Le Figaro’s eighth Big Bang for businesses: for Antoine Frérot ‘the plural role of businesses is broader than CSR’
June 04, 2021 at 02:45 pm IST
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Antoine Frérot recalled that businesses will be challenged if they are only useful to a few. For Veolia's CEO, businesses must be useful to all those who engage with them: employees, customers, regions, society, and even future generations. By giving themselves a corporate purpose, they give themselves several objectives that serve all of their stakeholders. A business is strong when it is supported by everyone it serves. For example, Veolia's merger with Suez will make it possible to be useful to a greater number of people as the new entity will be looking after the interests of the stakeholders of the two groups.
The plural role of businesses is broader than CSR
The concept of Corporate Social and Environmental Responsibility (CSR) is often too narrow. We need to broaden this view. Businesses must aim for more objectives and more stakeholders, with the same level of requirement. The plural role of businesses is broader than CSR. Businesses participate in and contribute to general interest. They are a part of it, but they don't build it: elected representatives do. The general interest of a nation brings together all that constitutes it, and, in a democracy, elected representatives govern this general interest.
Businesses play a special role in certain areas of general interest. For example, for some young people who are less comfortable with the abstract content delivered at school, work-study apprenticeships in a company give them qualifications to integrate society. Similarly, for continuing education throughout careers, businesses play a decisive role by partnering with national education.
Good sovereignty means mastery of one's destiny
Asked about the impact of the health crisis, Antoine Frérot reaffirmed that businesses had succeeded in delivering services and products during this difficult time. They were able to protect their employees, in the image of Veolia, where many employees work on public roads ... Regarding the lessons to be drawn from this crisis on relocation, the CEO recalled that 'good sovereignty is local control of the production we will need, it's the mastery of one's destiny. '
Find out more:
> (In French) Replay of the Big Bang of corporate citizenship : watch the round table discussion with Antoine Frérot from 37:39
>Our purpose
>Acting and committing to ecological transformation
>The Figaro's Big Bang for businesses
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Veolia Environnement SA published this content on 04 June 2021 and is solely responsible for the information contained therein. Distributed by Public, unedited and unaltered, on 04 June 2021 09:14:05 UTC.
Veolia Environnement is the world leader in environmental management services. Net sales break down by activity as follows:
- water-related services (40.6%; No. 1 worldwide): water resources management, drinking water distribution and delivery, wastewater collection, treatment and recovery, engineering, design, construction of water treatment facilities and customer relationship management, etc.;
- waste management services (32.4%; no. 1 worldwide): collection, treatment and recycling of liquid, solid, non-hazardous and hazardous waste, waste treatment and recovery through composting, energy recovery from waste, etc. Veolia Environnement also provides urban waste management services (maintenance and cleaning of public spaces, provision of mechanized street cleaning and façade treatment services), maintenance of industrial sites, and dismantling of industrial facilities and equipment at the end of their useful life;
- energy services (27%; No. 1 in Europe): delegated management of urban heating and air conditioning networks, management of thermal and multi-technique services (operation of heating systems, facility design, construction, and maintenance, etc.) and industrial services (industrial process analysis, production equipment operation, service, and maintenance), general management of buildings and public lighting.
Net sales are distributed geographically as follows: France (21.5%), Europe (41.9%), North America (7.4%), Asia (5.6%), Africa and the Middle East (4.9%), Pacific (4.3%), Latin America (4%) and other (10.4%).