Impact on developing markets continued into this matter have concluded that a letter had been sent by the European Chamber of Commerce in China on the subject to the Chinese authorities. Heineken Shanghai Trading Corporation, a 100 percent subsidiary of our joint venture Asia Pacific Breweries, is member of this organisation. Neither Heineken, nor Asia Pacific Breweries has had any active involvement with the letter in question. This incident was discussed with FNV in February 2007 and the conclusion reached was that Heineken indeed had no direct responsibility for the letter or any other lobby activities. We believe that we have a good track record for respecting our employees' rights. Employee rights are subject to monitoring through an annual survey in which we ask our operating companies to indicate whether incidents have occurred. For 2006, no incidents were reported. Nevertheless, we realise that as a growing and expanding company we need to provide better guidance to our local operations about what we expect from them. For this reason, in 2006 we drafted a document outlining Heineken's vision on employee rights and also investigated the potential use of self-assessment methodologies. Consequently, we have selected the Human Rights Compliance Assessment (HRCA) tool offered by the Danish Institute for Human Rights as the best option for our company. Due to limited available resources at the time, we had to postpone pilot studies of the Heineken vision and the HRCA in 2006. We will conduct this pilot in the course of 2007 and make our final choices following the evaluation of results. Local economic impact As participants in society, any company's operations can have three kinds of impact: economic, environmental and social. Within Heineken, disclosure of environmental and social impacts is the subject of detailed reporting and analysis through dedicated (sustainability) reporting. Insight into our economic impact over and above the profit and loss account had not been studied in any detail until 2006. However, in the context of our contribution towards realisation of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), we acknowledged the need to improve understanding of our contribution to poverty-related MDGs (for example those on hunger, education and health). Because there is not yet one clear standard methodology to calculate the direct and indirect economic impact of an organisation, we partnered with the National Committee for International Cooperation and Sustainable Development (NCDO), a Dutch government agency that raises awareness on development issues. Together with NCDO, a tender was issued allowing a number of well-regarded consultancies to pitch for the assignment. After due consideration, Dutch consultancies Triple Value Strategy Consultants and InReturn, were chosen. Our joint venture in Sierra Leone, Sierra Leone Brewery Ltd. (SLBL) was selected to work with these agencies. We believe we need an easy-to-use model to assess our economic impact. Economic development and poverty reduction are not only important from a humanitarian perspective - in many emerging markets lack of economic prosperity is also one of the most important obstacles to further growth of our business. Understanding precisely what determines the level of our impacts gives us an opportunity to optimise the positive influence that we have. After preparation of the framework, the field research in Sierra Leone took place during July QC Heineken N.V. OO Sustainability Report 2006

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Heineken - Milieuverslag | 2006 | | pagina 38