By Emma Thomasson
BERLIN (Reuters) - Many of the world's top food and beverage companies are taking steps to improve their social and environmental impact on poor countries, although there is still much more to do, development group Oxfam said on Wednesday.
Oxfam launched its "Behind the Brands" campaign a year ago to try to assess the real impact of food and drink companies on the countries where they source raw materials, especially given a proliferation of public commitments to sustainability.
Oxfam said the companies it ranked as most responsible - Nestle
Big food and beverage companies have come under increasing scrutiny in recent years over their sourcing of raw materials, courting criticism on issues ranging from child labor on cocoa farms to the impact of palm oil plantations on rain forests.
Oxfam said its campaign had been helped by thousands of consumers bombarding brands with messages calling for action as well as a joint statement from 31 investment funds representing nearly $1.5 trillion of assets reiterating the Oxfam demands.
"Those that are not moving fast enough will pay a price with the public, investors and communities in the field," Chris Jochnick, director of Oxfam's private sector work, told Reuters.
"Those companies that move first should see benefits in long-term access to sustainable supply chains which should be reflected in their share price."
Oxfam said the biggest 10 food and beverage companies it studied had huge impact given that their annual revenues of more than $450 billion are equivalent to the national income of all the world's low-income countries combined.
Oxfam ranked the firms on their policies in areas it sees as critical to sustainable agriculture: women, small-scale farmers, farm workers, water, land, climate change and transparency.
Nestle came first, Unilever second, Coca-Cola third, Mondelez International
Jochnick said General Mills had lost ground due to a lower score for transparency as it was not publishing as much information as before on its water policies. General Mills was not immediately available for comment.
Oxfam said the biggest improvements in company policies had come on policies over land, gender equality and climate change.
"What initially sparks companies' attention is reputational concern but as they dig into these issues they have started to find financial reasons to do the right thing," Jochnick said.
(Editing by Alison Williams)
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