Reports: Sustainability Actions Report
Introduction
In 2015, the United Nations adopted the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. It has been rightly heralded as a “blueprint to achieve a better and more sustainable future for all”, and at the core are the 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).
The SDGs recognize that “ending poverty and other deprivations must go hand-in-hand with strategies that improve health and education, reduce inequality, and spur economic growth – all while tackling climate change and working to preserve our oceans and forests.” They are an urgent call to action for all stakeholders – from governments and business to NGOs and individuals.
The Animal Health sector – companies that manufacture products to better prevent, diagnose and treat animal disease, such as vaccines, parasiticides, predictive and monitoring tools, diagnostics and antibiotics – is embracing the global push to achieve the SDGs by 2030.
The Members of HealthforAnimals represent approximately 90% of the Animal Health sector. Our ten companies work in nearly every country around the globe, operate international supply chains, employ tens of thousands of people, and touch the lives of over a billion farmers and pet owners.
Simply put – we have the networks, expertise and resources that can help advance the SDGs. Within this publication, you will find 60+ ways that HealthforAnimals Member Companies and Associations have embraced this responsibility. From cutting emissions to delivering nutrition to those in need, we believe these actions make a difference in the lives of people around us.
But, as is often said, the Sustainable Development Goals cannot be achieved by one company or sector nor one country or region. It is only through coordinated, collaborative action that we can provide that ‘better and more sustainable future for all.’
The Animal Health sector is ready to build upon our actions, collaborate with others and be a champion for this global movement. We look forward to working with you in the years to come.
Carel du Marchie Sarvaas
Executive Director
HealthforAnimals
Marc Prikazsky
President, HealthforAnimals
CEO, Ceva Santé Animale
The Animal Health Sector has the networks and tools to help advance the Sustainable Development Goals across three areas. Click on the buttons below to see how we are taking clear, concrete and measure actions in each one.
Environment
Reducing the footprint of our operations and promoting a culture of sustainability
Health
Delivering better nutrition and healthier lives, while helping reduce hunger
Communities
Working with our employees and partners to provide more sustainable livelihoods
This is why we are taking an array of clear, concrete and measurable actions across the globe.
Supporting Environment
The 2010–2020 decade was the warmest ever on record, leading to a measurable rise in extreme weather events like floods and droughts. Farmers oftentimes bore the brunt of these occurrences, which is why the agriculture sector is considered ‘highly exposed’ to the impacts of climate change. Halting this trend requires rethinking how we produce food and supply the necessary inputs for agriculture. In the Animal Health sector, we are focused on both tasks.
On the farm, 20% of livestock are lost to disease each year. These losses are not only an animal welfare crisis, but mean natural resources such as feed, water and carbon emissions are spent for little to no benefit to our food supply.
HealthforAnimals Members invest nearly $3 billion each year in R&D to deliver new, innovative tools to improve how we monitor, prevent, diagnose and treat illness in animals. Every new product, such as smart sensors that monitor for fever, diagnostics powered by artificial intelligence or next generation vaccines, helps provide better health for the animal and a more sustainable farm.
Our sector recognizes that producing these tools also has an environmental impact. Developing new technologies requires energy, natural resources, and a global supply chain.
However, we’re applying the same innovative mindset that helps us tackle animal health challenges to our production processes and facilities. We are finding new efficiencies and challenging ‘the way it’s always been done’ so we can offer products that meet farmer and societal needs.
Although each HealthforAnimals Member company has a unique approach, all are aligned on the core mission – find new ways to better support our environment, not just through our customers but within our own companies.
Below is a sample of how we are putting this belief into action.
Highlights
Consumption
- Virbac has pledged to reduce waste, water and energy consumption across facilities by 2025.
- Zoetis has committed to 100% renewable energy use in facilities by 2050.
- IDEXX facilities are meeting LEED and other global standards through solar arrays, energy recycling, and more.
- ZENOAQ is reducing energy use within its head offices by 1% each year.
Emissions
- Merck Animal Health is reducing scope 1 and 2 emissions by 40% by 2025.
- Boehringer Ingelheim is making their Gainsville, GA, USA facility carbon neutral.
- Elanco has pledged to help remove 21 million tons of emissions from their customers’ farms.
Recycling & Disposal
- Phibro is cutting plastic usage while building a culture of recycling across facilities.
- Vetoquinol is implementing ‘greener’ product packaging and shipment processes.
Supporting Communities
From 1990 to 2015, extreme poverty plummeted from 36% to 10%. It was a testament to the power of concentrated, coordinated action by the public and private sectors to grow economies, deliver education and strengthen resiliency.
However, according to the United Nations the “pace of change is decelerating” and the fallout from Covid-19 “risks reversing decades of progress.” In addition, the World Bank estimates climate change will drive 68 to 132 million more people into poverty over the next decade.
We must redouble our efforts, and in many regions, it starts with livestock farming.
At least 1.3 billion people rely on animal agriculture for their livelihood and food security. Livestock provide labour for their farms, nutrition for their families, and economic growth for their regions. These animals a cornerstone of rural communities, and when they are lost to illness, it reverberates.
The Animal Health sector can deliver products, from vaccines and diagnostics to nutritional supplements and parasiticides, that protect livestock and strengthen the surrounding community.
This work helps support rural communities where farming is a core part of life. However, our efforts must go beyond just our agricultural partners. HealthforAnimals Members also have a responsibility to our employees and the neighbourhoods where they live and work.
Their resilience is essential to the long-term success of any company. It’s why we are also implementing programs such as beautification campaigns, donations to social action campaigns, and leadership initiatives that support our staff and the vibrant communities they inhabit.
Although each HealthforAnimals Member approaches the challenges of the coming decade differently, all understand that strong communities can unite to deliver a more prosperous, sustainable world. Below is a sample of how we are putting this understanding into action.
Highlights
Livelihoods
- Elanco launched the ‘East Africa Growth Accelerator’ that helps improve farmer incomes in the region.
- Boehringer Ingelheim’s Last Mile program is helping livestock farmers in six African nations build more sustainable businesses.
- Phibro Animal Health’s ‘Cattle Raising Insight’ project in Brazil helps farmers generate higher productivity and efficiency.
- Zoetis’ A.L.P.H.A. project provides trainings to hundreds of thousands of farmers to improve their livestock health, while strengthening local infrastructure.
Education
- CEVA Sante Animale partnered with Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation to train veterinarians in Bangladesh and Ethiopia on improved poultry disease control.
- Merck Animal Health’s* Veterinary Student Scholarship Program has awarded over US$4.5 million in grants across 850 scholarships in recent years.
- ZENOAQ has operated the ‘Shakunage Assembly’ in Japan since 1969 to train 1000+ livestock veterinarians and technicians across 36 prefectures each year.
- The IDEXX Tuskegee Scholars Fund has provided $3.6 million for scholarships, mental support and emergency funding for veterinary students in need.
Supporting Health
Today, 690 million people go to bed hungry every night, while 1 in 5 children under the age of five suffer from malnutrition. These numbers are only expected to rise in the wake of Covid-19.
Furthermore, the world is undergoing a silent crisis. Societies are drastically underinvesting in mental health according to the WHO, and 264 million suffer from depression worldwide.
Sustainability providing for future populations means offering better care for our physical and mental well-being, and animals can play a central role.
Micronutrients like calcium, iron, zinc and vitamin A provide the building blocks for development in our early years and resilient minds in our adulthood.
For many, foods from livestock – milk, meat, eggs and fish – are a valuable, convenient way to get these nutrients and in developing regions, they are often the only way. However, we know access remains a challenge in many areas.
And while proper diets are the cornerstone of a sustainable future, nourishing both our physical and mental health, the animals around us can deliver not just health, but happiness and well-being.
Pets are a proven way to increase physical activity and strengthen our mental health, while assistance animals play a vital role in supporting the vulnerable in our society. In developing areas, dog-mediated rabies remains a persistent threat despite the availability of effective canine vaccines.
Each HealthforAnimals Member is taking on our responsibilities in a different way, but all understand that good health is synonymous with a sustainable future. Below is a sampling of how we put this understanding into action.
Highlights
Nutrition
- Ceva Sante Animale’s ‘Egg a Day’ program is helping address malnutrition by delivering better nutrition through eggs to children in South America and Asia.
- Elanco Animal Health pledged to create more resilient food systems by enabling 57 million more people to better access their annual nutritious protein needs through their ‘Protein Pledge’
Companion Animals
- Boehringer Ingelheim supports canine rabies eradication efforts in nations like Mexico and Pakistan through vaccine donations and community education.
- ZENOAQ collaborates with the Japan Service Dog Resource Center to help train service dog trainers, breed and raise more service dogs, and donate products for their veterinary care
Mental Wellbeing
- Zoetis works with Beyond Blue in Australia to help deliver mental health services in rural communities.
- Merck Animal Health has partnered with American Veterinary Medical Association to measure and improve veterinary mental health, including a $100,000 commitment to a Workplace Wellbeing program.