ANZ sugar fallout broadens
Shareholders will want answers from ANZ bank after it was
revealed this week that the banking giant’s joint venture in Cambodia
financed ruling party senator Ly Yong Phat’s controversial sugar
plantation, the Responsible Investment Association Australia (RIAA) said
yesterday.
Environmental audit documents obtained by the Post on Tuesday
linked ANZ Royal Bank, a joint venture with Cambodia’s Royal Group, to
Phat’s Phnom Penh Sugar Company, which has been at the centre of forced
land evictions and child labour scandals.
But it is outside of Cambodian shores where the bank’s business may feel the pinch.
In Australia, home to ANZ’s head office and largest business base,
there is rising demand for investments in companies meeting socially
responsible criteria, according to Simon O’Connor, CEO of RIAA. These
investors, O’Connor added, are connected to 16 per cent of the total
assets under management, amounting to about $1 trillion.
“Beyond the financial risks, it is worrying for responsible investors
and Australians at large that any Australian company could be involved
in a project that is allegedly breaching environmental standards and
poorly treating workers,” he said. “Many of our members will be
concerned about the allegations made about ANZ’s Cambodian partner, ANZ
Royal Bank, and its financing of Phnom Penh Sugar, and would expect that
this majority-owned subsidiary would be operating to the same standards
as the parent bank.”
The investment arm of the Uniting Church in Australia is one such shareholder that has already demanded answers from the bank.
Mark Zirnsak, an executive director of offices in Victoria and
Tasmania, said that as a starting point, he was satisfied with the
official response received from ANZ, but he would be monitoring the
situation closely.
“If we don’t feel that these issues are being addressed by the Phnom
Penh sugar company, we will engage with ANZ again and say, well, either
you get the client to really address the issues or we need to exit the
relationship,” Zirnsak said from Melbourne yesterday.
The church may not be the bank’s largest shareholder, but they are
big enough to be heard, having raised concerns over unethical
investments with the bank in the past. Zirnsak also bought in to
question Royal Group’s part ownership of ANZ in Cambodia. He said less
control meant greater risk to reputation.
“That might be a matter for them really making tough decisions about
how they actually make sure that the Cambodian branch stacks up to the
standards that would be expected for the rest of the bank,” he said.
ANZ declined to respond to questions regarding brand risk yesterday.
But the bank met with Phnom Penh Sugar, NGOs and local community members
last week to address concerns, according to a company statement.
“Where impacts are identified that are not consistent with ANZ’s
policies, our aim is to be a positive force for engagement and for
change,” it said.
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