Royal Friesland Campina N.V.

From Bedrijven
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Royal FrieslandCampina N.V.
Bedrijf Logo
Quick Facts
TypeCooperation (member-owned)
sectorDairy
Headquarters (Benelux Organization)Amersfoort, Netherlands
Year of Origin2008
Emissions (All Scopes)17,4 Megatons of CO2 (2020)
Net Income11,14 billion (2020)
Key PeopleHein Schumacher (CEO), Hans Janssen (CFO), Geraldine Fraser (CPO), Roel van Neerbos (Chairman)
Subsidiaries
  • 61 daughter companies, four joint ventures

Royal FrieslandCampina N.V., stylized as FrieslandCampina, was founded in 2008 by merger of Friesland Foods and Campina. Roots of the cooperation trace back to 1879. Received royal status in 2009. [1] Active in diary. Became a major player through mergers and acquisitions. FrieslandCampina has branch offices in 38 countries and employs 23,877 people (2020). Its products are marketed in more than 100 countries. [2] FrieslandCampina is headquartered in Amersfoort, the Netherlands. With 17000 members they are one of the largest diary cooperatives worldwide. [3] Revenue of FrieslandCampina was 11,1 billion euro’s in 2020, of which 79 million was profit. The operating profit was 268 million, or 2,4% of the net revenue.[4]

FrieslandCampina is the world 7th largest diary company and therefore undoubtedly a key player in its industry.[5] It is the only Dutch player in the list of the largest twenty diary companies in the world, as composed by Rabobank. The balance sheet value of FrieslandCampina was 8,7 billion in 2020. [6]

Company Structure

FrieslandCampina employs a two-tier structure, containing an executive board and a council of commissioners or supervisory board.[7].

Executive Board

Executive Board [8]
Name Function Remuneration x1000 EUR
Hein Schumacher Chief Executive Officer Unknown
Hans Janssen Chief Finanacial Officer Unknown
Geraldine Fraser Chief Peoples Officer Unknown
Roel van Neerbos President Food & Beverage Unknown

Before 2020, the executive board was composed of two members (CEO Hein Schumacher and Jaska de Bakker, who no longer works for FrieslandCampina) Together they earned 1,4 million euro’s.[9] Of Jaska de Bakker is known that she received 1.1 million euro’s in termination benefits on top of her regular remuneration.[10] Individual remuneration of the other members of the executive board is not disclosed.

Executive Leadership Team

Management Board [11]
Name Function
Arnoud van den Berg President Trading
Berndt Kodden President Specialised Nutrition
Herman Ermens President Ingredients
Roger Loo Vice-president Professional
Kemal Cetin Chief information officer
Margrethe Jonkman Global director Research & Development
Roman Scieszka Chief Supply Chain officer
Simone Boitelle Global director Corporate Affairs
Hein Brenninkmeijer Global director Corporate Development

There is no information available on the remuneration of the executive leaderschip team.

Supervisory Board

The supervisory board exists of the full board of the Zuivelcoöperatie FrieslandCampina U.A. as well as four external members. Their short-term remuneration in total is 1,1 million euro's, individual remuneration is not disclosed. [12]

Supervisory Board [13]
Name Function Remuneration x1000 EUR
Frans Keurentjes Chairman Unknown
Erwin Wunnekink Vice-chair Unknown
Sandra Addink-Berendsen Member Unknown
Heiko Schipper Member Unknown
Angelique Huijben-Pijnenburg Member Unknown
Hans Stöcker Member Unknown
Angelien Kemna Member Unknown
René Hooft Graafland Member Unknown
Elze Jellema Member Unknown
Hans Hettinga Member Unknown
Cor Hoogeveen Member Unknown
Wout Dekker Member Unknown
Frans van den Hurk Member Unknown

Accountant

The external accountant of FrieslandCampina is PriceWaterhouseCoopers. [14]

Operations

FrieslandCampina is fully owned by Zuivelcoöperatie FrieslandCampina U.A., with 16,995 members, of which 11,100 dairy farmers in the Netherlands, Belgium and Germany. [15]

FrieslandCampina is divided into four business groups, all with their own specific focus and expertise. FrieslandCampina Consumer Dairy supplies consumers and professionals directly with all kinds of diary. FrieslandCampina Specialised Nutrition supplies specific groups of consumers, like young children or professional sporters. FrieslandCampina Ingredients supplies ingredients as innovative partner in healthy or functional foodsolutions. FrieslandCampina Dairy Essentials produces and sells cheeses, butter and milk powder for professional and industrial clients. [16]

FrieslandCampina has received Royal status in 2009. [17] This means that according to the Dutch State, this company is more than 100 years old, prominent in its sector in the Netherlands, its governance is inmpeccable and the management is without any controversy. [18] FrieslandCampina has not received support in NOW-subsidies during Corona-times. [19]

Paris Agreement to Today

FrieslandCampina has developed a tool to measure emissions per member farm, which can help reduce these emissions. Since 2019, for all member farms emissions are being calculated seperately. [20] This data has not yet been publicly shared and therefore no conclusions on progress can be drawn from this data.

Current Policies and Emissions

In 2020, FrieslandCampina’s greenhouse gas emissions during production and transport were 720 kton CO2-eq. The greenhouse gas emissions on member diary farms counted up to 12319 kton CO2-eq. [21] These numbers exclude the purchase of CO2 emission rights of 1.198 kton (2019) and 1.154 kton (2020). [22] In 2019, total emissions were 11,96 mton CO2-eq. [23] In an investigation commissioned by Milieudefensie, Houkema Advies Duurzaam Voedsel concluded FrieslandCampina emitted 17,4 mton CO2-eq. in 2019. Due to lack of insight into the calculations of FrieslandCampina, an explanation of the difference cannot be given. [24]

Although products of FrieslandCampina are sold in over 100 countries worlwide, [25] all of the member diary farms are located in the Netherlands, Belgium and Germany. [26] In the Netherlands, over 75 percent of all dairy farmers are members of FrieslandCampina. [27] Nearly 95 percent of all emissions by FrieslandCampina occur in the Netherlands, Belgium and Germany (12319 mton out of 13039 mton CO2-eq.).

Climate Plans

FrieslandCampina strived to grow its company in a climate-neutral way. This long-term climate-neutral growth objective has been realised according tot heir own rapportations: greenhouse gas emissions in the period 2010-2020 decreased from 13,108 kt to 13,039 kt, while production volume increased by 13.6 percent. [28]

FrieslandCampina has sustainability targets, but there are no targets on emission numbers besides the long-term targets which are set out in law. As an example, one of the sustainability targets is maximizing income for member farmers, which coincides with the interest of the company owners, which are the member farmers. Other targets are making processes circular and feeding a growing world population. [29] In other words, increase output and reduce production costs.

By 2050, FrieslandCampina aims to be producing (net) climate-neutral dairy and, by 2030, it intends to reduce the emission of greenhouse gases by more than one-third (compared to 2015) in line with the Paris Climate Agreement and Green Deal climate targets. [30] How these targets will be met is not specified. FrieslandCampina mentions net climate-neutrality, leaving the option open to compensate emissions instead of reducing them.

FrieslandCampina claims to have reduced greenhouse gasses emissions with 20% between 1990 and 2020. Based on the FrieslandCampina data, the prognosis of emission reduction is exactly 45 percent in 2030. [31]

Conclusion

FrieslandCampina has set emission reduction targets for 2030 and 2050, as mandated by law. The way in which these targets will be met is not specified. FrieslandCampina wants its production to grow in accordance with the growth of the demand for dairy worldwide. [32] This expected growth is 2 percent per year and is therefore higher than the production growth in the period 2010-2020, which was 13,6 percent. [33] In the period 2010-2020 emissions dropped by less than 1 percent. FrieslandCampina strives to lower emissions from 2015 to 2030 by more than 33 percent. [34]

FrieslandCampina is going through difficult times in terms of profit and member satisfaction. More than 95 percent of the emissions of FrieslandCampina take place in the Netherlands, Belgium and Germany while the large majority of the products is exported. The current business model of FrieslandCampina prevents third world countries from properly developing their own markets. Due to its expansion thrift, FrieslandCampina has hardly cut down on emission in previous years. With its expected growth numbers, their emission reduction targets for 2030 are hardly realistic. Especially when comparing the targets to the realised numbers of the last decade.

  1. https://lc.nl/archief/FrieslandCampina-koninklijk-20685510.html
  2. https://www.frieslandcampina.com/about-frieslandcampina/our-organisation
  3. https://www.frieslandcampina.com/about-frieslandcampina/financials/financial-and-sustainability-reports/ p. 30
  4. https://annualreport.frieslandcampina.com/en/2020/our-results/ p. 8
  5. https://research.rabobank.com/publicationservice/download/publication/token/H5laAEfE5bCRp5mv9cP4
  6. https://annualreport.frieslandcampina.com/en/2020/our-results/ p. 96
  7. https://annualreport.frieslandcampina.com/en/2020/our-results/ p. 75
  8. https://www.frieslandcampina.com/nl/over-frieslandcampina/onze-organisatie/executive-board-en-executive-leadership-team/
  9. https://annualreport.frieslandcampina.com/en/2020/our-results/ p. 143
  10. https://annualreport.frieslandcampina.com/en/2020/our-results/ p. 143
  11. https://www.frieslandcampina.com/nl/over-frieslandcampina/onze-organisatie/executive-board-en-executive-leadership-team/
  12. https://www.frieslandcampina.com/about-frieslandcampina/financials/financial-and-sustainability-reports/ p. 143
  13. https://www.frieslandcampina.com/nl/over-frieslandcampina/onze-organisatie/executive-board-en-executive-leadership-team/
  14. https://annualreport.frieslandcampina.com/en/2020/our-results/ p. 193
  15. https://www.frieslandcampina.com/nl/over-frieslandcampina/financiele-resultaten/financiele-verslagen-en-duurzaamheidsontwikkelingen/
  16. https://www.frieslandcampina.com/about-frieslandcampina/our-organisation/ p. 4
  17. https://www.koninklijkhuis.nl/onderwerpen/onderscheidingen/predicaat-koninklijk/overzicht-predicaat-koninklijk
  18. https://www.koninklijkhuis.nl/onderwerpen/onderscheidingen/predicaat-koninklijk/aanvragen
  19. https://www.uwv.nl/overuwv/Images/uwv-register-now-vijfde-aanvraagperiode.pdf
  20. https://www.frieslandcampina.com/sustainability/
  21. https://annualreport.frieslandcampina.com/en/2020/our-results/
  22. https://annualreport.frieslandcampina.com/en/2020/our-results/ p. 8
  23. https://www.frieslandcampina.com/nl/over-frieslandcampina/financiele-resultaten/financiele-verslagen-en-duurzaamheidsontwikkelingen/
  24. https://milieudefensie.nl/actueel/zuivelindustrie
  25. https://www.frieslandcampina.com/about-frieslandcampina/our-organisation/
  26. https://www.frieslandcampina.com/about-frieslandcampina/
  27. https://www.frieslandcampina.com/sustainability/sustainability-on-the-farm/biodiversity/
  28. https://annualreport.frieslandcampina.com/en/2020/our-results/ p. 23
  29. https://www.frieslandcampina.com/nl/duurzaamheid/
  30. https://www.frieslandcampina.com/about-frieslandcampina/financials/financial-and-sustainability-reports/ p. 7
  31. https://www.frieslandcampina.com/sustainability/sustainability-in-the-supply-chain/reducing-greenhouse-gas/
  32. https://annualreport.frieslandcampina.com/en/2020/our-results/ p. 28
  33. https://annualreport.frieslandcampina.com/en/2020/our-results/ p. 23
  34. https://www.frieslandcampina.com/about-frieslandcampina/financials/financial-and-sustainability-reports/ p. 7