Orsted
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
To ensure our decisions and activities are informed by the perspectives of value chain workers, we engage proactively with them and their representatives, including trade unions. The outcome of this engagement directly informs our strategies for identifying, assessing, and addressing actual and potential impacts on workers. Through this collaborative process, we work to uphold fair labour practices and to foster safe, dignified, and inclusive work environments across our operations and partnerships.
Report Date: 4Q2024Relevance: 65%
- Provide detailed information regarding the intended or achieved positive outcomes of initiatives or processes for value chain workers. This should include the process for setting targets related to managing material negative impacts, advancing positive impacts, and managing material risks and opportunities. Specify whether and how the undertaking engaged directly with workers in the value chain, their legitimate representatives, or credible proxies with insight into their situation. Additionally, describe the actions taken on material impacts on value chain workers, the approaches to managing material risks and pursuing material opportunities related to these workers, and the effectiveness of those actions. Include any initiatives or processes based on the needs of affected workers and the progress in implementing such initiatives or processes.
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Question Id: S2-4_16
During the year, we have also taken steps to address critical work-related rights impacts, including debt bondage and forced labour. For instance, we are working with industry peers through the Worker Welfare Group, a partnership focused on labour rights and worker welfare requirements within the marine construction sector. The Worker Welfare Group has developed a set of principles and guidelines to support, in the first instance, the Singapore marine construction sector, enabling it to meet international standards for worker rights and worker welfare, particularly focusing on responsible recruitment, improved accommodation, better transport, and improved access to grievance mechanisms. We have engaged with key stakeholders to advocate for systemic improvements and are also working with local organisations to facilitate access to remedy for workers. Going forward, we aim to build on our initial learnings from the Worker Welfare Group and implement the principles for fair treatment of migrant workers throughout 2025. This will further strengthen our dedication to labour rights and worker welfare.
Report Date: 4Q2024Relevance: 85%