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actions creating value Social Responsibility Report 2008 Index II A Tribute to Don Eugenio Garza Lagüera 1 Introduction 2 A message from our Chairman of the Board and CEO 4 Our Company’s Profile 6 FEMSA’s principles, values, and culture 10 FEMSA Foundation 17 Core Value 1 Quality of Life in the Company 18 Core Value 2 Health and Wellness 28 Core Value 3 Community Engagement 34 Core Value 4 Environmental Care 44 Global Vision 56 GRI Index 68 A tribute to a Great Leader Don Eugenio Garza Lagüera We are honored to give our farewell to a great man who will always be dear to our hearts. We have embraced his example of honesty, strength, and good will as the legacy that continues to live on at FEMSA. D on E u g enio Ga rza L agüera 0 (1 923 -20 8) Don Eugenio Garza Lagüera, an exemplary Mexican who was always concerned for people, the community, and nation’s development. His creative talent and modesty are qualities that will always stay present in FEMSA. His leadership style taught us that integrity and keeping our word are the fundamentals on our actions, both in good and bad times. During his tenure as President of the Board and Chief Executive Officer, the company reached significant national and international distinction. He promoted a culture to generate economic and social value, which today can be clearly felt in the nine countries in which FEMSA operates. Don Eugenio made his mark by promoting development in Mexico through education and culture. He furthered education by expanding the Tec de Monterrey, where he served as Chairman of the Board between 1973 and 1998, and was active in his role as Honorary Life Chairman until his decease. He faced important challenges during his lifetime, leaving us an example of determination and optimism in his actions, the core foundation of what we are today as a company. Thank you Don Eugenio: For your drive, passion, and commitment to work that lasted more than half a century, which have accomplished our company’s success. Thank you for caring and focusing on the collective well-being of the entire FEMSA family. Thank you for teaching us that social and economic development do go hand-in-hand. Thank you for showing us that an individual’s true value lies in his actions that reflect respect, humbleness, and camaraderie. Thank you, Don Eugenio, for not limiting your actions to simply doing business, but also promoting a corporate culture of integral development founded on values. The entire FEMSA family desires to honor your memory by following your lead. 1 action At FEMSA, Social Responsibility is based on our permanent pledge to sustainable development in our workplace and its surroundings. We believe in the need to promote the benefits our company offers to our employees and their families, our communities, and stakeholders in terms of wellness and development, while minimizing the impact our operations could have on the natural environment. To achieve the aforesaid goals, we engage in different directions: we strive to meet our internal community’s basic needs, such as education, health, and promotion for its development; we work side-by-side with communities in the face of natural disasters; we support them by working together with the authorities and other entities; we cooperate with business chambers and non-profit organizations on initiatives to promote well-being to the community; we sponsor programs to promote responsible and healthy lifestyles; we promote art and culture; we are permanently dedicated to improving our processes and equipment to guarantee efficient water and energy usage, while raising ecological awareness both in and outside our operations. We understand that improving living conditions is everybody’s commitment; therefore, we set ourselves ambitious goals in an effort to fulfill our role as responsible corporate citizens, as we strive to fulfill our commitment to improve living conditions. Raúl S a n tiba ñ ez Alm FE M S a guer A C er v eza D is Mon te tributio rre y, M n C en t exico. er sw immin a n ts in Pa rticip xico. re y, M e Mon ter 2 E lea z a r Re ye s T Jug o orres s De l Va ll e, M e xico. e g cours yF s a t SC FEMSA Social Responsibility Report 2008 value Our work philosophy and its supporting values have allowed us to build over the course of time wide-ranging initiatives to promote development and wellness for our employees and their families. These pioneer and spearhead initiatives have included health, training, and housing programs, the promotion of a savings culture, and family development and progress implemented through institutions such as Sociedad Cuauhtémoc y Famosa (SCYF, acronym in Spanish). Today, 118 years after our company’s foundation, we count with an integral social responsibility scheme that actively promotes the simultaneous creation of economic and social value. Our social responsibility scheme has been enhanced and strengthen on time, through our employees’ committed attitudes, our client and consumers’ preference, and the recognition granted by government authorities and different organizations in the countries in which we operate. M a r co An ton io Masca I n tern rúa G a a tion a l lin do L eg a l C FE M S A oun se Corpo l ra tivo. We know that being socially responsible is not a destination, but rather a permanent goal we strive to meet day by day. Our commitment is to continue promoting, with the same enthusiasm, this work philosophy. a ta lin a a rez y C Oma r Álv , z re é P bia. D a n iel A Colom la FE M S Co ca- Co Á vila 3 Introduction Being a socially responsible company is an ongoing and permanent goal we proactively assume with all of our audiences. This commitment begins with our employees and their families, and unfolds to include everyone and everything involved in our operations, such as suppliers, clients, communities, and the environment. 4 GRI 3.2 Our annual report traditionally has included a summary of certain significant programs as part of our social responsibility scheme. However, starting in 2004, in an effort to provide greater detail on said actions, we have published two social responsibility reports. Our last report was the one published in 2008. GRI 3.3 This is our third social responsibility report, which we now intend to issue once a year. GRI 3.1, 3.11, and 4.12 This document shares our social responsibility philosophy, values, and vision with our readers, as we report on the key actions FEMSA performed and the achievements it obtained in 2008. Part of our continuous improvement culture includes the adoption of international guidelines in preparing this report, such as the incorporation of the Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) indicators. This represents our third report on our corporate progress after committing to become a member of the United Nations Global Compact. Core value 1 Quality of Life in the Company Core value 2 Health and Wellness Core value 4 Environmental Care Core value 3 Community Engagement FEMSA Social Responsibility Report 2008 GRI 2.5, 2.7, 2.9, 3.6, 3.8, and 3.11 Throughout this document, each reference to a specific GRI core indicator is printed in wine-colored ink, while references related to the UN Global Compact are printed in orange. You will also find a GRI reference chart at the end of the document. GRI 3.13 At FEMSA, we are aware of the fact that this first incorporation of GRI performance indicators involves the challenge of evolving permanently on standardizing our systems and procedures to keep driving compliance levels with our commitment to social responsibility; consequently, this document was not submitted to an external auditor. GRI 3.5 This report is based on two criteria, the first of which highlights the relevance of our actions and initiatives, their impact on the economy, society and the environment, and their influence on corporate stakeholders. The second criteria is based on the FEMSA philosophy, the types of productive activities the company is engaged in, and the impact they have on the community and the environment, in addition to the experience we have acquired in preparing our two previous social responsibility reports. This report includes information on activities performed by FEMSA and its Business Units: Coca-Cola FEMSA, FEMSA Cerveza, FEMSA Comercio, and the area of Strategic Supplies (Logistics and Packaging). In this manner, we have operations in Argentina, Brazil, Colombia, Costa Rica, Guatemala, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, and Venezuela. This report also includes facts on initiatives the Corporate Affairs Team has undertaken after its recent creation to further strengthen FEMSA’s commitment to social responsibility. Unlike previous reports, this edition includes information on new businesses acquired and the geographic territories our Business Units moved into in 2008, which include REMIL, The Coca-Cola Company franchise in Brazil; Jugos del Valle in Mexico and Brazil; Agua De Los Ángeles in Mexico, Agua Brisa in Colombia, and the expansion of the company’s logistics facilities in Costa Rica, Panama, and Brazil. Consequently, this report is divided into the following two main sections: the first section is dedicated to FEMSA’s origins with a description of the company; it includes a message from our CEO and expounds on the company’s corporate philosophy and social responsibility scheme. The second section focuses on the following four core values that serve as the basis for our social responsibility scheme: Quality of Life in the Company, Health and Wellness, Community Engagement, and Environmental Care, which are subdivided into different lines of action based on examples and testimonies of the foremost activities. The final segment of this report includes a summarized description of the most outstanding results obtained in each country in which FEMSA operates. S erg io L ó p ez M OX XO a rrón Mon t D istribut ion C erre y en ter , M ex ico. 5 letter GR I 1.1 and 1.2 than an action e or m is y it il b si on sp At FEMSA, social re our employees, of t en m op el ev d l ra g te that promotes the in unities, and the environment. mm their families, our co e have expanded and perfected hy w It is a work philosop . over the last 118 years z Carbajal José Antonio Fernánde rd and CEO Chairman of the Boa their families, communities, and the environment. It is a work philosophy we have expanded and perfected over the last 118 years. We believe that sensitivity and respect for our stakeholders, and our resolution to overcome environmental challenges are strategic to ensure the company’s growth and sustainability. FEMSA posted positive results in 2008 and significant achievements in terms of our socially responsible activities. We generated sound operating and financial results from a business perspective, and improved our competitive position while maintaining our growth trends despite the difficult financial situation observed in 2008, which was reflected primarily in the rising costs of some of our basic supplies. Our key to this success is based on our integrated beverages platform, best practices, client value management strategies and market segmentations, as well as our ability to adapt to uncertain environments, all of which allowed us to post growth rates higher than those reported in industries we participate on. Our social responsibility actions also reported significant accomplishments in practically all of our core value areas, as we continue to build an increasingly stronger foundation that will allow us to move forward in this effort. At FEMSA, social responsibility is more than an action that promotes the integral development for our employees, 6 Thus, we decided to create the Corporate Affairs Team, which has the objective to promote actions to ensure appropriate environmental management processes from a proactive perspective, increase understanding and reinforce collaborative relations with the authorities, expand our ability to create social and cultural value in our communities, and secure our reputation as a responsible company that generates economic and social value, simultaneously. Part of this effort led to the creation of the FEMSA Foundation in 2008, an institution that represents one of FEMSA’s major social investment instruments that supports education, science, and technology for the conservation and sustainable water usage, as well as the promotion of healthy lifestyle among the community. FEMSA also faced key challenges in 2008 regarding social responsibility. In health-related issues among the population, obesity –especially in Latin America– and the responsible consumption of alcoholic beverages became current. Relevant environmental issues included climate FEMSA Social Responsibility Report 2008 FEMSA Foundation’s first major project consisted of creating the Water Center for Latin America and the Caribbean, together with the Tec de Monterrey and the Inter-American Development Bank, which share the same responsibility principles and commitment to community wellness. change and its implications on the availability of drinkable water, in addition to proper solid waste management. This year, FEMSA spent significant time and efforts on topics we believe could put our business operations at risk and those we felt could have a favorable impact on the communities’ quality of life. For that reason, FEMSA Foundation’s first major project consisted on creating the Water Center for Latin America and the Caribbean, together with the Tec de Monterrey and the Inter-American Development Bank, which share the same responsibility principles and commitment to community wellness. This project is focused on research for water sustainability, technologies to maximize water purification costs, and the cleansing of natural water tributaries. We also supported other projects, such as the FEMSA Biotechnology Center at the Tec de Monterrey, which specializes in bioengineering and agro-biotechnology research, in addition to other specialties, as well as the Zambrano Hellión Medical Center that will focus on cancer and heart disease research while providing related medical care. On the other hand, we continue to follow up on the actions we have engaged in for years, which are the basis of our social responsibility scheme, by enhancing these projects with the contributions made by new FEMSA acquisitions that have allowed us to grow in size as well as in the generation of social value. Looking forward to increasing our social responsibility commitment, we adhered to the United Nations Global Compact in 2005, and have incorporated for the first time in this edition, the Global Reporting Initiatives (GRI) to elaborate our reports on this subject. The year of 2009 suggests major challenges and obstacles. The current economic crisis presents a different set of challenges for different industries and economies. Although we expect the crisis to have a less significant impact on the beverage industry, FEMSA is prepared to face those challenges and capitalize on opportunities. We are wellpositioned as a strong market competitor and continue to increase our knowledge of consumer needs, and we possess the support of talented human resources. Finally, I want to confirm that social responsibility at FEMSA is a corporate culture we practice with pride and satisfaction, convinced that it provides us with an opportunity to respond to our stakeholders’ needs, promoting wellness for current and future generations, and guaranteeing the sustainability of our business and its environment. I would like to invite you to read this document to learn how we work to meet this commitment. 7 Our Corporate Profile GRI 2.1, 2.2, 2.4, and 2.7 Origins FEMSA was founded in Monterrey, Mexico in 1890, when Isaac Garza, José Calderón, José A. Muguerza, and Joseph M. Schnaider, along with other businessmen, created Cervecería Cuauhtémoc and established the values that have served as the company’s foundation for development. FEMSA is the integrated beverage company leader in Latin America with operations in nine countries that serve over 215 million consumers including large metropolis such as, Bogota, Buenos Aires, Caracas, Mexico City, and São Paulo. The company is based in Monterrey, Mexico and is composed by three Business Units and the area of Strategic Supplies: GRI 2.6, 2.8, EC1, LA1, and LA2 COUNTRY MEXICO M E R COSU R ARGENTINA BRAZIL Company FEMSA ownership (%) Sales volume FEMSA Cerveza 100 FEMSA Comercio 100 - Revenues(4) 42,385(8) 47,146 33,799 21,204 Income from Operations(4) 5,394(8) 3,077 6,715 3,321 6 6,374 10 1 4 Distribution Facilities 347 10 83 5 27 Distribution Routes 2,795 - 3,680 296 1,417 Brands 21 1 42 27 19 Clients(5) 320 3.7 (6) 612 82 197 Head Count(7) 23,815 1,149 (3) 53.7(1) 30,872(2) (10) Plants / Stores 186 (3) 21,261 Note: Information limited to core businesses. (1) The remaining 31.6%; and 14.7% are owned by The Coca-Cola Company and public shareholders, respectively. (2) Thousands of hectoliters. (3) Millions of unit cases (one unit case equals 24 8-ounce bottles). 8 Coca-Cola FEMSA Coca-Cola FEMSA 371 (3) 65,021 (4) Expressed in millions of Mexican pesos. (5) Expressed in thousands. (6) Millions of clients per day. (7) Includes third-party personnel. (8) FEMSA Cerveza results, includes Mexico and Brazil (9) The remaining 17% is owned by Heineken. (10) Includes exports. FEMSA Social Responsibility Report 2008 Coca-Cola FEMSA FEMSA Comercio This is the largest Coca-Cola bottler in Latin America and second largest worldwide. It produces and sells 10% of the Coca-Cola System’s total volume worldwide, 30% in Latin America, and 40% in Mexico. Coca-Cola FEMSA markets 137 brands, including Coca-Cola, Coca-Cola Light, Sprite, Fanta, Fresca, Lift, and Ciel, among others. Operates OXXO, the largest and fastest growing convenience store chain in Latin America, with ten distribution centers, and more than 6,374 stores across Mexico, 811 of which opened in 2008. Support Area: Strategic Supplies This area supports the beverage business units by providing packaging, refrigeration, and logistics services, which represent one of our major competitive advantages. FEMSA Cerveza (Cervecería Cuauhtémoc Moctezuma) This is the only brewery in the world that operates in three of the fastest growing markets across the globe: Mexico, Brazil, and the imported beer industry in the United States. FEMSA Cerveza produces and sells 35 brands, such as the famous Bohemia, Carta Blanca, Dos Equis, Indio, Sol, Superior, and Tecate Mexican brands; and the popular Bavaria, Gold, Kaiser, and Sol Pilsen Brazilian brands. GRI 2.3 Structure L AT I N CE N T E R GUATEMALA COLOMBIA VENEZUELA BRAZIL NICARAGUA COSTA RICA PANAMA Coca-Cola FEMSA 133 (3) 198 (3) 207 (3) FEMSA Cerveza 83(9) 10,181(2) 27,973 42,385(8) 3,659 5,394(8) 5 6 4 8 28 32 33 413 316 607 466 7,150 28 17 11 14 102 366 159 400 Beer and OXXO Beer, Soft Drinks, and OXXO Soft drinks Beer 2,210(7) Soft drinks and beer 9 GRI 4.14 and 4.15 Stakeholders FEMSA believes its stakeholders include everyone with whom we have some type of relationship, and state an interest in our activities. All stakeholder groups are important to FEMSA, which is why we have specialized areas that work with each group, such as the Labor and Social Development Team, Community Affairs, Investor Relations, Institutional Relations, Media Relations, and Customer Service, among others, as we strive to maintain respectful, open, and collaborative relationships based on the delivery of honest and timely information. Our stakeholders include: • • • • • Employees and their families. Communities: our immediate facilities / workplace surroundings, neighbors, local governments, and non-profit organizations, which are active in the area. Commercial partners: shareholders, investors, and suppliers. Clients and consumers. Society: non-profit organizations and both national and international inter-governmental entities; different state and Federal entities, the academic sector, and communications media. Society Employees and their families Clients and consumers Our stakeholders Commercial partners 10 Communities Considering these stakeholders’ needs, we have defined our social responsibility scheme through the following four core values: Core value 1 Quality of Life in the Company Core value 2 Health and Wellness Core value 4 Environmental Care Core value 3 Community Engagement GRI 4.12 and 4.13 Believing that non-profit organizations play a key role in civil society, at FEMSA we decidedly promote different institutions, specifically those involved in business, education, communities, and the natural environment by providing direct support for such non-profit organizations’ operations and special projects, and in many cases, with the participation of our employees in these organizations as active governing board members. In Mexico, we participated in 200 of said organizations in 2008 alone, many of which have a strategic impact on our industries, while others contribute to building up different social structures. FEMSA Social Responsibility Report 2008 EC9 Economic value Each of our operations has a favorable impact on the economy of the countries and regions in which we operate. Every time we invest in a new production plant, a distribution center or an OXXO store, we set an important value chain into motion that represents earnings generated by the demand for machinery, technologies, supplies, raw materials, and transportation equipment, among many other elements that benefit different industries such as the construction, services, transportation, and agricultural sectors, in addition to creating an important number of direct and indirect jobs. In the soft drinks industry, we create 5 indirect jobs for each direct job created, while in our Mexican beer industry we generate 4 indirect jobs for each direct job created, based on the same premise. In mid-2008, we initiated an important investment in both a beer plant and a glass container plant in Meoqui, Chihuahua, Mexico, while also investing in Yucatán, Mexico; and Brazil, Argentina, Costa Rica and Panama, which constitute new economic development in those regions. Our economic value in 2008 • Over 120,000 direct jobs in Latin America • Over 228,000 indirect jobs in our beverage businesses, in Mexico alone • USD $1.625 million paid in taxes in Mexico • USD $15,068 million Direct Economic Value Generated* (GRI EC1) * Direct Economic Value Generated = It is important to note that FEMSA has invested USD $4.4 billion in fixed assets over the last five years, which represents average investments of USD $880 million per year. net sales + financial investment revenues + asset sales In the soft drinks industry, we create 5 indirect jobs for each direct job, while we generate 4 indirect jobs for each direct job in the Mexican beer industry, based on the same premise. 11 GRI 4.8 FEMSA principles, values, and culture FEMSA’s business philosophy consists of a mission that defines our essential purpose, a vision that guides our goals and values that constitute the ethical framework that directs all of our business activities and relations. These values were set since the company was established in 1890 and since then, have helped us keep our course based on the following key principle: The respect for human dignity prevails over all economic considerations. Mission Satisfy and please the beverage consumer with excellence. Vision • Duplicate the value of our businesses every five years. • Generate an important proportion of our income in foreign markets and currencies. • Provide our stockholders with an attractive return on their investment. • Be leaders in the markets where we participate. • Contribute to social development. Values • Passion for service and focus on the client/ consumer • Innovation and creativity • Quality and productivity • Respect, integral development, and personnel excellence • Honesty, integrity, and austerity 12 FEMSA FEMSASocial SocialResponsibility ResponsibilityReport Report2008 2008 GRI LA12 Living the Values ada o G arza S D on Eugeni Cuauhtémoc Principles This document contains a series of personal principles and concepts stated and promoted by Don Eugenio Garza Sada, one of the men that shaped the company’s history, who always lived by the conviction that progress and common good should be promoted both inside and outside of the company. These principles embody the essence of values that today are a fundamental part of FEMSA’s culture. Cuauhtémoc Principles I. Recognize the merit of others II. Control your temper III. Never mock anyone IV. Be polite V. Be tolerant VI. Be punctual VII. If you are vain, conceal the fact VIII. Do not change the truth IX. Let others have their say X. Express yourself concisely XI. Refine your vocabulary XII. Make sure to enjoy your work XIII. Acknowledge the enormous value of manual labor XIV. Consider the interest of the business rather than your own XV. Analysis above inspiration or intuition XVI. Dedication to work X VII. Be modest Julia goes over the list of goals and commitments established for the ending year, a task she performs every December. She also evaluates how she has put the company’s institutional values into practice. For all these, she uses the TOPS (The One Page System) methodology, a management tool to organize objectives that has become an important aid to promote and spread our culture of values. Although FEMSA had traditionally transmitted its values since its creation, it doubled its efforts in 2003, as it faced the challenge of implementing this task in the Latin American countries where the company expected to grow based on its accelerated expansion plans. By implementing TOPS, the company discovered it was an excellent mechanism, as it compels leaders to stay in close touch with their subordinates, thus providing a setting where they can discuss their personal and job-related concerns. Sixty percent of all FEMSA employees participated in this process in 2008. Thus, TOPS has often been the tool that detonates key individual performance and reveals leadership, entrepreneurial, negotiation, and other business skills. The key to success in this process has consisted of involving the leaders, as aptly said by Paloma González, Director of Organizational Development at FEMSA. “Once a leader supports and commits to this philosophy, it spills over and urges the entire organization to get involved and take action. In the future, FEMSA’s vision is to continue to strengthen this culture by ensuring it is a solid common value that prevails in every country in which the company operates, where it might need to be customized to the different regions’ characteristics, but maintains its essence supported by the same pillars and principles.” Pa lo ma G on zález G o rtá rez D irector o f Org a n iza tion a D e velopm l en t a t F E M SA. 13 FEMSA uses its internal coverage tools to promote its Business Code of Ethics, Corporate Polices, and the Whistle Blowing System throughout its Business Units in the nine countries in which the company operates. GRI SO2 and SO3 • GC I through X Business Code of Ethics Compliance with the Business Code of Ethics is fundamental to developing a corporate culture that stimulates job performance in a pleasant and clear environment infused with respect and integrity that spreads to all labor, commercial, financial, and social relations. At FEMSA, all Business Units operate under the premise that they must observe and comply with laws and codes to ensure their existence and ideal operation within their social settings. FEMSA uses its internal coverage tools to promote its Business Code of Ethics, Corporate Polices, and the Whistle Blowing System through its Business Units in the territories in which the company operates. The company’s different tools are available for all (100%) of our employees. Furthermore, all of our stakeholders have access to both the Business Code of Ethics and the Whistle Blowing System. GRI 4.4 and 4.16 Communication channels with our stakeholders FEMSA has made different mechanisms permanently available to receive information and respond to its stakeholders. An example of these mechanisms includes the Whistle Blowing System, which is available 24/7 over the phone and through the Internet, for both internal and external use in all official languages of the countries in which the company operates. This system seeks to prevent inappropriate practices in our operations and is managed by an independent company that guarantees objectivity and the confidentiality of the denunciator. Other key internal mechanisms include mixed commissions with union representation where union delegates 14 and representatives can express both their personal concerns and those related to the company’s activities. The Communication Day is an annual event in which our executive team besides presenting the last year’s results and perspectives for the current year, forms a panel to which all employees in the nine countries that we operate, can access through videoconference technology, allowing them to ask questions or express their opinions on any subject of interest. One of the main tools companies use to obtain information on employee satisfaction regarding their labor conditions and other concerns is an organizational climate survey, which FEMSA applies at least once every two years as a corporate policy. Sociedad Cuauhtémoc y Famosa (SCYF) and the Distribution Centers also serve as open communication channels between corporate partners and employees. The Business Units operate telephone and electronic systems, such as the toll-free “Hello Coca-Cola” customer service telephone line, the CIS system for Coca-Cola FEMSA clients, and the FEMSA Cerveza Brazil Customer Service Center to respond to client, consumer, supplier, and other interested outside parties’ concerns regarding our products and services. Other telephone system examples include “01800-cerveza” by FEMSA Cerveza (Cervecería Cuauhtémoc Moctezuma) and “OXXO Listens” by FEMSA Comercio. Each company also provides its e-mail address through its individual website. The Investor Relations Teams respond to all stockholder issues, and through their own websites, provide direct links to those of FEMSA Cerveza and Coca-Cola FEMSA. FEMSA Social Responsibility Report 2008 GRI 2.10 • GC I through X Communication with majority and minority stockholders is maintained through the information and communication mechanisms established by the National Banking and Securities Commission (CNBV, acronym in Spanish) and by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), according to applicable legislation in Mexico and the United States, markets in which the company trades its shares. GRI 4.12 Transparency 2008 Awards FEMSA • Socially Responsible Company 2008 (CEMEFI) • Ethics and Values in the Industry 2008 (Association of Industrial Chambers) • Best Employers Mexico 2007-2008 (Hewitt Associates) FEMSA Cerveza FEMSA complies with the highest corporate governance standards and assumes full responsibility for the quality and transparency of its published information. The company abides by the Mexican and the New York Stock Exchange requirements, the U.S. Sarbanes-Oxley Act, and the Code of Best Corporate Practices established by the Mexican Business Association. GRI 4.6 Conflicts of interests (Cervecería Cuauhtémoc Moctezuma) Mexico • • • Socially Responsible Company 2008 (CEMEFI) Best Business Practices, Responsible Consumption category 2008 (CEMEFI) Clean Industry, Guadalajara Plant (Federal Environmental Protection Advocate) Brazil FEMSA’s Business Code of Ethics contains a chapter on conflicts of interests for all employees, directors, and advisors, which establishes their ethical obligations to the company, its investors, clients, creditors, suppliers, government authorities, and the competition. It also includes the basic criteria that govern the ethical behavior of all employees, as representatives of all FEMSA companies. io un ica t Comm n Da y Felipe de J e sús R D irec o dríg t uez L FE M S or o f Hu ó p ez ma n R A Co rpora esou rc e s te O f fice. • • • Social Award (Mayor’s Office of the City of Ponta Grossa) Outstanding Environmental Award (Gravataí Commercial and Industrial Association) Social Responsibility Certification (House of Representatives of the State of Rio Grande do Sul) 15 GRI PR3 This document states that executives and employees must abstain from mediating on behalf of their supervisors, direct reports, colleagues, family members, or friends’ requirements, if said interests are contrary to the company’s best interests. FEMSA Board Members that have conflicts of interests in corporate matters or decisions must abstain from participating in all related discussions and voting processes, without allowing this to affect the quorum that is needed to convene a Board Meeting. This is the same policy that applies to board members of all other public companies. The company has also implemented internal mechanisms, such as the aforementioned Whistle Blowing System, to guarantee transparency in all commercial, labor-related, financial, and social transactions. Product labels and consumer services All nations have established norms that regulate required labeling information for different products; however, there are common requirements to all, such as the following: name of the product, country of origin, the manufacturer’s name and address, information in the official language of the country where the product will be sold, list of ingredients in a descendent quantitative order, expiration date, energetic value statement, warnings (if applicable), net content, and Health Ministry registrations, among others. Our brewery operations in Mexico fully comply with all (100%) of the corresponding Official Norm requirements on our labels, including the following additional information: alcohol content percentage volume and production lot number, while our low-calorie brands also indicate the product’s energetic content in calories per serving. GRI 4.17 Stakeholder concerns The primary concerns stakeholders have mentioned through the company’s different mechanisms relate to the following key topics: health, including obesity and abuse of alcohol consumption; climate change and all matters related to water, energy, gas emissions and waste; and safety and education. In the case of products distributed by Coca-Cola FEMSA, the company that defines the label design and information is the owner of the brand of the product to be bottled and/or distributed, (The Coca-Cola Company, Promotora de Marcas Nacionales, S.A. de C.V., and Mundet, among others), who together with each country’s bottlers work to ensure compliance with all applicable legal provisions. In addition to complying with all required information, all of our products post contact information, such as a customer service telephone line. In addition to complying with all required information, all of our products post contact information, such as a Customer Service telephone line. 16 FEMSA Social Responsibility Report 2008 GRI 4.1 • GC X Corporate Governance One of the Board of Director’s tasks consists of ensuring that all FEMSA decisions comply with established financial transparency, responsibility, and high ethical standards. Having a solid corporate government is the only way to strengthen our company and produce the results expected by our stakeholders. GRI 2.10 • GC I through X 2008 Awards Coca-Cola FEMSA Mexico • Socially Responsible Company (CEMEFI) GRI 4.2, 4.3, 4.5, 4.7, and LA13 Board of Directors FEMSA’s Board of Directors has 19 members, six of which are independent advisors. Board Members are elected in a General Ordinary Stockholders meeting according to Mexican law. Each board member has an alternate director who is authorized to sit on the board when the primary board member is unable to attend the meetings or participate in the Board’s activities. Board members and their alternate directors are appointed to serve for a oneyear period. Corporate bylaws establish that FEMSA Series D shareholders can elect five board members. Board members’ compensation is not currently linked to the company’s performance, but is rather based on prevailing industry standards in companies comparable to FEMSA’s size and earnings. Key executives’ compensation, which must be approved by the Corporate Practices Committee, includes a scheme tied to the company’s performance; a practice that has been extended to other levels within the organization. FEMSA has always sought to create a well-balanced Board of Directors comprised of honorable men and women with broad and diverse professional backgrounds that can add value to the company and raise our level of prestige in the community. Thus, the current Board of Directors is formed by presidents and managing directors from important companies, legal and financial experts, different nationalities, and gender. José Antonio Fernández Carbajal has served as CEO since 1995, and became Chairman of the Board in 2001. During his tenure, our company has experienced a significant growth. Argentina • Best Company to Work For in Argentina (Great Place to Work Institute) Brazil • • • • • The Young People’s Corporate Friend Award (Local House of Representatives) Excellence Award at a Call Center and Best Call Center to Work (Consumidor Moderno magazine) Corporate Friend Award by the City of Campo Grande (Mayor’s Office of the City of Campo Grande) Planet Trophy (The Coca-Cola Company) Respect to the Environment Award (Vale Paraibano daily journal) Colombia • AMCHAM Friendship Award • Time Bank Award (Office of the President of the Republic of Colombia) FEMSA Comercio • Socially Responsible Company 2008 (CEMEFI) • Inclusive Company Award (Government of the State of Colima) • Recognition for offering employment to people with disabilities (Government of Sonora) Area of Strategic Supplies • National Safety Award 2008 (National Private Transportation Association) • Stellar Packaging Award 2008 (Mexican Containers and Packaging Association) FEMSA purchased the largest Coca-Cola franchise in Latin America in 2003, becoming the largest bottler in the region with operations in nine countries. The com- 17 In our company we generate a preventive culture, in which the business strategy design includes risk management in all classifications possible. pany repurchased 30% of FEMSA Cerveza shares in 2004, followed by the acquisition of Brazilian Brewery Kaiser in 2006, and the purchase of Jugos Del Valle in Mexico and Brazil in 2007 and 2008, in a joint venture with The Coca-Cola Company. These actions reinforced FEMSA’s operating and financial position, showing a growth in total revenues of 8.6% compound annual rate over the last five years. The Board of Directors relies on three committees to increase its corporate performance. Audit Committee It is constituted by independent advisors and is responsible for reviewing the accuracy and the integrity of FEMSA’s quarterly and annual financial statements, in accordance with accounting, internal control, and auditing requirements. The Audit Committee is also responsible for the appointment, compensation, retention, and oversight of the independent auditor, who reports directly to this committee. It reviews related party transactions other than in the ordinary course of FEMSA’s business, while identifies and follows up on contingencies and legal proceedings. The Audit Commitee has implemented procedures for receiving, retaining, and addressing complaints regarding accounting, internal control, and auditing matters, including those reported through the Whistle Blowing System regarding questionable accounting or auditing matters. Corporate Practices Committee It is comprised by independent directors and it is responsible for preventing or reducing risks of performing operations that could damage the value of FEMSA or that benefit a particular group of shareholders. This Committee is authorized to call shareholder meetings and include matters on the agenda for that meeting that it may deem appropriate, approve policies on the use of the company’s assets or related party transactions, approve the compensation for key executive officers, and support the Board of Directors in the elaboration of reports on accounting practices. 18 Finance Committee Its responsibilities include evaluating the investment and financing policies proposed by the Chief Executive Officer and identifying risk factors to which the corporation is exposed, as well as evaluating its management policies. GRI 4.11 and SO1 Risk management At FEMSA, the preventive approach in the handling of risks is very important. Therefore, we have established an Incident Management and Crisis Resolution methodology (MIRC, acronym in Spanish) in all Business Units to analyze operational and environmental risks, design of plans, and mitigation programs and projects; as well as to establish coordinated processes and procedures for a crisis resolution, in a possible case something occurs. Through the use of this methodology we generate a preventive culture, in which the business strategy design includes risk management in all classifications possible. FEMSA Social Responsibility Report 2008 GRI 4.12 • GC VII through IX The FEMSA Foundation Fundación FEMSA, A.C. was created in 2008 to promote projects that provide in-depth and long-term solutions for two of the key challenges Latin America and other global regions now face: environmental sustainability and quality of life in the community. The Foundation will initially focus on formulating solutions that contribute to conservation and sustainable use of hydrological resources in Latin America, and supporting nutritional health-related initiatives. FEMSA Foundation operates under a cooperation scheme with other organizations sharing the same principles of solidarity, responsibility, and commitment to improving quality of life in the community, as they jointly strive to generate knowledge to promote projects that will produce a positive outcome regarding the following three core issues: 1. Sustainable Development of Water Resources The Foundation intends to provide comprehensive solutions to the challenges Latin America faces in terms of sustainable management of hydrological resources and access to drinkable water, considering the fact that water is the most important element for development. FEMSA Foundation’s first project consists on the creation of the Water Center for Latin America and the Caribbean, which represents the first major and specific effort in Latin America, focused in sustainable water conservation and usage with the use of leading edge technology and a large number of participating specialists. The Water Center serves as a meeting point and idea exchange venue for knowledge management on water for the public and private sectors, the scientific community, non-profit organizations, and society as a whole. This project is possible with a joint investment of USD $11 million over a five-year period among FEMSA Foundation, Tec de Monterrey, and the Inter-American Development Bank. 2. Quality of Life FEMSA Foundation seeks to form alliances and establish relationships with leading institutions that specifically contribute to improve health and nutrition in Latin America. 3. Promotion of Technological and Scientific Innovation A responsible contribution to water sustainability and improvement of quality of life in the community demands innovative technology development that creates the knowledge that is needed to promote initiatives from a solid foundation. 19 action GRI 4.12 Core Value 1 Quality of Life in the Company FEMSA has a deep sense of respect for human beings, especially for those who choose to work at our company. The company acknowledges its employees as the most valuable resource to meet its goal of creating economic and social value simultaneously. Consequently, our employees and their families are the key axis of the social responsibility scheme that has traditionally characterized our company. 20 FEMSA Social Responsibility Report 2008 value Recognition Makes Us Grow Alejandro Romero enjoyed a very special evening in 2008, when he and eight of his FEMSA Cerveza coworkers at the Guadala jara plant in Mexico were handed the Recognition Torch, after winning the Recognition Makes Us Grow Award, in the Innovation category. This category honors teams that implement the initiatives that have the greatest impact on the company over the course of the year, along with the work centers that post the best results. Alejandro and his team won this award based on their initiative to modify an equipment to produce two different beverages ensuring their odors and flavors were kept separate, and better yet, with no need for investment. Esthela Cadena, who is in charge of Winn ers o f th e “R eco gn itio Ma kes U promoting this program, said that one of n s G row” Aw a rd I nn o va ti on ca teg its key virtues is that it is open to all ory FE M S A C erveza, M exico company employees in all areas, unlike other awards that are limited to specific departments. “This program opens doors to all corporate areas and levels; people are motivated and feel a keen sense of recognition,” she said. The “Recognition Makes Us Grow” contest has its origin in one of the Cuauhtémoc Principles that reads, “Recognize the merit of others” that Don Eugenio Garza Sada promoted and which provides a clear example of how corporate principles are actually carried out. Alejandro and his colleagues proudly show off their torch at the Guadala jara plant. 21 Core Value 1 Quality of Life in the Company GC I, II, IV, V, and VI Social Development Scheme For more than 118 years, FEMSA has developed and implemented its Social Development philosophy to promote an integral development of our employees, regarding familiar, financial, social, labor, educational, and formative matters. This scheme of social development is called BIENSCYF. Sociedad Cuauhtémoc y Famosa (SCYF) has been fundamental to this comprehensive development program. SCYF celebrated 90 years of promoting integral development for all FEMSA employees and their families. Its origins date back to 1918 when SCYF was created in an effort to respond to the epidemic breakouts, poverty, and economic problems that plagued a nation besieged by a revolutionary movement. It was initially created to promote the company’s sustained growth and the integral development of employees and their families, by providing basic grocery supplies to improve their purchasing power, in addition to medical services, savings funds, discounts, sports-related activities, and training courses and scholarships, among other benefits the company provided to support common interests. Today, SCYF promotes a culture of human development, work, and savings through cultural, recreational, and sports-related activities, financial and legal consulting services, scholarships and tuition aid through its 115 Social Development Centers, nine recreational centers in Mexico, and its Argentinean affiliate, SKOFBA. The company continues to promote employee and family growth and wellness through these centers, with a full sense of respect for the geographic territory’s local character and culture. BIENSCYF scheme 22 FEMSA Social Responsibility Report 2008 GRI LA1, LA2, and LA13 • GC VI We have a diverse workforce, which includes men and women from 15 different nationalities, with a growing number of female employees that has continued to rise over time. We also find value in the combination of age groups, where even though we have a young workforce, we give great value to our employees’ experience. Employees by Type of Contract Employees Total number of employees 45.9% Unionized Outsourced Total 50.4% 3.6% 100% Employees by Gender and Type of Contract Employees Unionized Outsourced Women 16.2% 14.0% 46.4% Men 83.8% 86.0% 53.6% 100.0% 100.0% 100.0% Employees by Age Group Age Group % 18-34 67.4% 35-45 23.6% 45 and older 9.0% Total 100% GC I, IV, and V Family Development Actions Heliodoro González Heliodoro González retired 13 years ago and is frequently involved in the programs promoted by Cervecería Cuauhtémoc Moctezuma’s facilities in the city of Tecate, in the Mexican state of Northern Ba ja California. These activities encourage our retirees to stay active and motivated by spending time with their former colleagues, working out, and taking timely medical exams, among other benefits. “The factory is a school for me. I am proud to have belonged to Cervecería and certainly recognize the efforts and support it offers us through its facilities and benefits, as well as the knowledge and practical applications the company provides,” said Heliodoro. Coca-Cola FEMSA Brazil celebrated the sixth edition of its Family Day with the “Your Way of Being Happy” theme. The event was held simultaneously in 14 different cities and gathered over 40,000 employees and their family members. Jundiaí alone witnessed the gathering of 15,000 people who enjoyed the featured circus shows, among other attractions. Coca-Cola FEMSA Argentina also celebrated its Family Day under the theme of “Your Family is your Team”. About 5,500 people gathered in a Buenos Aires theme park to enjoy magic and acrobatic shows, among other activities. Family is fundamental to FEMSA’s social development philosophy and thus provides benefits for employee spouses and children. Through our Social Development Centers we offer all-encompassing programs that include practically all areas of personal and family development. It organizes events to strengthen family integrity and values, children and young people’s development, spousal growth, and community support. FEMSA also promotes a bond between families and the company by building a culture of trust, respect, cooperation, harmony in the workplace, and social wellness. 23 Core Value 1 Quality of Life in the Company REMIL, one of Coca-Cola FEMSA recent acquisitions in Brazil, held its first FEMSA Youth Camp for its employee’s children in 2008. This event was attended by more than 1,400 teenagers who participated in its different training and recreational activities. The Packaging area organizes the “Learning about my Spouse’s Job” program to strengthen company-family relations and gathered over 550 people in the Bajío and Central Mexico territory, who had the opportunity to take a tour in their spouses’ workplace facilities, learn about their key processes, meet their colleagues families and spend time with their family members. Family Day Event held by Coca-Cola FEMSA Argentina. GRI LA11 • GC I, IV, V, and VI Actions to promote education Through Family Visits to the Plants, employee spouses and children have the opportunity to take a tour to the facilities where they receive environmental culture training talks and are able to spend time together in a recreational setting. Coca-Cola FEMSA Argentina, for example, completed a total of 229 visits to the Alcorta plant in 2008, which were attended by 7,900 individuals, including 559 family members. FEMSA understands that education is one of the main motors that drive personal and community development, which is why we have been purposefully committed to promoting education since our early beginnings. An example of this commitment can be found in the Cuauhtémoc Polytechnic School the company opened in 1906 to provide Cervecería Cuauhtémoc employees with elementary, middle school, and technical education. In São Paulo, over 850 wives of FEMSA Cerveza Brazil employees participated in the FEMSA Valuable Women Program, which consists of gastronomy courses, make-up and sewing lessons, and theatre plays, where corporate values are promoted. FEMSA now supports its employees’ children’s education from elementary school through college. The company also provides other benefits, such as aid to purchase books, the delivery of school supplies, and other assistance programs that allow gifted and outstanding students to continue their education. actions with value We allocated over $331 million Mexican pesos (USD $29.6 million) to educational, training, family development, and occupational safety programs for our employees and their families in 2008. 24 FEMSA Social Responsibility Report 2008 An example of said benefits can be found in the CECAC (Centro Escolar Cuauhtémoc), which FEMSA and other group companies built in 1957. The CECAC currently offers pre-school, elementary, and middle school for its employee’s children in Monterrey, Mexico, while also serving the community by accepting local students. Over 2,700 students will benefit from the first-class education the CECAC’s 150 teachers will provide during the 2008-2009 school year. There is no question about the fact that one of FEMSA’s legacies can be seen in its permanent support to the Tecnológico de Monterrey, which started since it was founded in 1943 and headed by Don Eugenio Garza Sada, who then served as the company’s chairman. Currently known as the Tec de Monterrey, this university has become one of the major private universities on the American continent. The KOF Children’s Program in Coca-Cola FEMSA Mexico has recognized over 13,000 employees’ children for their outstanding academic performance since its early beginnings. During the 2007-2008 school year, over 5,900 children with nine and ten point averages [on a scale of one to ten] received the recognition. FEMSA Comercio launched its Middle School Education Plan in 2008, which offers store employees the opportunity to study High School through an open-ended program. FEMSA Cerveza has a similar program that helped 200 of its employees to finish High School in 2008. Coca-Cola FEMSA Colombia, on the other hand, also promotes employee development and supported 45 employees in finishing their High School education in 2008. Workplace … and life values Mónica Villegas joined Coca-Cola FEMSA Central America four years ago. Her first contact with the Coca-Cola FEMSA Social Development scheme took place right after she was hired during the Cultural Day event, which made it easier for her to become a part of the company. Monica learned more about the scheme over time and started to get involved through the company’s internal communication campaigns and activities. “I believe it’s a great scheme because it seeks to promote all-encompassing employee development that is not limited simply to our jobs, but also includes family, health, economic, and other aspects of an individual’s life. Furthermore, it is well-aligned with the company’s profile and the principles that govern our culture, which are based on support and creation of value in our communities.” Monica also believes that another benefit that the Social Development scheme offers is that the employees can take the values home. “These are universal values that seek to do things correct at the first time, pursue excellence as a performance indicator, and promote respect, honesty, and austerity, which is understood as learning how to use our resources to create value. It is the drive that motivates you to obtain everything you want in life.” Centro Escolar Cuauhtémoc classroom in Monterrey, Mexico. 25 Core Value 1 Quality of Life in the Company Coca-Cola FEMSA in Central America offered its employees over 44,500 hours of training on operational safety, and managerial and human development. Coca-Cola FEMSA Argentina, on the other hand, provided an average of 23.3 hours of training per employee, while Coca-Cola FEMSA Colombia invested close to $9.4 million Mexican pesos (USD $841,000) in this matter. Continuos training is a priority at FEMSA. A group of 41 employees at Coca-Cola FEMSA Argentina participated in a program called MBA in Company taught by the Business Management School of the University for the Company of Argentina, with the purpose of helping them maximize their skills and abilities by developing an innovative business vision. Through the Life and Development Program (PLANVIDE), our employees who are close to retirement and their spouses, learn on how to prepare for this new phase in their lives. Besides, our Social Development Centers provide aid and support for retirees by making it easy for them to participate in cultural, recreational, and sports-related activities, among others. GRI LA10 and LA11 • GC I, IV, and VI Actions towards Personnel Development Training represents another form of contribution to people’s human and professional development. The different training programs in our Business Units are open to employees at all levels and in all operational areas. Key training programs are focused on languages, finances, effective hiring procedures, leadership, quality, management, safety, and different technical courses. FEMSA employees hired under all three labor agreement modalities, regular, unionized, and outsourced employees, received close to two million hours of training in 2008, which represented a $190 million Mexican pesos (USD $17 million) investment. 26 The area of Logistic services provided an average of 48 hours of training to its unionized workers and 30 hours to its regular employees in 2008, an investment valued at $4 million Mexican pesos (USD $358,000). Some of the aforesaid key training courses included leadership, health and safety, and freight elevator operations, among other position-specific courses. GRI HR8 • GC I and II Actions towards Human Rights All our security staff members take permanent training courses FEMSA has designed and uniformly applies across all of its Business Units in all of the countries in which we operate. This training is provided to all (100%) team members, including direct and outsourced employees. The content of these specific courses covers diverse fields and topics related to their security jobs, such as considerations on human rights, fair, and dignified treatment for all individuals, speaking and listening skills towards different opinions, as well as procedures to handle difficult situations, among others. FEMSA Social Responsibility Report 2008 GC I, IV and VI FEMSA University FEMSA University is a training and development tool made available to FEMSA employees in all Business Units. The blend of virtual and direct educational processes allow students to acquire useful job-related knowledge and experience enlightening idea exchanges with peers in other countries and Business Units. Over 20,100 employees at all levels within the organization took at least one training module through this modern learning center in 2008. GC I and II Actions towards Industrial Safety and Occupational Health Occupational Health represents one of our key priorities based on its implications on FEMSA employees’ physical integrity and wellness. At FEMSA, our business units operate their safety and security programs according to guidelines established by the Occupational Safety and Health Management System (SASSO, acronym in Spanish), which consists of a methodology that is used to detect health and occupational risks, provide the proper response and correct such risks, and prepare and circulate campaigns to reinforce a culture of prevention and self care. Occupational health within the SASSO program consists of 12 practices that are applied to eliminate or reduce accidents in all job-related activities, including industrial, administrative, and distribution activities based on the premise that all accidents can be prevented. Implement- We promote professional development of our personnel through the FEMSA University. ing this system has started to yield results as Coca-Cola FEMSA Mexico saw a 33% reduction in its operating accidents after raising awareness, diagnosing, creating, and training its SASSO committees. FEMSA Cerveza Mexico, on the other hand, is also implementing these actions in its Distribution area and has increased safety levels and their benefits in all of its regions across Mexico. actions with value Coca-Cola FEMSA in Central America provided more than 44,500 hours in training focused on safety, and management and human development. 27 Core Value 1 Quality of Life in the Company actions with value The Logistics area was granted the first place in the National Safety Award for the third time in a row, in Mexico. GRI LA13 • GC I, II, IV, and VI The Logistics area was recognized with the first place in the National Safety Award for the third year in a row, in Mexico. This award acknowledges the company’s efforts to guarantee that its vehicle fleet complies with risk prevention and safety regulations and standards. It also honors the organization for its investment in driver’s safety and training, technology, and environmental care. Coca-Cola FEMSA Panama’s “Toma2, Por tu Vida” (Second Chance, for Your Life) program seeks to raise employee awareness on the importance of preventing traffic accidents, specifically among employees that work in the presales and distribution departments. Coca-Cola FEMSA Colombia’s “Andando Seguro” (Staying Safe) program seeks to encourage a culture of self care through different communication tools and national awareness campaigns. These efforts had a direct impact on close to 8,000 employees in 2008. Actions towards Diversity At FEMSA, everyone regardless of their age, gender, financial status, nationality, religious belief, or race, including people with disabilities, will find equal employment opportunities under the same conditions and circumstances, rights, obligations, and responsibilities, considering the same skills and abilities. Our hiring processes are based on the principle of equal employment opportunities in all of the countries in which we operate. FEMSA implemented its Labor Integration System in 2001 to support its belief in equal employment opportunities, which primarily promotes the hiring of the elders and people with disabilities, while promoting cooperative and harmonious workplace relations based on diversity. By the end of 2008, this program had incorporated to labor force over 1,500 people with disabilities and elders across all levels of our different Business Units in the countries in which we operate. The Packaging area invested approximately $4 million Mexican pesos (USD $358,000) in 22 Occupational Safety programs. More than 10,500 people were benefited through training programs, the creation of mixed commissions, first aid workshops, and auditing courses, among others. The Manufacturing area of Coca-Cola FEMSA Venezuela, which includes four plants, succeeded in reducing 75% of its incapacitating accidents in the first quarter in 2008, compared to the same period in 2007. Coca-Cola FEMSA Brazil, on the other hand, reduced its number of accidents by 34% from January through May compared to the same period in 2007. Employees at the OXXO Call Center in Mexico City. 28 FEMSA Social Responsibility Report 2008 Always Helpful and with a Smile on his Face We prom ote a cu lture o f th e “An d s a n do S e guro” pro elf ca re w ith C o ca- C gra m. ola FE M SA Colo mbia. FEMSA counts with an important workforce of more than 120,000 employees in nine countries of Latin America. Our company is enriched with a blend of 15 nationalities, diverse cultures, religious beliefs, ages, and levels of expertise, with a strong emphasis on female employment. GC I through VI Actions towards Cooperative and Harmonious Labor Relations FEMSA and its Business Units have historically maintained cooperative and harmonious labor relations with the union organizations that represent the interests of its unionized workers. This relation is based on mutual trust and permanent and open communication, which has allowed FEMSA to implement and promote institutional initiatives for the company and its employees’ common good. “His joy transforms us. We can come to work feeling down, but his smile is contagious and lifts our spirits.” This is how Carlos Quiroga, an OXXO store commission agent in Monterrey, Mexico talks about Hans Samuel Urbina, a young man afflicted by the Down Syndrome that started working at the store in mid-2008. Hans joined OXXO through FEMSA’s Labor Integration System and has won appreciation from his peers for a job well done, while clients have expressed their gratitude for his helpful attitude, especially when he helps them carry the groceries to their cars. Hans said he is very happy on the job – with a great big smile on his face –, and added how he enjoys cleaning shelves, stocking products, replenishing the coffee stand, and earning money. Quiroga added that “customers notice when Hans has a day off and always ask about him when he is not at the store.” Dialogue, communication, attention, and the timely resolution of issues is spearheaded by the creation of mixed commissions integrated by corporate representatives, employees, and union delegates that operate within the workplace centers and attend to labor, industrial safety, occupational health, and training and development concerns, among others. All FEMSA Business Units work under a comprehensive self-evaluation system to ensure compliance with their legal and labor obligations. This system measures observance of employee rights, while also includes initiatives on social development, health, safety, and other topics. Hans Samuel Urbina, OXXO store in Monterrey, Mexico. 29 action GRI 4.12, LA8, and LA9 Core Value 2 Health and Wellness Health is an issue that has acquired significant relevance across the globe, specifically among certain underprivileged groups. Consequently, and because health is one of the basic conditions individuals need to ensure their wholesome development, FEMSA has dedicated great attention and effort to health and wellness matters. 30 FEMSA Social Responsibility Report 2008 value Charting my Own Destiny FEMSA Cerveza developed and implemented a program called “Charting my Own Destiny” together with the University of Monterrey. University specialists designed a program for students between 11 and 19 years old to develop skills and abilities that help them make informed, healthy, and responsible decisions concerning all aspects of their lives. The program consists of developing 12 skills and abilities in the following three key areas: social, cognitive, and emotional control. This program was tested under a 2007-2008 pilot program in 180 schools across Nuevo Leon, Mexico that reached 26,000 students. During the 2008-2009 school year, it will benefit 225,000 students in all three secondary school levels in 890 public and private schools, including federal, community, and state, technical, and distance education secondary schools across this state. The program will reach 48,000 fifth and sixth grade elementary school students, and first secondary year students in Campeche, Mexico during the 2008-2009 school year, as it is implemented in public, private, community, and indigenous elementary and secondary schools. Outcome assessments applied before and after the workshops have provided encouraging results, showing that students made significant progress in eight of the program’s 12 skills and abilities. The “ C h a rt in g m Mon t y O erre y, Mexic wn D estin y” E ve o. nt “We were impressed with the results. We found that students actually changed their behavior, as the program had a significant effect on three types of life skills,” said Irma Adriana Garza, Undersecretary of the Secretariat of Public Education in the state of Nuevo Leon, who immediately after learning about it, expressed an interest in offering it to all 225,000 secondary students in the state. FEMSA is already planning to take this program to other regions in Mexico and Latin America. 31 Core Value 2 Health and Wellness FEMSA’s Biotechnology Center at the Tec de Monterrey In an effort to support health research, FEMSA contributed to the establishment of FEMSA’s Biotechnology Center at the Tec de Monterrey. The Center opened in early 2008 and has over 100 scientists focused on bioengineering, bioprocesses, agro biotechnology, bio-energy, and sustainable water usage research and development, among other topics. The FEMSA Biotechnology Center at the Tec de Monterrey, Mexico. 32 FEMSA Social Responsibility Report 2008 GC I and IV Actions towards Health and Wellness for employees and their families FEMSA has an extensive infrastructure in place to provide healthcare services to employees and their families, ranging from medical attention at the workplace, through firstclass hospital services. The company and its unions have established joint programs to provide employee healthcare, such as the Occupational Safety and Health Management System (SASSO), and the Mixed Health and Safety Commissions that operate at each one of the company’s workplace centers. SASSO has been uniformly implemented across all Business Units and consists of 20 programs that include occupational risk prevention and industrial contingencies, yearly medical check-ups, and preventive medicine, vaccination, nutrition, and physical activity campaigns, among others. One of the company’s most important healthcare support programs includes the Cuauhtémoc y Famosa Clinic, which was founded in Monterrey, Mexico in 1945 and provides all types of medical care. We have installed leading edge technology to improve the quality of the healthcare provided, such as the FEMSA Telemedicine System that provides efficient and expeditious distance healthcare services to prevent, diagnose, and treat diseases. José Alfredo Hernández Aguirre and Marcela Velázquez Sáenz with their newborn son. Clínica Cuauhtémoc y Famosa, Monterrey, Mexico. Coca-Cola FEMSA Colombia implemented its Growth and Development program in 2008, which focuses on monitoring its employees’ children’s growth and development and identifying probable diseases in their early stages. This program, which has already benefited 400 people, provides parents with complementary information on healthcare topics that are relevant to their children’s development. The Packaging and Logistics area implemented different programs that benefited over 9,000 people in 2008, as part of their permanent commitment to its employees’ health. An example of this effort is found in the annual medical check-ups and sessions with specialists who shared information concerning stress controls, habits to help prevent heart attacks, vaccination campaigns, healthy eating patterns, eating disorders, and addiction control, among others. actions with value FEMSA invested over $217 million Mexican pesos (USD $19.4 million) in internal and external health and wellness programs in 2008. 33 Core Value 2 Health and Wellness actions with value Through the Citizens Plaza program held in Brazil, more than 3,550 people from the community received healthcare services free of charge. Coca-Cola FEMSA Argentina offered an average of 1,800 appointments per month, through its medical service offices located at its operating units. Olympic Games that together with the participation of sport academies and a variety of tournaments, benefited over 48,000 people in Monterrey alone. In addition, over 200 employees have joined Espacio Saludable (Healthy Space), a private gym the company opened at the Alcorta Plant in an effort to promote healthy life habits and encourage employees to work out. At Valencia, Venezuela, the first Coca-Cola FEMSA Valencia Sport Games 2008 edition was held, where more than 340 employees participated in the event’s different sport disciplines. Close to 200 teenage children of Coca-Cola FEMSA Panama employees participated in the Healthy Summer program in 2008, a sports-related and recreational event that featured communication, values, teamwork, and development of leadership skills and abilities workshops. FEMSA knows that sports are vital for a healthy lifestyle, which is why we organize sport events that encourage employees and their families to integrate and spend time together, in addition to the physical benefits these events provide. An example of this is found in the FEMSA Cup held in Brazil, which drew 400 people this year. Coca-Cola FEMSA Colombia, on the other hand, organized different soccer, volleyball, softball, and other sport tournaments over the course of 2008, in which more than 5,600 people participated. Mexico held the SCYF 90th Anniversary Over 20,700 people have been trained through the VIRE program between 2002 and 2008. 34 GC I, II, IV, and V Actions towards Community Health and Wellness FEMSA creates all-encompassing health programs that cover aspects such as healthy and responsible lifestyles, nutrition, and addiction prevention. Our Business Units work side-by-side with the authorities in preventive medicine and vaccination campaigns, while supporting institutions that fight specific ailments and help the sick. Besides, they develop actions in order to take basic healthcare services to the impoverished. It is important to state that FEMSA pioneered the implementation of programs to promote the responsible consumption of alcoholic beverages in Mexico, along with the benefits of adopting healthy and balanced lifestyles, especially among young people. One of these initiatives is known as VIRE: Responsible Lifestyle Promoters Workshop, that seeks to raise awareness about the need to create and develop a culture of responsibility, especially among young people. This training and preventive workshop is shared at schools and universities across Mexico. The University of Monterrey together with the Social Research Foundation (Fundación de Investigaciones Sociales, A.C.) developed this program in 2001, at the request of Cervecería Cuauhtémoc Moctezuma, a FEMSA Social Responsibility Report 2008 FEMSA Comercio in Chihuahua, Mexico, organized the 2008 21K OXXO race, which has become a tradition since 1990, gathering 1,800 athletes, among national and international runners, people with disabilities, and indigenous athletes from the Sierra Tarahumara in this Mexican state. 21K OXXO, Chihuahua, Mexico. One of the most successful sports tournaments in Mexico and other Latin American countries is the Coca-Cola Soccer Cup, which is sponsored by The Coca-Cola Company and supported by the system’s bottlers. This tournament gathers close to 100,000 young people every year, in Mexico alone. In addition to the physical activities, it promotes teamwork values, discipline, and the importance of working out and caring for your health, among other topics, besides helping prevent teenage addictions. The program also allows young people to access professional soccer through the new Coca-Cola All Stars initiative. FEMSA Cerveza subsidiary. The program has trained over 20,700 people through the more than 420 workshops it has held in 36 cities in 14 states across Mexico, since it was created in 2002 and through the end of 2008. Through the Citizens Plaza program held in Brazil in 2008, over 3,550 people from the community received healthcare services free of charge, such as diabetes and blood pressure tests, information on healthy eating choices, and legal consulting services, among others. Because of the benefits obtained from regular physical activity, FEMSA supports sports-related activities at all levels, particularly at an amateur level, through the sponsorship of sport clinics and tournaments for recreational purposes, as well as offering support to clubs and schools in 36 cities in 14 Mexican states. The C oca- C ola ocaThe C Cola men ourna ccer T o S a Panam Mexic o So ccer Tourn amen t t 35 action GRI 4.12, EC1, EC8, and SO1 Core Value 3 Community Engagement Following our firm commitment to contribute and take an active role in the development of the communities we belong to and in which we serve our products and services, we support initiatives that allow us to improve their quality of life. 36 FEMSA Social Responsibility Report 2008 value Time Bank in Colombia Álvaro Pérez voluntarily decided to reintegrate into society. He heard about the Time Bank program from the High Board for Reintegration, and decided to join the Bank as soon as it was created, while inviting others to join him. The Time Bank provides people, formerly involved in the guerilla groups, with the knowledge and skills they need to lead a productive life. Currently, Coca-Cola FEMSA Colombia is engaged in the program with the participation of 50 employees from the Internal Central office that work on training a group of people who have decided to reintegrate into civil society, by providing them with tools that encourage productivity. This program is sponsored by Colombiana Company together with local authorities. Álvaro believes the benefits are evident. “This program has been highly beneficial and enlightening. I was able to form my own company thanks to the program. We have all learned so much. Before, we only knew how to make garments, but now we have learned how to manage the business. I want to invite some of my other companions to join this new life.” Jua n C a rlo s J a ra millo K OF C o , D irec lombia tor o f in 2 0 0 8 O p e ra t High B , a n d re ion s fo o a rd o f presen t r I n tegra a tives o w a s cr tion wh f th e ea ted. en th e T ime B ank 37 Core Value 3 Community Engagement The Designated Driver® Program FEMSA Cerveza Mexico continued to reinforce its Designated Driver ® program through Cervecería Cuauhtémoc Moctezuma, by promoting responsible driving practices. The company launched a new advertising campaign in 2008, with crash test dummies and a tagline that read, “Unlike him, you were not made to crash”, to encourage young people to engage in safe and responsible fun and entertainment. The program registered 41,000 new drivers over the course of the year. The Designated Driver® program has registered close to 133,000 drivers since its beginning in 2002, and has directly benefited approximately 600,000 people. To recognize the development and implementation of these types of programs, Cervecería Cuauhtémoc Moctezuma, a FEMSA Cerveza subsidiary, received the Award for Best Social Responsibility Practices in 2008, from the Mexican Center for Philanthropy (CEMEFI), under the Responsible Consumption category. The Designated Driver® Campaign. 38 FEMSA Social Responsibility Report 2008 actions with value We invested over $400 million Mexican pesos (USD $35.9 million) in community support. We constantly seek to obtain a better understanding of our environment, which allows us to design job plans that effectively respond to educational, cultural, sports-related, development, and social assistance needs. In early 2008, the company created the Community Affairs and Social Responsibility Team, managed by Corporate Affairs, with the objective of promoting the creation of FEMSA’s social values while building and maintaining ties with our stakeholders to facilitate our businesses and communities’ growth and operations. The Community Affairs and Social Responsibility Team encourages the application of tools that are used to evaluate and mitigate the impact corporate operations might have on the immediate surroundings, if this were to be the case. These analytical tools allow the local heads of the Business Units to create specific plans and build community relations in an attempt to understand the community concerns and needs, and somehow help them resolve these issues. supporting public and private universities, such as the Tec de Monterrey and scientific research activities. It also mobilizes programs that promote leadership and values, in order to help people become trained, responsible, and committed citizens to their communities. We have permanently supported academic efforts at the Tec de Monterrey, one of the most prestigious universities in Latin America that offered educational programs to over 90,000 students in 33 campuses across Mexico in 2008. Our aid includes research, business-school ties, and corporate leadership programs, among others. Furthermore, in Mexico we sponsor a joint scholarship fund with the University of Monterrey to help outstanding students further their education, while also being able to work in the company’s internship programs. Thirteen students received this type of aid in 2008. One of our first imperatives in Brazil has consisted in help- GC I, II, IV, V, and VI Actions towards Education FEMSA firmly believes that the value of education drives personal and community growth, providing development opportunities for all. The company is aware of the important consequences of this action and has earmarked most of its community donations towards education, covering practically all teaching-related areas. FEMSA specifically supports schools in deprived areas by helping children and teenagers stay in school, improving academic quality, and providing job training while We encourage children’s development through our Coca-Cola FEMSA Colombia playrooms. 39 Core Value 3 Community Engagement actions with value The Valuing of the Young Program benefited 1,000 people in 2008 and reduced illiteracy levels by 95% in the communities it supported. ing reduce school dropout levels and illiteracy through programs such as, Education for Work and Valuing of the Young, the latter of which benefited 1,000 people in 2008, reducing illiteracy levels by 95% in the communities we supported. In addition to providing academic knowledge, the program also focuses on raising the levels of self-esteem and social skills among participants. The support of reading diffusion mechanisms has played a key role in Venezuela, where close to 86,000 people benefited from the “Refresh Yourself Reading” program Coca-Cola FEMSA Venezuela developed together with The Coca-Cola Company and the Book Bank. This initiative encourages the creation of reading spaces as well as training workshops for parents, teachers, and librarians. Additionally, we supported the El Nacional in the Classroom program which through a monthly publication of an educational series in daily journals, seeks to promote reading habits in children and provide teaching tools parents and teachers are able to multiply. This program benefited 200,000 people in 2008. responsible lifestyles. The conferences taught by successful and national acknowledged characters had a positive effect on 110,000 people in 2008. FEMSA Cerveza also participated in the Guía T (Guide Yourself) event that promotes the importance of making career decisions through proper vocational orientation programs among High School students. More than 16,000 people attended this event in Mexico City this year, including students, professors, parents, and guests. Coca-Cola FEMSA Colombia also supports the Playroom Program of the Children’s Day Corporation. By providing equipped, free of charge public spaces, children, parents, and teachers can engage in activities that encourage creativity, imagination, and autonomy. Through these playrooms, values and skills are reinforced to help children The University of Monterrey developed the Responsible Waiter Workshop at Cervecería Cuauhtémoc Moctezuma’s request, a FEMSA Cerveza subsidiary, to raise awareness among waiters and the people in charge of consumption centers that sell alcoholic beverages, and train them on the importance of their responsibility in serving these products. It also promotes quality services, certain civil protection aspects, and awards participants for the role they play in preventing alcohol abuse. By 2008, the program had trained over 2,300 waiters through 71 workshops. The Tour with Responsibility for Success consists on a series of conferences at schools, universities, and other forums to promote talent values, efforts, discipline, and character among young people as it seeks to foster 40 C ity. ico M ex in en t T Ev Guía FEMSA Social Responsibility Report 2008 Supporting our Community ”Refresh yourself Reading” program benefited 86,000 people in Venezuela. grow and develop into responsible, tolerant, and supporting human beings. The company currently sponsors the La Tora Playroom in Barrancabermeja, and provides the required materials to the San Martín Playroom in Medellín. This program benefited more than 7,000 people in 2008. FEMSA has sponsored the Professional Baseball Hall of Fame since it was first inaugurated to honor the most outstanding players in the history of this sport in Mexico. This center, which has a museum and provides recreational activities related to baseball, celebrated its 35th anniversary and hosted over 134,000 visitors in 2008. Its website registered almost 500,000 visits this year. Most part of the year, the city of Tecate in the Mexican state of Ba ja California, suffers from water shortages. However, assistance provided by the Tecate Plant of Cervecería Cuauhtémoc Moctezuma has played a key role in making sure that two ma jor areas are kept green in the city: the Los Encinos Municipal Park and the Insurgentes Corridor. The Plant irrigates both facilities with its own treated water, which is sent to fountains and an artificial lake to make sure the water is reused. As a result, the town has saved significant amounts on water consumption and costs, for instance, Los Encinos Park, has reduced its costs by 60%, while the Insurgentes Corridor has saved 100% of its costs. Armando Zavala, Head of the Ecological Department in the township of Tecate believes that Cervecería Cuauhtémoc Moctezuma’s respect for the environment sets an example other companies should follow. “Treated water usage represents a huge contribution to our local ecology, since it allows us to beautify our green areas and pour vitality into the Tecate River, while maximizing our water usage, which is scarce and very important to the region.” 41 Core Value 3 Community Engagement GRI EC6 • GC II, IV, and V Supplier development and support for the local economy FEMSA firmly believes that the creation of economic and social values is a continuous and ongoing process and not a finite goal, which is why we work hard to integrate our social responsibility activities into key business processes. The supply chain is a fundamental link we are specifically interested in developing. As all on-going business, economic, technical, logistics, and legal criteria, as well as reputation and reliability are the starting points in the supplier selection process. Aspects such as labor liabilities and the exclusion of child labor are also considered. At FEMSA Cerveza, we initially seek to purchase all of our required products and services in Mexico and only take foreign suppliers into account when the specialized or unique supplies needed cannot be obtained in Mexico. In the case of agricultural supplies, for example, the company is duty-bound to purchase all of its malt supplies from Mexican farmers and will only import grains when national production is insufficient to supply the local industry’s needs. Coca-Cola FEMSA Colombia supported a two-year program to develop four strategic suppliers as part of its effort to balance commercial trade between Colombia and Mexico, and reduce Colombian reliance on a limited num- IDEARSE program, Monterrey, Mexico. ber of client countries. The purpose of this program consists on creating new jobs in Colombia that can produce quantifiable results in 2009. Through the sponsorship of the IDEARSE program in Mexico, FEMSA encouraged small and medium-sized suppliers to adopt a work culture based on social responsibility vision and values. During the course of this project that lasted 18 months and which FEMSA implemented as a joint effort with the Interamerican Development Bank and the Anáhuac University, the participating companies and a group of specialized consultants worked to set the basis to drive profitability, based on a socially responsible performance in different areas such as finances, strategic planning, human resources, and corporate governance, among others. This initiative had a positive impact on a workforce of more than 1,000 employees. actions with value Between 2002 and 2008, the OXXO PRO program has collected $260 million Mexican pesos (USD $23.2 million) from its generous clients, benefiting 729 institutions in 59 cities across Mexico. 42 Justina’s case Justina, a young 16 year-old girl from the Mexican state of Hidalgo, suffered a series of health problems that finally forced her to go to the hospital, where her medical studies revealed a very difficult reality: Justina had leukemia. Her family’s impoverished condition made it practically impossible for her to have access to medical treatments and the possibility of surgery was even more remote. This situation reached the ears of Justina’s sister’s boss in Monterrey, Mexico, who suggested them to go to AMANEC, Asociación Mexicana de Asistencia a Niños con Enfermedades Catastróficas A.C. (Mexican Association that Helps Children with Serious Diseases), an institution that helps leukemia patients and has received donations from OXXO’s Social Responsibility Program PRO. Consequently, Justina and her family traveled to Monterrey where studies revealed that one of her brothers was a compatible bone marrow donor. Justin a De la C r uz S án c h ez Justina is now home after a successful operation; she started High School and plans to become a pediatrician. This effort, which is part of OXXO’s Social Responsibility program, invites customers to round off their bill and donate the change to a special cause. The funds raised are donated to local health, educational, and social assistance non-profit organizations. PRO has supported 729 institutions in 59 cities in Mexico, with donations in excess of $260 million Mexican pesos (USD $23.2 million) between 2002 and 2008. It raised more than $60 million Mexican pesos (USD $5.3 million) in 2008 alone, to support 179 institutions, 46 of which provide educational services and 59 of which are involved in providing assistance with healthrelated matters. GC I and II Actions towards Social Assistance Over the course of our history, at FEMSA we have shown interest and concern for supporting those causes that help improve quality of life in our communities, especially those with high levels of marginalization. 15th edition of the Eugenio Garza Sada Award in 2008, in the individual and institutions category, respectively. These winners were selected out of a total of 81 participants from different states in Mexico. This is why we provide different types of support, through our own programs or through non-profit organizations that meet a specific need in the community, such as providing food, housing and shelter, and emergency assistance. During 2008 in Monterrey, Mexico, the construction activities began to build the Zambrano Hellión Medical Center, a hospital that will be operated by the Tec de Monterrey and will be focused on research and medical care for two of the deadliest diseases with the highest mortality rates in the world: cancer and heart disease. FEMSA donated almost five hectares of prime city property to this cause. It is important to note the formal support and recognition our company offers to people and institutions that, inspired by Don Eugenio Garza Sada’s work and the values he preached, further social progress and economic development in a community. José Guadalupe González Múzquiz and the Esposos Rodríguez Foundation won the Coca-Cola FEMSA Mexico donated over 850 blankets to the One Kilometer of Blankets program, sponsored by the Global Healing Association and the Mexico City 43 Core Value 3 Community Engagement Dining halls’ milk donations Coca-Cola FEMSA Argentina reinforces its community ties by purchasing long-life milk with funds collected from its employees’ children’s summer camp registration fees. The company matched the funds that were raised to be able to purchase approximately 6,000 liters of milk it donated to seven schools and dining halls near its operating facilities, which benefited close to 1,800 children. Silvina Mabel Meriño, an HR Analyst from U.O. Parral, said: “I was thrilled to witness delivery of the donation and see the joy it created. It helped me understand the importance of solidarity and how much our society needs our support.” Food Bank. Coca-Cola FEMSA Colombia. day in 2008. This program is sponsored by the American Nicaraguan Foundation and supported by Coca-Cola FEMSA Nicaragua and The Coca-Cola Company. During 2008, the services provided by 14 Food Banks operating in major Colombian cities, benefited close to 204,000 people living in poverty. Coca-Cola FEMSA supported this effort by providing transportation and refrigeration services, offering legal advice, and contributing with product donation. After heavy rains hit Costa Rica and thousands of people were left homeless, Coca-Cola FEMSA employees came together in an effort to collect food, clothing, and personal care products to lend a hand to those affected. GC I and V Actions towards Arts and Culture FEMSA sponsors cultural activities as another means to contribute to education and community development by endorsing initiatives that encourage a closer approach to different expressions of art, and the promotion of artistic creations through events and contests. authorities. A total of 9,000 blankets were collected and donated to poor children during the winter season. The One Meal, One Smile program encourages our employees and their families to show their solidarity and participate in civic activities in Nicaragua. More than 10,100 underprivileged children received one free meal every school 44 Thousands of children and teenagers in Brazil have direct access to the theatre through the FEMSA Award to the Infant and Juvenile Theatre, which has promoted artistic expression development through 15 program editions in São Paulo, as a means to training and entertainment. This oneof-a-kind program in Latin America, works together with another program called FEMSA Takes You to the Theatre, that benefited 10,300 children and young people in 2008, who were able to come into the theatre and discover an educational and training tool through this artistic form of expression. FEMSA Social Responsibility Report 2008 actions with value More than 10,100 underprivileged children received a free meal every school day through the One Meal, One Smile Program in Nicaragua. We also promote art and culture through the FEMSA Art Collection that contains more than 1,100 works of modern and contemporary Latin American art that is made public through different cultural exhibitions in Mexico and abroad. More than 751,000 people had the opportunity to enjoy the itinerant exhibitions of the FEMSA Art collection in 2008. An example of this is found in the sample of 41 works painted by famous artists that was part of the exhibition titled “Latitudes: Latin American Masters”, which was presented at the National Museum of Fine Arts in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Other exhibitions from the FEMSA Collection included “Reality and Subtleties”, featured in the Central Library at the Tec de Monterrey, and “Symbolism and Destruction”, which was exhibited in the cities of León and Guanajuato in the Mexican state of Guanajuato. selected by famous artists and specialized art critics. The Biennial honors the winners with a cash award and a working residence for one month, which is sponsored by the French Alliance at the School of Art and Design of SaintÉtienne, France. More than 2,300 works by 920 artists participated in this initiative’s Eighth Edition. During 2008, the complete exhibition, comprised of 69 art pieces, including the winning pieces with honorable mentions and state awards, was exhibited at the Center of Arts in Monterrey, the San Ildefonso Museum in Mexico City, and the Jesús Gallardo Gallery in León, Guanajuato, in Mexico. In addition to the exhibitions FEMSA organizes, the Collection also enhances other art samples as individual works are loaned to other exhibitions. Approximately 733,000 people had the opportunity to view the 16 works FEMSA individually loaned to other museums and cultural spaces in 2008. The FEMSA Monterrey Biennial, a bi-annual plastic arts contest, is another one of our cultural activities that focuses on acknowledging, strengthening, stimulating, and disseminating artistic creations in Mexico. This contest gathers renowned artists from all over Mexico whose works are The exhibition titled, “Latitudes: Latin American Masters,” presented at the National Museum of Fine Arts in Buenos Aires, Argentina was visited by both the Mexican and the Argentinean Presidents. 45 action GRI 4.12 and EN30 Core Value 4 Environmental Care Adhering to the sustainability principle, FEMSA seeks to maintain a balance between its operations and the environment by developing initiatives and programs to favor the reduction or elimination of its environmental impact. 46 FEMSA Social Responsibility Report 2008 value Best Practices in Water Savings: Environmental Management System The results are clear: FEMSA Cerveza plants in Mexico substantially increased production between 1992 and 2008; however, they were able to reduce their water usage levels by 54% per liter of beer produced. This type of success stories have made the company a global reference in the industry in terms of how it saves this vital liquid by producing one liter of beer with just 3.8 liters of water, compared to the global average of 10 liters of water used to produce one liter of beer. This achievement is the result of the work performed by the Central Environmental Committee and the breweries that work together in an effort to implement best practices related to water saving, energy, reduction of gas emissions, and other topics that allow friendly ecosystem operations. Once a year, plant employees get together to present and share their achievements and best practices so the other breweries can replicate them. Alfonso Cantú and Jorge Castillo, two of the men responsible for promoting and following up on this system have said that the key to this success is found in the program’s functionality and the serious attitude the plants take regarding the system. Another fundamental element that further supports the system is the fact that all plant investment authorizations are conditioned to creating a favorable environmental impact. Wa ter Trea tm ent Pla FEM SA nt Cervez a Mexic o. The system received the Best Environmental Practice Award from the Mexican Center for Philanthropy (CEMEFI), based on its Environmental Management System, which also adheres to environmental standards and has received the Mexican National Quality Award. The system has also led to a 29% decrease in electrical power consumption between 1992 and 2008, with significant CO2 and NOx level reductions. 47 Core Value 4 Environmental Care The Water Center for Latin America and the Caribbean The Water Center for Latin America and the Caribbean, FEMSA Foundation’s first ma jor activity created jointly with the Tec de Monterrey and the Interamerican Development Bank, seeks to resolve one of the key issues suffered by the ma jority of the region’s population. These efforts will drive scientific innovation and applied technology to contribute to community sustainability and quality of life. The Center will thus become a very important platform for development, capacities, and knowledge that will guide to improve the management and usage of water resources in Latin America and the Caribbean. The FEMSA Foundation and the Water Center for Latin America and the Caribbean launch event in Monterrey, Mexico. 48 FEMSA Social Responsibility Report 2008 As part of our sustainability strategy, FEMSA seeks to maintain a balance between its operations and the environment by developing initiatives and programs to reduce or eliminate its environmental impact. On principle, all of our plants comply with environmental standards and legislation that prevail in the regions or countries in which they operate, even exceeding them at times. Environmental Care The organization permanently focuses on finding opportunities to reduce environmental impacts, implement clean and low environmental impact technologies, promote eco-efficiency, and provide permanent employee training courses on the importance of environmental protection. GRI EN26 • GC VII, VIII, and IX Actions for the Sustainable Use of Water Our facilities have installed permanent operational programs to maximize and reduce water usage. These measures include activities that range from water treatment plants, the use of energy-efficient equipment, technologies and recovery systems, to awareness campaigns for company employees and their families. The FEMSA Cerveza bottle washing process Monterrey, Mexico. Because water is a vital source of life and an indispensable raw material for a beverage company, at FEMSA we strive to ensure the most efficient use, treatment, and dumping of this vital liquid in all of our plants and processes based on each country’s rules and regulations, and have even exceeded the corresponding official requirements. The company currently operates 33 water treatment plants, 20 of which are in Mexico. The construction of the Wastewater Treatment Plant was completed in Panama in 2008, and construction activities on another plant were started in Barcelona, Venezuela. With these actions we achieve that 90% of Coca-Cola FEMSA plants treat their wastewater and comply with local regulations and The Coca-Cola Company norms, before dumping the water into sewage systems or a body of water. The company expects to continue moving in this direction to make sure all (100%) of our plants treat their wastewater by 2010. actions with value We accomplish 90% of all Coca-Cola FEMSA plants to treat their wastewater before dumping it into the sewage system or into a body of water. 49 Core Value 4 Environmental Care FEMSA Cerveza invested close to $2 million Mexican pesos (USD $179,000) in different areas of the beer production process, such as the brewing, cooling, and bottling process, attaining savings between 50% to 100% on water usage and/or recovery rate. Volunteers cleaning up the coasts, beaches, and wetlands. Coca-Cola FEMSA Colombia. Improvements to reduce Coca-Cola FEMSA’s water usage allow us to save close to 890,000 cubic meters of water in 2008, which is equal to the annual average used by more than 2,500 families with five members each. Coca-Cola FEMSA Colombia invested close to $6 million Mexican pesos (USD $537,000) in 2008 to reduce its water usage; consequently, water usage per liter of beverage produced improved by 7.2%. In 2008 Coca-Cola FEMSA supported the actions for the cleaning and recovery process of the ground waters of Humedal Capellanía, a major water source in Colombia that had been suffering damages. The company, together with the Secretariat of the Environment in Colombia and other organizations, signed the Humedal Capellanía Recovery Pact, which will set the stage to start working on projects to balance its natural ecosystem. In addition, Coca-Cola FEMSA Colombia led the cleaning journey for coasts, beaches, and wetlands called Everyone for the Water, for the third year in a row. The program is implemented in a joint effort with The Coca-Cola Company and other companies in six cities across the nation. The main goals are to collect garbage in the aforesaid sites, which totaled 16 tons in 2008, and further the development of environmental care protection habits – a message that reached the nearly 2,000 volunteers that participated in this journey. On the other hand, Coca-Cola FEMSA Mexico implemented a program that has engaged its employees in leak detection, recovering, and reusing water in its cleaning tasks. This program allows us to improve our water usage by 3.6%, compared to 2007, in addition to raising awareness among our employees on the need to use this resource in the most efficient manner. actions with value Coca-Cola FEMSA Colombia invested close to $6 million Mexican pesos (USD $537,000) in its plants to reduce its water usage. 50 FEMSA Social Responsibility Report 2008 GRI EN5, EN6, EN7, and EN26 • GC VII, VIII, and IX Actions for Energy Saving Electricity and fuel are two of the most important energy supplies FEMSA uses in its operations, which is why it spends a significant amount of resources on maximizing and reducing their usage. In 2008 we led energy saving campaigns and installed better energy-efficient machines and equipment in our plants and offices, such as heat recovery ventilation systems and power-saving light bulbs, among other measures. Coca-Cola FEMSA plants were able to save energy equal to seven million Gigajoules through their operating improvements, energy audits, and optimization of their technologies and system controls. This saving is enough energy to supply power for 5,000 families with five members each for one whole year. The area of Strategic Supplies developed the Neviz cooler after two years of research, making it the most environmentally friendly cooler system in the world. Its energy consumption is comparable to the power used by a 25 watt light bulb, and it uses inert refrigeration gas that can be fully recycled at the end of its useful life. Vendo, our Strategic Supplies cooling-system manufacturer, reduced its energy use by 15% in 2008. On the other hand, the FAMOSA Monterrey plant, which manufactures metallic packages and hermetic enclosures, saved 13% on its power bill after improving its facilities. Intelligent OXXO stores This project consists of a system to control the store’s lighting, refrigeration, and air conditioning equipment in real time through a Central Processing Unit, which results in greater energy-efficiency and represents a significant reduction of gas emissions to the environment. This system was operating in 3,500 stores at the end of 2008 and by 2009, the company plans to expand its implementation to 1,700 additional stores. Miguel Ángel Lira Garza, Equipment and Maintenance Engineering Manager for OXXO, said that through the Intelligent Store System, they have evolved in energy and operational practices, having strengthened the correlation between a good operation and the store’s energy-efficient use. Much of this success comes from the fact that the established performance indicators are clearly visible to all parties involved. Neviz Cooler, developed by the area of Strategic Supplies. 51 Core Value 4 Environmental Care During 2008, Coca-Cola FEMSA Guatemala saved almost 200,000 liters of its estimated fuel consumption for 2008, thanks to the major overhaul program it used to repair its delivery fleet, while Coca-Cola FEMSA Panama also reduced its estimated fuel consumption by more than 121,000 liters. Coca-Cola FEMSA Nicaragua implemented a similar program that included driving lessons and the replacement of certain delivery vehicles to save about 150,000 liters of its estimated annual fuel consumption. GRI EN2, EN18, EN26, and EN27 • GC VII, VIII, and IX Actions for Recycling and Packaging Optimization Because of the significant impact on environmental conservation, we give special attention and resources on recycling, as well as promoting important programs on this topic. Operations on Coca-Cola FEMSA saved over 5,000 tons of PET in 2008, by the lightening of its primary packaging. These savings represent more than 225 million of 600 ML beverage bottles. With this achievement, close to 30,000 tons of CO2 gas emissions were not issued, thus contributing to fighting the war on global warming. IMER Plant, Toluca, State of Mexico. 52 Bottles used on FEMSA Cerveza and Coca-Cola FEMSA products are made with materials that can be fully (100%) recycled, specifically glass, aluminum, and PET. Fifty-two percent of all FEMSA Cerveza sales volumes in 2008 corresponded to returnable bottles; i.e., these can be reused in the beer filling process without the need for a transformation process. On the other hand, almost one third of all Coca-Cola FEMSA volumes corresponded to returnable or reusable containers. It is important to point out that in both cases, all containers are made out of 100% recyclable materials regardless of their presentation. Percentage of Recycled Materials used by FEMSA Cerveza Supply/ material Cardboard Recycling % vs. total annual consumption 100% Aluminum 62% Glass 40% Steel 17% IMER, the Mexican Recycling Industry Plant, opened its doors in 2005, as a result of a combined project between Coca-Cola Mexico, ALPLA (the PET container manufacturer), and Coca-Cola FEMSA. This bottle-to-bottle PET recycling plant processed more than 12,000 tons of PET materials in 2008, and 7,800 of said tons were incorporated into new bottles. Besides, the amount of recycled PET in the plant increased by 70% in 2008, compared to 2007. FEMSA Social Responsibility Report 2008 The first ECOPET Coca-Cola contest was held in the Mexican states of Veracruz and Tabasco in 2008, with outstanding results. The project was organized in a joint effort with the environmental authorities that invited elementary school students in these states’ major cities to collect the largest number of PET bottles possible. A large number of students from 245 schools collected 212 tons of bottles. GRI EN7, EN16, EN18, and EN26 • GC VII, VIII, and IX Actions for a Clean Air Children that participated in the Mission Planet program collected 1,187 tons of PET. The area of Strategic Supplies received the Stellar Container and Packaging Award in 2008, granted by the Mexican Containers and Packaging Association, for developing a pallet made out of an oil derivative, which is fully recyclable and has a useful life of eight to ten years. During the first phase, the production of 300,000 pallets a year is expected, thus preventing the felling of an estimated 30,000 trees. In 2008, the Planet Mission program, which was developed and implemented by Coca-Cola FEMSA Costa Rica together with Coca-Cola Industrias S.A., celebrated its tenth anniversary promoting the plastic bottle recycling culture. During this year, it collected 1,187 metric tons of plastic this year (equal to 100,000 bottles), which after being milled, they are transformed into polyester to make fabrics and packaging supplies, among other applications. FEMSA Cerveza and Coca-Cola FEMSA Mexico were recognized in 2008 for their efforts to reduce CO2 gas emissions and fight global warming in 2008. The companies worked together with the Secretariat of the Environment and Natural Resources, the World Business Council for Sustainable Development, and the World Resources Institute on identifying, inventorying, controlling, and reducing greenhouse gas emissions (GEI) in Mexico. Cervecería Cuauhtémoc Moctezuma, a FEMSA Cerveza subsidiary, reported the gas emissions generated in 2007 for the operations of its six plants in Mexico. This report highlights the fact that, as a result of their own electricity and vapor generation, FEMSA Cerveza’s total greenhouse gas emissions dropped 10% between 2006 and 2007, despite the fact that the company reported a 5% growth on production volume during the same period. actions with value The area of Strategic Supplies received the Stellar Container and Packaging Award 2008, granted by the Mexican Containers and Packaging Association, for designing a fully recyclable plastic pallet. 53 Core Value 4 Environmental Care Staff at FEMSA headquarters also joined this project by installing videoconference equipment in practically all of its meeting rooms, thus creating a favorable impact on indirect energy usage by reducing transportation and travel needs for a large group of people. During 2008, this initiative kept the company from sending 43 tons of CO2 emissions into the atmosphere. Our employees share the value of environmental care. Metric Tons of CO2 in 2007* FEMSA Cerveza Coca-Cola FEMSA Mexico Direct source emissions 138,131 47,855 Indirect source emissions 121,941 84,640 *Reported in 2008 The Coca-Cola FEMSA report corresponds to the greenhouse gas emissions produced by the 13 bottling plants it operates in Mexico, which were generated by their electrical power and fuel usage. Greenhouse gas emissions were practically constant between 2004 and 2007, notwithstanding the fact that production grew approximately 11%. The Coca-Cola FEMSA plants in Mexico are some of the most energy-efficient plants within The Coca-Cola System worldwide. We have not limited ourselves to consider reducing our processes emissions into the atmosphere, but we are also gradually incorporating these criteria into the acquisitions process; an example of which can be found in the neutral carbon emissions carpet installed in several FEMSA buildings in Monterrey, Mexico. This is achieved by calculating the emissions generated during the product’s useful life, from the moment the raw materials were obtained until its disposal. The carpet supplier used this information to purchase bonds that will be invested in renewable energy projects. GC VII and VIII Actions towards Waste Management FEMSA and its Business Units’ plants comply with the corresponding national legislation and environmental standards in terms of transportation and hazardous waste treatment in every country they operate. It is important to mention that regarding transportation and disposal of hazardous waste, FEMSA and its Business Units hire the services of companies certified to do so. actions with value In 2008, 545 employees of Coca-Cola FEMSA Mexico and their families, together with the community, participated in the third reforestation journey for the Nevado de Toluca volcano. 54 FEMSA Social Responsibility Report 2008 GRI EN13 • GC VII and VIII Actions towards Reforestation A group of 200 FEMSA directors planted 300 trees in the Fuentes de Iparanga Park in March of 2008. This park is found in one of the most impoverished areas in the city of São Paulo, Brazil, and the executives intended to create a space the local population could use to enjoy healthier and environmentally friendlier surroundings. As in prior years, in 2008, 545 employees of Coca-Cola FEMSA Mexico and their family members, together with the community, participated in the third reforestation journey for the Nevado de Toluca volcano. This activity is part of the Water Factory project the company has supported since its beginnings in 2006. This year, authorities of the State of Mexico and Grupo CIMSA also joined the reforestation journey, where 5,000 pine trees and other regional species were planted in an area of 5 km2 (500 hectare). The program ultimately contemplates to plant 600,000 pine trees. FEMSA, in alliance with CONAFOR (the National Forestry Commission) and PRONATURA, the largest Mexican environmental conservation group, supported during 2008 the project to reforest one square kilometer (100 hectares) of the National Cumbres Park in Monterrey, Mexico. The parties intend to plant 100,000 trees to protect this area that is home to 73 species, out of the total of 1,368 that live in the area, which are believed to be in danger of becoming extinct, threatened, endemic, rare, vulnerable, or in need of special protection. In Brazil, during 2008, USD $400,000 were invested in reforestation and basin protection activities, as part of the Tropical Forests Project, which seeks to preserve the Jundaí Sierra Japi vegetation and water springs; through this program, 3.3 million trees have been rescued in this region. Work was done through the Crystal Water Forest for the Future program in 2008, in a joint effort with SOS Mata Atlántica that focused on preserving the Tietê River’s hydrographical space, where besides planting new trees, 80 native vegetation species were rescued. GC VII and VIII Actions to Promote an Ecological Culture Over 177,000 Kindergarten through High School students from the Mexican cities of Chihuahua, Chihuahua; Hermosillo, Sonora; and Monterrey, Nuevo León, were honored Vela o Yuta n i Ra ymun d OX XO , B ra zil. s esource ão Paulo Huma n R on Journ e y in S ti Reforesta OXXO Ecolog y Award O ver 170,00 0 students in Chihuahua and Monterr , Hermosillo, ey participat ed in the pr ogram in 20 0 8. to receive the OXXO Ecology Award. The students perform and document positive environmental actions through organized schools clubs, such as tree planting, cleaning public spaces, trimming parks and gardens, and recycling, in addition to other activities. Their actions are subsequently evaluated and rewarded. OXXO invested close to $1.5 million Mexican pesos (USD $127,000) in 2008, to promote this program operating since 1996. FEMSA has had an impact on Brazil through the FEMSA Environmental Education program that has been shared with 50,000 people through the environmental protection speeches taught at schools and universities. This program also supports diffusion campaigns on the importance of raising environmental awareness. 55 Core Value 4 Environmental Care actions with value In 2008, 1,187 metric tons of plastic (equal to 100,000 bottles) were collected through the Planet Mission program. Coca-Cola FEMSA Argentina participated in a paper recycling campaign sponsored by the Garrahan Children’s Hospital Foundation to celebrate the World Environment Day. The purpose was raising funds for the hospital’s sustainability, and this year FEMSA contributed with 1,430 kilograms of paper. Súmate, Vive nuestra Cultura [Add Yourself Up, Experience our Culture] is a savings and awareness program promoted by FEMSA headquarters that has obtained noteworthy results. Some of the program’s activities include the purchase of environmentally friendly products, e-mails on the building’s water and energy usage and savings, and the Business Units’ replication of best practices. It is important to note that the program is extensive to our suppliers and our employees’ family members. In 2008, over 250 Gigajoules of energy were saved, while 19 tons of aluminum, cardboard, and newspaper were collected and recycled. FEMSA incorporated the following phrase to all of its outgoing e-mails in 2008: “Printing only when needed is an action creating value”, thus encouraging readers to save energy and reduce paper usage. Close to two million emails carried this message every month. 56 o f en vir ure o t l u c a omote W e pr ca re. al nm en t Informe FEMSA de Responsabilidad Social Responsibility SocialReport FEMSA2008 2008 GRI EN26 • GC VII, VIII, and IX Initiatives towards Environmental Impact Reduction The company’s priorities have included the sustainable use of resources and environmental care for many years, building on an ongoing and daily culture based on respect, while having the incorporation of these factors into strategic planning and decision-making processes by each operating unit. Plans and initiatives to build on these actions are implemented throughout the company’s offices and operations. An example of these are the plans and programs from Coca Cola FEMSA Argentina, which consider mov- We su pp th e su ort pro gra m s tha t sta in a ble us pr o m o en viron e of r te men ta esour l ca re ces a n . d ing towards lightweighting, increasing recyclable waste percentages, implementing plans to recycle and reuse rainwater and water from the liquid effluent treatment plants, applying periodical assessments of its status on greenhouse gas emissions, and planning improvements in its processes. We apply technologies to make lightweighting packagings. SIVESA, the glass container manufacturer, has integrated gas emission observations and supervision of sewage water dumping levels into its bi-annual planning and operational parameters to ensure compliance with the established norms and the disposal of hazardous waste through authorized companies, which are responsible for its proper treatment. actions with value In 2008, FEMSA invested over $255 million Mexican pesos (USD $22.8 million) in equipment and technology acquisitions as well as in the implementation of environmental care and Ecological Culture programs. 57 We suppo rt an in tegr al de velopm culture fo en t r our empl o yees. Co ca- Cola FE M S A A rg en tina. We s coo eek to e pera n co ur tiv all o ur w e an d c ag e an d omp prom orkp Co c ani la ce ote a- C a cent onship ola FE M en vir ers. SA o nm B ra z en t in il. 58 a ll o f ure to ta l cult e. n e m n o n vir p e ra t e our e h we o We ta k in whic s ie r t n u . th e co , B ra zil C erveza A S M E F FEMSA Social Responsibility Report 2008 Global Vision A long history of innovation, work, and savings has shaped the company we are today. A humanistic philosophy where people are at the center of our decisions, with no economic considerations to prevail over dignity, has been the foundation of our culture based on values and permanently guided our every day performance. This is how we seek to transcend by working on the simultaneous generation of economic and social values through initiatives that allow us to have a positive effect on our stakeholders. This is why we dedicate to our social commitment. Through an adequate strategic planning, detailed environmental analyses, and documentation of the best practices and results, we look forward to replicate success stories and provide the best social return on our investment in the different spheres of social responsibility, in all of our Business Units, and territories in which we operate. FE M S A Va lu a ble W FE M S om e n A C er P r o g ra veza B m. ra zil. 59 GC I, II, IV, V, and VI Quality of Life in the Company Family Day Coca-Cola FEMSA Argentina celebrated its Family Day with the “Your Family is Your Team” theme, where more than 5,500 people came together in a park in Buenos Aires to enjoy acrobatic and magic shows, and a carnival. Argentina • Employment1: • Investment2 in millions of Mexican pesos: Junior KOFAR Junior KOFAR, is a corporate association program that allows employees’ 18 to 25 year-old offspring to complete their trainee programs within the company to acquire knowledge and experience. 3,528 $ 1,276.7 Family Plant Visits Through the Family Visits to the Plants program, close to 7,900 people, including 559 employees, their spouses, and children, toured the Alcorta Plant facilities, where they received environmental culture training talks and enjoyed spending time together in a recreational setting. • Investment2 in USD $ millions: $ 114.3 • Social programs: Educational programs Family development programs Health and sport programs • Wastewater treatment plant: 12 2 6 4 MBA in Company In 2008, a group of 41 Coca-Cola FEMSA Argentina employees participated in a corporate MBA in company program. This Masters in Business Administration is taught by the Business Management School of the University for the Company of Argentina and helps students maximize their skills and abilities by developing an innovative business vision. 1 • Investment in Social Responsibility3 programs: $9 Millions of Mexican pesos: $ USD Thousands: • People benefited: $ 806.8 26,144 Includes outsourced personnel During 2008; Mercosur region including Argentina and Brazil. 3 Quality of Life, Health and Wellness, Community Engagement, and Environmental Care 1 2 A Culture of Prevention and Self Care Coca-Cola FEMSA Argentina has developed a wideranging safety program geared to strengthen a culture of prevention and self care, which includes training courses, emergency management, and even contractor induction courses. As support in this assignment, the company’s medical services offered an average of 1,800 medical appointments per month in 2008, through its medical service offices located at its operating units. GC VI Health and Wellness Soccer Tournament and Healthy Spaces Looking to promote physical exercise and its health benefits, in 2008 a Soccer Tournament was organized, counting with the participation of 300 employees. The Espacio Saludable (Healthy Space) was also created, 60 FEMSA Social Responsibility Report 2008 which consisted of equipping a gym in the Alcorta Plant that 200 employees use to exercise and perform different group classes. In addition to the health benefits, these activities are also important integration mechanisms. Brazil GRI 4.12 • GC I and II Community Engagement Milk Donations Coca-Cola FEMSA Argentina reinforces its community ties by purchasing milk with funds collected from its employees’ children’s summer camp registration fees. The company matched the funds collected to purchase close to 6,000 liters of milk it donated to seven schools and dining halls near the Alcorta Plant facilities, which benefited close to 1,800 children. EN26 • GC VII and VIII Environmental Care Reduced Water Usage The Coca-Cola FEMSA Argentina Alcorta plant reduced its water usage by 8% in 2008, compared to 2007, through improvements made in different production areas following the Kaizen methodology. Support for the Garrahan Children’s Hospital Foundation The company participated in a paper recycling journey sponsored by the Garrahan Children’s Hospital Foundation to celebrate the World Environment Day. The purpose was to raise funds for the hospital’s sustainability, to which FEMSA contributed with 1,430 kilograms of paper. • Employment1: • Investment2 in millions of Mexican pesos: 13,349 $ 1,276.7 • Investment2 in USD $ millions: $ 114.3 • Social programs: 23 Educational programs 12 8 3 Family development programs Health and sport programs • Wastewater treatment plants: 2 • Investment in Social Responsibility3 programs: Millions of Mexican pesos: $ USD Millions: • People benefited: $ 36.1 $ 3.2 138,700 Includes outsourced personnel During 2008; Mercosur region including Argentina and Brazil 3 Quality of Life, Health and Wellness, Community Engagement, and Environmental Care 1 2 GC I, II, IV, V, and VI Quality of Life in the Company Family Day Coca-Cola FEMSA Brazil celebrated the sixth edition of its Family Day with the “Your Way of Being Happy” theme, in 2008. The event was simultaneously held in 14 different cities, and gathered over 40,000 employees and their family members. Jundiaí alone witnessed the gathering of 15,000 people who enjoyed the featured circus shows among other attractions. Coca-Cola FEMSA Argentina reinforces its community ties by purchasing and donating milk. 61 FEMSA Valuable Women Over 850 wives of FEMSA Cerveza employees in São Paulo, Brazil participated in the FEMSA Valuable Women program that offers gastronomy courses, make-up and sewing lessons, and theatre plays, while promoting corporate values. The FEMSA Youth Camp REMIL, one of Coca-Cola FEMSA Brazil’s recent acquisitions, held its first FEMSA Youth Camp for its employees’ children in 2008, which was attended by over 1,400 teenagers who participated in training and recreational activities. FEMSA Junior The FEMSA Junior program focuses on professional practices geared to providing a knowledge base and professional development for our employees’ children who are in college. GRI 4.12 and EC8 • GC I, II, IV, V, and VI Community Engagement Education for Work and Valuing of the Young Programs such as Education for Work and Valuing of the Young seek to reduce school desertion and illiteracy rates. This last one benefited 1,000 people in 2008 and reduced illiteracy levels by 95% in all of the communities supported. The program also focuses on helping increase participants’ self-esteem levels and social skills, in addition to providing academic knowledge. The FEMSA Award to the Infant and Juvenile Theatre, and FEMSA takes you to the Theatre Program Thousands of children and teenagers in Brazil have direct access to the theatre through The FEMSA Award to the Infant and Juvenile Theatre, which has promoted artistic expression development through 15 program editions in São Paulo, as a means to training and entertainment. This one-of-a-kind program in Latin America, works together with another program called FEMSA takes you to the Theatre that benefited 10,300 children and young people in 2008, who were able to come into the theatre and discover an educational and training tool through this artistic form of expression. GRI 4.12 and EN13 • GC VII and VIII Environmental Care Reforestation Programs In Brazil, USD $400,000 were invested in reforestation and basin protection activities in 2008, as part of the Tropical Forests Project that seeks to preserve the Jundaí Sierra Japi vegetation and water springs; through this program, 3.3 million trees have been rescued in this region. Work was done through the Crystal Water Forest for the Future program in 2008, in a joint effort with SOS Mata Atlántica that focused on preserving the Tietê River’s hydrographical space, where besides planting new trees, 80 native vegetation species were rescued. Citizens Plaza Over 3,550 community members received complimentary access to healthcare services such as diabetes and blood pressure tests through the Citizens Plaza program in Brazil in 2008, which also provided information on healthy eating choices, and legal consulting services, among others. Pa rtic ipa n ts o f th e I n fa n t FE M S A a n d Ju Aw a rd ven ile T FE M S A to th e h ea tre B ra zil. . 62 FEMSA Social Responsibility Report 2008 GC I, II, IV, V, and VI Quality of Life in the Company Central America • Employment1: • Investment2 in millions of Mexican pesos: 5,295 $ 1,924.5 • Investment2 in USD $ millions: $ 172.3 • Social programs: 20 Educational programs 9 7 4 Family development programs Health and sport programs • Wastewater treatment plants: 2 • Investment in Social Responsibility3 programs: Millions of Mexican pesos: $ USD Millions: • People benefited: $ 20.7 $1.8 28,607 Includes outsourced personnel During 2008; Latincenter region including Central America, Colombia, and Venezuela 3 Quality of Life, Health and Wellness, Community Engagement, and Environmental Care Training During 2008, Coca-Cola FEMSA in Central America offered its employees over 44,500 man hours in training on operational safety, and managerial and human development. Traditional and Party Celebrations Coca-Cola FEMSA in Central America celebrated some of the major local parties and traditions in 2008, in an effort to strengthen family values and encourage companyfamily integration. Over 4,400 people participated in these Mother’s Day, Father’s Day, Children’s Day, Independence Day, and Christmas celebrations. Toma2, Por tu Vida Coca-Cola FEMSA Panama’s “Toma2, Por tu Vida” (Second Chance, for Your Life) program seeks to raise employee awareness on the importance of preventing traffic accidents, specifically among employees that work in the presales and distribution divisions. GC I, II, IV, and VI Health and Wellness Healthy Summer Close to 200 teenage children of Coca-Cola FEMSA Panama employees participated in the Healthy Summer program in 2008, a sports and recreational event that featured communication, values, teamwork, and development of leadership skills and abilities workshops. 1 2 KOF Cup The KOF Cup is a traditional children’s soccer tournament held in Costa Rica. Over 1,000 children participated in the 2008 edition. GRI 4.12 • GC I and II Community Engagement One Meal, One Smile The One Meal, One Smile program encourages our employees and their families to show their solidarity and participate in civic activities in Nicaragua. More than 10,100 underprivileged children received one free meal every school day in 2008. This program is sponsored by the American 63 Colombia n . D e L eó Pa n a m a Osca r E F M SA la o C C o ca- • Employment1: Nicaraguan Foundation and supported by Coca-Cola FEMSA Nicaragua and The Coca-Cola Company. Responding to Natural Disasters After heavy rains hit Costa Rica and thousands of people were left homeless, Coca-Cola FEMSA employees came together in an effort to collect food, clothing, and personal care products to lend a hand to those affected. GRI 4.12, EN5 and EN26 • GC VII, VIII, and IX Environmental care Planet Mission In 2008, the Planet Mission program, which was developed and implemented by Coca-Cola FEMSA Costa Rica together with Coca-Cola Industrias S.A., celebrated its tenth anniversary promoting the plastic bottle recycling culture. During this year, it collected 1,187 metric tons of plastic this year (equal to 100,000 bottles), which after being milled, they are transformed into polyester to make fabrics, packaging materials, and other applications. Fuel Savings During 2008, Coca-Cola FEMSA Guatemala saved almost 200,000 liters of its estimated fuel consumption for 2008, thanks to the major overhaul program it used to repair its delivery fleet, while Coca-Cola FEMSA Panama also reduced its forecasted consumption by more than 121,000 liters. Coca-Cola FEMSA Nicaragua implemented a similar program that included driving lessons and the replacement of certain delivery vehicles to save about 150,000 liters of its estimated annual fuel consumption. 64 • Investment2 in millions of Mexican pesos: 7,797 $ 1,924.5 • Investment2 in USD $ millions: $ 172.3 • Social programs: 30 Educational programs 8 1 21 Family development programs Health and sport programs • Wastewater treatment plants: 6 • Investment in Social Responsibility3 programs: Millions of Mexican pesos: $ USD Millions: • People benefited: $ 39.8 $ 3.5 3,231,511 Includes outsourced personnel During 2008. Latincenter region including Central America, Colombia, and Venezuela 3 Quality of Life, Health and Wellness, Community Engagement, and Environmental Care 1 2 GC I, II, and IV Quality of Life in the Company Andando Seguro (Staying Safe) Coca-Cola FEMSA Colombia’s “Andando Seguro” (Staying Safe) program seeks to encourage a culture of self care through different communication tools and national awareness campaigns. These efforts had a direct impact on close to 8,000 employees in 2008. FEMSA Social Responsibility Report 2008 GC I and II Health and Wellness Growth and Development During 2008, Coca-Cola FEMSA Colombia implemented the Growth and Development program that benefited 400 people. The program consists on keeping records on employees’ children’s growth and development to allow for the early detection of potential diseases. Additionally, parents receive complementary information on healthcare issues that are relevant to their children’s development. Sports Tournaments Over the course of 2008, Coca-Cola FEMSA Colombia organized different soccer, volleyball, softball, and other sports tournaments that involved more than 5,600 people. GRI 4.12 and EC8 • GC I, II, IV, V, and VI Community Engagement Time Bank The Time Bank program consists on training individuals that were formerly involved in the guerilla groups so they can reintegrate into society with the knowledge and skills they need to lead a productive life. Coca-Cola FEMSA Colombia is engaged in the program with the participation of 50 volunteers that donated part of their free time to work as trainers. This program is sponsored by the company and the Colombian authorities. Playrooms Coca-Cola FEMSA Colombia supports the Playroom program of the Children’s Day Corporation. By providing equipped, free of charge public spaces, children, parents, and teachers can engage in activities that encourage creativity, imagination, and autonomy. Through these playrooms, values and skills are reinforced to help children grow and develop into responsible, tolerant, and supporting human beings. The company currently sponsors the La Tora Playroom in Barrancabermeja and provides the required materials to the San Martín Playroom in Medellín, benefiting more than 7,000 people in 2008. ported this effort by providing transportation and refrigeration services, offering legal advice, and contributing with product donation. GRI 4.12, EN13 and EN26 • GC VII, VIII, and IX Environmental Care Humedal Capellanía In 2008 Coca-Cola FEMSA supported the actions for the cleaning and recovery process of the ground waters of Humedal Capellanía, a major water source in Colombia that had been suffering damages. The company, together with the Secretariat of the Environment in Colombia and other organizations, signed the Humedal Capellanía Recovery Pact, which will set the stage to start working on projects to balance its natural ecosystem. Todos por el Agua (Everyone for the Water) In addition, during this year, Coca-Cola FEMSA Colombia led the cleaning journey for coasts, beaches, and wetlands called Everyone for the Water, for the third year in a row. This program is implemented in a joint effort with The Coca-Cola Company and other companies in six cities across the nation. The main goals are to collect garbage at the aforesaid sites, which totaled 16 tons in 2008, and further development of environmental care protection habits – a message that reached the nearly 2,000 volunteers that participated in this journey. Water Savings Coca-Cola FEMSA Colombia invested close to $6 million Mexican pesos (USD $537,000) in 2008 to reduce its water usage, and was able to improve its water consumption index per liter of beverage produced by 7.2%. Food Bank During 2008, the services provided by 14 Food Banks operating in major Colombian cities, benefited close to 204,000 people living in poverty. Coca-Cola FEMSA sup- 65 GC I, II, V, and VI Quality of Life in the Company KOF Kids Through the KOF Children’s Program, more than 13,000 children of Coca-Cola FEMSA Mexico employees have been recognized for their outstanding academic performance. This program honored over 4,000 of our employees’ children who obtained 9 and 10-point averages in the 20072008 school period. Mexico • Employment1: • Investment in millions of Mexican pesos: Health and Wellness Charting my Own Destiny FEMSA Cerveza implemented the Charting my Own Destiny program with support from the University of Monterrey. University specialists designed a program for students between 11 to 19 years old to develop skills and abilities that help them make informed, healthy, and responsible decisions concerning all aspects of their lives. During the 2008-2009 school year, it will reach 225,000 students in all three secondary school grades in 890 public and private schools, including federal, community, and state, technical, and distance education secondary schools across the state of Nuevo León, Mexico. In the Mexican state of Campeche, during the 2008-2009 school year, this program will reach 48,000 fifth and sixth grade elementary school students, and first secondary year students in public, private, community, and indigenous elementary and secondary schools. $ 11,092 • Investment in USD $ millions: • Social programs: $ 993 660 Educational programs GRI 4.12 • GC I, II, IV, V, and VI 82,578 144 262 254 Family development programs Health and sport programs • Wastewater treatment plants: 20 • Investment in Social Responsibility2 programs: Millions of Mexican pesos: $ USD Millions: • People benefited: $ 888.8 $ 79.5 19,232,894 1 2 66 Includes outsourced personnel Quality of Life, Health and Wellness, Community Engagement, and Environmental Care ch e c OX XO a PRO ry of o. D elive M exic erre y, t n o M a tion. k do n VIRE: Responsible Lifestyle Promoters Workshop FEMSA has pioneered the implementation of programs that promote the responsible consumption of alcoholic beverages in Mexico, and the benefits of adopting healthy and balanced lifestyles, especially among young people. One of these initiatives is known as the VIRE: Responsible Lifestyle Promoters Workshop that trains and seeks to raise awareness among young people, about the need to create and develop a culture of responsibility. This training and preventive workshop is shared at schools and universities across Mexico. FEMSA Cerveza together with the University of Monterrey, created this program in 2002, and since its beginnings thru 2008, has trained over 20,700 people through more than 420 workshops. FEMSA Social Responsibility Report 2008 The FEMSA Biotechnology Center In an effort to support health research, FEMSA contributed to the establishment of FEMSA´s Biotechnology Center at the Tec de Monterrey. The Center opened in early 2008 and has more than 100 scientists focused on bioengineering, bioprocesses, agro biotechnology, bio-energy, and sustainable water usage research and development, among other topics. GRI 4.12 and EC8 • GC I, II, IV, V, and VI Community Engagement The Designated Driver® Program FEMSA Cerveza Mexico continued to reinforce its Designated Driver® program by promoting responsible driving practices. In 2008, the company launched a new advertising campaign with a tagline that read, “Unlike him, you were not made to crash”, that encourages young people to engage in safe and responsible fun and entertainment. The program registered 41,000 new drivers over the course of the year. The Designated Driver® program has registered close to 133,000 drivers since its beginning in 2002, and has directly benefited close to 600,000 people. To recognize the development and implementation of these types of programs, FEMSA Cerveza received the Award for Best Social Responsibility Practices in 2008, from the Mexican Center for Philanthropy (CEMEFI), under the Responsible Consumption category. Internship Program In order to contribute to students’ practical development and on-the-job training, FEMSA Cerveza and the area of Logistics and Packaging have Internship Programs that in 2008 benefited 280 students from different Mexican universities. The OXXO (PRO) Social Responsibility Program The OXXO (PRO) Social Responsibility program invites OXXO customers to round up their purchases to the next closed peso amount. The collected funds are then donated to local health, education, and social assistance institutions. Between 2002 and 2008, PRO has supported 729 institutions in 59 cities in Mexico, with donations above $260 million Mexican pesos (USD $23.2 million). During 2008, more than $60 million Mexican pesos (USD $5.3 million) were raised and used to support 179 non-profit organizations, 46 of which provide educational services, and 59 are involved in providing health-related matters. The FEMSA Art Collection We promote art and culture through the FEMSA Art Collection, which contains more than 1,100 works of modern and contemporary Latin American art, put on display to the public through exhibitions in different cultural spaces both in Mexico and abroad. Thru 2008, over 751,000 people have had the opportunity to enjoy the itinerant exhibitions of the FEMSA Art collection. Tec de Monterrey Since its foundation, we have permanently supported academic efforts at the Tec de Monterrey, one of the most prestigious universities in Latin America that through its 33 campuses across Mexico, in 2008 offered educational programs to more than 90,000 students. Our aid includes research, business-school associations, and corporate leadership programs, among others. Guía T (Guide Yourself) FEMSA Cerveza also participated in the Guía T (Guide Yourself) event that promotes the importance of making career decisions through proper vocational orientation programs among high school students. Over 16,000 people attended this event in Mexico City, including students, professors, parents, and guests. Pro vis ion FE M SA o f housin g fo C ervez a M exic r fa milies in o. 67 GRI 2.10, 4.12, EN5, EN6, EN13, and EN26 • GC VII, VIII, and IX Environmental Care Water Consumption Savings FEMSA Cerveza plants in Mexico substantially increased production between 1992 and 2008; however, they were able to reduce their water usage levels by 54% per liter of beer produced. Intelligent OXXO stores By the implementation of a system to control the store’s lighting, refrigeration, and air conditioning equipment in real time, using a Central Processing Unit, an Intelligent OXXO store is established, resulting in energy-efficiency and significant reductions in its gas emission levels. By the end of 2008, this system was operating in 3,500 stores, and by 2009, the company plans to expand its implementation to 1,700 additional stores. Neviz, the Environmentally Friendly Cooler The area of Strategic Supplies developed the Neviz cooler after two years of research, making it the most environmentally friendly cooler in the world. Its energy consumption is comparable to the power used by a 25 watt light bulb, and it uses inert refrigeration gas that can be fully recycled at the end of its useful life. IMER, PET Recycling Plant The Mexican Recycling Industry Plant (IMER) started operations in 2005, as a combined project between Coca-Cola Mexico, ALPLA (the PET container manufacturer), and Coca-Cola FEMSA. This bottle-to-bottle PET recycling plant processed more than 12,000 tons of PET materials in 2008, and 7,800 of said tons were incorporated into new bottles. Besides, the amount of recycled PET in the plant increased by 70% in 2008, compared to 2007. The ECOPET Coca-Cola Challenge The first ECOPET Coca-Cola contest was held in the Mexican states of Veracruz and Tabasco in 2008, with outstanding success. The project was organized in a joint effort with the environmental authorities that invited elementary school students in these states’ major cities to collect the largest number of PET bottles possible. A large number of students from 245 schools collected 212 tons of bottles. 68 Stellar Container and Packaging Award The area of Strategic Supplies received the Stellar Container and Packaging Award in 2008, granted by the Mexican Containers and Packaging Association, for developing a pallet made out of an oil derivative, which is fully recyclable and has a useful life of eight to ten years. During the first phase, the production of 300,000 pallets a year is expected, thus preventing the felling of an estimated 30,000 trees. The Nevado de Toluca Water Factory As in prior years, in 2008, 545 employees of Coca-Cola FEMSA Mexico and their family members, together with the community, participated in the third reforestation journey for the Nevado de Toluca volcano. This activity is part of the Water Factory project the company has supported since its beginnings in 2006. The authorities of the State of Mexico and Grupo CIMSA joined the reforestation journey on this occasion, where the group planted 5,000 pine trees and other regional species in an area of 5km2 (500 hectare). The program ultimately contemplates to plant 600,000 pine trees. OXXO Ecology Award Over 177,000 Kindergarten through High School students in the Mexican cities of Chihuahua, Hermosillo, and Monterrey, received the OXXO Ecology Award. The students perform and document positive environmental actions through organized school clubs, such as planting trees, cleaning public spaces, trimming parks and gardens, recycling, and other activities. Their actions are subsequently evaluated and rewarded. OXXO invested close to $1.5 million Mexican pesos (USD $127,000) in 2008 to promote this program, operating since 1996. FEMSA Social Responsibility Report 2008 GC I, II, and IV Quality of Life in the Company Accident Reduction Activities The Manufacturing area of Coca-Cola FEMSA Venezuela, which includes four plants, succeeded in reducing 75% of its incapacitating accidents in the first quarter of 2008, compared to the same period in 2007. Venezuela GRI 4.12 • GC I, II, and IV Health and Wellness • Employment1: • Investment2 in millions of Mexican pesos: 7,930 $ 1,924.5 • Investment2 in USD $ millions: $ 172.3 • Social programs: 23 Educational programs 8 7 8 Family development programs Health and sport programs • Wastewater treatment plants: 2 • Investment in Social Responsibility3 programs: Millions of Mexican pesos: $ USD Millions: • People benefited: $ 316.8 $ 28.3 616,808 Includes outsourced personnel During 2008. Latincenter region including Central America, Colombia, and Venezuela 3 Quality of Life, Health and Wellness, Community Engagement, and Environmental Care 1 2 Coca-Cola FEMSA Valencia 2008 Sport Games At Valencia, Venezuela, the first edition of the Coca-Cola FEMSA Valencia Sport Games was held, where more than 340 employees participated in the event’s different sport disciplines. Baseball Camaineras Through the support to the Baseball Camaineras, we promote this popular national sport. The program consists on organizing free of charge tournaments, offering sports clinics taught by distinguished baseball players, and granting awards to the participants for their efforts. This initiative, which was created to promote sports-related activities and values, benefited 7,000 young people in 2008. GRI 4.12 and EC8 • GC I, II, IV, V, and VI Community Engagement Refresh Yourself Reading The support of reading diffusion programs has played a key role in Venezuela, where close to 86,000 people benefited from the “Refresh Yourself Reading” program Coca-Cola FEMSA Venezuela developed together with The Coca-Cola Company and the Book Bank. This program promotes the creation of reading spaces and training workshops for parents, teachers, and librarians. El Nacional in the Classroom Coca-Cola FEMSA Venezuela supported the El Nacional in the Classroom program in 2008, which through a monthly publication of an educational series in daily journals, seeks to promote reading habits in children and provide teaching tools that parents and teachers are able to multiply. This program benefited 200,000 people in 2008. 69 GRI 3.12 GRI Index GRI (G3) Indicator Table of Contents Page 1. Strategy and Analysis 1.1 Statement from our Chairman and CEO 4 1.2 Impacts, risks, and opportunities 4 2. Organizational profile Table of Contents Page 4.13 Memberships in associations 8 4.14 Stakeholders 8 4.15 Stakeholders 8 4.16 Stakeholders 12 4.17 Stakeholders 14 2.1 Company Name 6 2.2 Brands, products and/or services 6 Economic Performance Indicators 2.3 Operational structure 7 EC1 Economic value 6 and 9 2.4 Location of headquarters 6 EC6 Suppliers 40 2.5 Number of countries where organization operates 3 2.6 Nature of ownership and legal form 2.7 Markets served 2.8 Scale of the organization 6 Environmental Performance Indicators 2.9 Significant changes in the reporting period 3 EN2 Materials 50 2.10 Awards 6 3 and 6 3.1 Reporting period EC8 Infrastructure investments and services provided for public benefit 34, 60, 63, 65, and 67 EC9 Indirect economic value 9 EN5 Energy 49, 62, and 66 EN6 Energy 49 and 66 2 EN7 Energy EN13 Habitats protected 13, 15, and 66 3. Report Parameters 49 and 51 53, 60, 63, and 66 3.2 Date of previous report 2 3.3 Reporting cycle 2 EN16 Gas emissions 51 Inside Back Cover EN18 Gas emissions 50 and 51 3 EN26 Mitigation of environmental impacts 3 EN27 Reclaimed packaging materials 50 3 EN30 Environment investments 44 3.4 Contact information 3.5 Process for defining report content 3.6 Boundary of the report 3.8 Basis for including information in case of joint ventures 3.11 Significant changes from previous reporting periods 3.12 GRI Index 68 3.13 External assurance 3 4.1 Corporate Governance 15 4.2 Corporate Governance 15 4.3 Corporate Governance 15 4.4 Corporate Governance 12 4.5 Corporate Governance 15 4.6 Corporate Governance 14 4.7 Corporate Governance 15 4.8 Mission, values, code of ethics, and relevant principles 4.11 Principle of caution 47, 49, 50, 51, 55, 59, 62, 63, and 66 Labor Practices and Decent Work Performance Indicators 2 and 3 4. Governance, Commitments, and Stakeholder Engagement 10 16 4.12 Social, environmental, and economic programs and initiatives 2, 8, 13, 17, 18, 28, 34, 44, 59, 60, 61, 62, 63, 64, 65, 66, and 67 70 GRI (G3) Indicator LA1 Employment 6 and 21 LA2 Employment 6 and 21 LA8 Health 28 LA9 Health 28 LA10 Training 24 LA11 Training 22 and 24 LA12 Career performance and development LA13 Diversity 11 15, 21, and 26 Human Rights Performance Indicators HR8 Security staff training 24 Social Performance Indicators SO1 Impact on communities SO2Anti-corruption risks, policies, and procedures 16 and 34 12 SO3 Anti-corruption risks, policies, and procedures 12 Product Responsibility Performance Indicators PR3 Product information 14 Ten Principles of the UN Global Compact: Human Rights Principle I (GC I) Support and respect the protection of internationally proclaimed human rights. Principle II (GC II) Do not complicit in human rights abuses. Labour Standards Principle III (GC III) Uphold the freedom of association and the right to collective bargaining. Principle IV (GC IV) Eliminate all forms of forced and compulsory labor. Principle V (GC V) Support the effective abolition of child labor. Principles VI (GC VI) Eliminate discrimination in respect of employment and occupation. Environment Principle VII (GC VII) Support a precautionary approach to environmental challenges. Principle VIII (GC VIII) Undertake initiatives to promote greater environmental responsibility. Principle IX (GC IX) Encourage the development and diffusion of environmentally friendly technologies. Anti-Corruption Principle X (GC X) Work against corruption in all its forms, including extortion and bribery. design www.signi.com.mx Contact information Corporate Communications FEMSA Carolina Alvear Sevilla Karla Torres Elizondo Phone: (52) 81-8328-6046 Fax: (52) 81-8328-6117 e-mail: [email protected] Community Affairs and Social Responsibility Jaime Toussaint Elosúa Anik Varés Leal Phone: (52) 81-8328-6148 Fax: (52) 81-8328-6117 General Anaya No. 601 Pte. Col. Bella Vista Monterrey, Nuevo León, Mexico, C.P. 64410 Phone: (52) 81 8328-6000 www.femsa.com
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