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ESRS disclosure: ESRS S2 \ DR S2-1 \ Paragraph 17b
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- Provide a detailed description of your organization's human rights policy commitments concerning value chain workers. Include information on the processes and mechanisms in place to ensure compliance with the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights, the ILO Declaration on Fundamental Principles and Rights at Work, and the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises. Focus specifically on material issues and outline your general approach to engaging with value chain workers.
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Question Id: S2-1_03
GN is committed to ensuring that human rights are safeguarded and that we manage our material sustainability matters related to value chain workers. Our human rights policy commitments cover all value chain workers across all geographies in which we operate to enable identification, assessment, and management, or remediation of our material IROs. GN is committed to the UN’s principles of responsible business, having been a signatory of the UN Global Compact since 2010. Over the last reporting period, we have observed no cases of non-respect to these principles involving value chain workers in our upstream or downstream value chain. To address our human rights policy commitments, GN has introduced a number of initiatives and due diligence processes to ensure we are able to engage with value chain workers or their proxies and representatives to take measures enabling remedy of our negative impacts. Furthermore, we strive to set policy commitments that inform GN’s overall strategy and work in this area, ensuring we take into account the interests, views, and rights of workers in the value chain.
Report Date: 4Q2024Relevance: 85%
- Has the undertaking reported any severe human rights issues and incidents connected to its upstream and downstream value chain? If applicable, disclose the details of these incidents.
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Question Id: S2-4_11
GN conducted 46 supplier audits across China and Southeast Asia in 2024, where major human rights-related findings were connected to occupational health and safety, excessive overtime hours, overuse of dispatched workers, and inadequate parental leave. All major findings have either been resolved or are subject to mandatory corrective action. Through these processes, there have been no major findings related to severe human rights issues and incidents, such as forced or child labor.
Report Date: 4Q2024Relevance: 85%