impact to be evaluated by year-end.
• Our work shows positive results in reducing child labour:
• Child labour can be reduced by up to 20% over 3 years through child-centered community development.
• Child Labour Monitoring and Remediation Systems (CLMRS) can reduce child labour by 50% amongst identified children.
• ICI estimates that effective, industry-backed child protection systems cover only 10-20% of the cocoa supply chain (in CDI and Ghana) as at end-2020.
Scale-Up Imperative
OUR NEW VISION AND MISSION
THRIVINGCOCOA COMMUNITIESICI’S VISION FOR CHANGE
OUR NEW GOALS
By 2025……
OUR NEW STRATEGIC OBJECTIVES AND CORE CATALYTIC FUNCTIONS
LEARNING & INNOVATION
TECHNICAL ADVOCACY
CAPACITY & SYSTEM STRENGTHENING
OUR EXPECTED COVERAGE AND IMPACT
ESTIMATING ICI’S 2025 IMPACT ON CHILD LABOUR
Estimated potential impact of
ICI’s Direct Action:
Up to 210,000 children
could be supported out of child labour.
Up to42,500 children
could be less exposed to hazardous work.
Total estimated potential impact of
ICI’s Action & Influencing:
Up to 850,000 children
could be supported out of child labour.
Up to170,000 children
could be less exposed to hazardous work.
Estimated potential impact of
ICI’s Influencing work:
Up to 637,500 children
could be supported out of child labour.
Up to 127,500 children
could be less exposed to hazardous work.
+REDUCED CHILD LABOUR FOR UP
TO 1 MILLION CHILDREN
SO WHAT’S DIFFERENT?
• BUILDING ON PROVEN RESULTS
• MORE IMPACT• 100% system coverage (CDI + GH)• New geographies (WA)• 1.7 million children at-risk of child labour• Scaling through systems strengthening (community, local, supply-chain, national,
international) • Addressing barriers to scale (knowledge, alignment, motivation, capability,
accountability)
• EXPANDING HUMAN RIGHTS DUE DILIGENCE• Working at the nexus of the SDGs and UNGPs
• FULL INTEGRATION OF FORCED LABOUR
• ICI AS CATALYST
• FOCUS ON RESULTS• Prevalence and severity metrics• Root-causes and risk indicators
• DRIVING ACCOUNTABILITY• Data disaggregation for ICI actions, ICI members actions and sector-wide outcomes
• ENABLING PARTNERSHIPS
NEW PUBLIC-PRIVATE PARTNERSHIPS
Ongoing
Next step 1
Next step 2
Next step 3
April – Dec 2019
Jan 2020
Jan 2020 - now
▪ Extensive background assessments, scoping discussions, co-creation workshops (govts, industry, UNICEF, ILO, ICI).
▪ Agreement on CDI and GH Statements of Intent.➢ commitment to partnership development➢ focus areas under 4 pillars (poverty, child protection,
quality education, child survival)➢ principles of collaboration (holistic focus on root-causes,
government leadership, coherence with National Action Plans, systems approach, upfront financial commitments)
• Regular meetings of National Steering Committees.• Appointment of UNICEF consultants to facilitate
needs & gap analysis.• Establishment and regular convening of 4 thematic
Technical Working Groups (govt ministries, industry, UNICEF, ILO, ICI, NGOs, donors) to finalize Needs Assessment identifying priority actions and financing requirements (nearing completion).
▪ In CDI only, interim bi-lateral discussions between industry and govt on priority, early commitments (incl. LID, scaling CP systems, CLEF/ELAN).
▪ Finalisation of Needs Assessments and Comprehensive Frameworks for Action.
▪ Partner engagement and donor mobilization.
▪ Establishment of Governance structure.
▪ Definition of M&E, Reporting & Accountabilitymodalities.
Ongoing PPP development process (CDI & GH)
© 2020 International Cocoa Initiative (ICI). All Rights Reserved.
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QUESTION & ANSWER
There are three ways to ask questions during the virtual seminar:
1. Ask a question in writing via the chat.
2. Write the word "question" in the chat or lift your hand by clicking on the
hand symbol. The moderator will then unmute you so that you can ask the
question verbally.
3. Participants who are connected via telephone can ask questions by e-mail to
[email protected], which will then be read out loud by the
moderator.
All participants are muted.
Nestlé Cocoa Plan & Child Labor Monitoring and Remediation System
October 2020
Agenda
The issues
How we tackle them
CLMRS in more detail
Smallholder farming system with human and environmental issues…
Living IncomeChild LabourDeforestation
• Not enough income for a decent living
Due to
• Low cocoa productivity
• Poor agricultural practices and aging trees
• Insufficient income from other sources
• Farming costs
• Commodity prices
• Families resort to using their children to work on the farm
Due to
• Limited education facilities
• Malnutrition
• Insufficient water and health provision
• Lack of adult labour
• Use of family labour
• Protected forests are cut
Due to
• Soil depletion – extending to new areas
• Migration
• Lack of enforcement
• Logging
BETTER FARMINGEnabling farmers to run profitable farms by:
• Farmer training to improve farming practices
• Better quality plants to improve yield and disease resistance
• Respecting the environment to avoid deforestation
BETTER LIVESImproving social conditions by:
• Tackling child labour through transparency and monitoring to help elimination
• Promoting gender equality to improve household revenues
• Improving water and sanitation provision
BETTER COCOASustainable good quality cocoa by:
• Building long term loyal customer - farmer
Group relationships
• Supply chain traceability to the farmer
• Rewarding NCP farmers for certification and good quality.
Collaboration, Transparency and Public Reporting Working with WCF, CocoaAction, independent partners e.g. Fair Labor Association, ICI, Rainforest Alliance, IDH, GIZ, local NGO’s and research organisations
OUR VISION Building a brighter future for cocoa farmers, producing great quality cocoa
OUR MISSION Better Farming, Better Lives, Better Cocoa, Every day
Collaboration and transparency in practice
No Deforestation
CFI collaborative work – eg satelliteCavally Forest Landscape
Child Labour Living Income
Collaborative actions in landscape
CFI work in our supply chain –mapping farmers, forest and fruit trees etc
CLMRS, inc remediation such as bridge schools etc
ICI, ILO child labour platformCLEF, Children First
Roundtables (Belgium, NL, CH, DE)KIT
Productivity – trees, pruning etcExtending the eliteHousehold income accelerator
Nestlé actions in our supply chain
Reporting impact future report
First to implement CLMRS in cocoa
2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020
FLA report
Start CLMRS
CLMRS rolled out to all coops
First Tackling child labour report
Second Tackling child labour report
Functioning of the CLMRS
39
Findings & Evidence
Remediation activities
Reach & Impact of the System
2 October, 202042
Alignment with UN Guiding Principles
43
Th
an
k y
ou
4545
QUESTION & ANSWER
There are three ways to ask questions during the virtual seminar:
1. Ask a question in writing via the chat.
2. Write the word "question" in the chat or lift your hand by clicking on the
hand symbol. The moderator will then unmute you so that you can ask the
question verbally.
3. Participants who are connected via telephone can ask questions by e-mail to
[email protected], which will then be read out loud by the
moderator.
All participants are muted.