Good afternoon, everyone. My name is Daniela, and I will be your event coordinator today. All lines have been placed on mute to prevent any background noise. Welcome to Grupo Bimbo's Sustainability Day. There will be a question and answer session after the speaker's opening remarks, and instructions on how to place a question will be given at that time. I have the pleasure of introducing you today to Grupo Bimbo's Chairman and CEO, Mr. Daniel Servitje, as well as Grupo Bimbo's Executive VP and Chief Sustainability Officer, Mr. Rafael Pamias. Please note that this event is for investors and analysts only, and questions from the media will not be taken.
Any forward-looking statements made during this conference call are based on information that is currently available. They are subject to risks and uncertainties that could cause actual results to differ materially from the expectations and assumptions discussed today. This may be due to a variety of factors, including the risks outlined in Grupo Bimbo's most recent reports. Please refer to the disclaimer in the corporate reports for guidance on this matter. We will now begin with an introductory video about Grupo Bimbo's sustainability strategy.
Recipes. As bakers, they are everything to us. They tell us how to make the delicious things that nourish you and your family. Recipes are more than just words on paper. They reflect our soul, our beliefs, our culture. We're taking action, developing new and better recipes, the kind that will nourish our world and make it a better place. We know this is important to you, and that makes it important to us. We're starting with recipes for health, real ones for baking. With grains, vegetables, legumes, and more. Our goal, to be a leader in plant-based diets by making them possible for everyone through all of our products, for your health, as well as the planet's. To address climate change affecting us all, a recipe for the environment.
To grow more of the ingredients we bake with on farms that replenish and protect their soil, along with programs to support small farmers. Finally, to spread the goodness, a recipe for fairness based on a simple commitment, to put bread on every table. Everything we bake is now more affordable and available to more people than ever. You've shared with us how you want to build a better future. We've heard you, and these are our recipes. Baked for You, Baked for Life, Baked for Nature.
I will now turn the call over to Mr. Daniel Servitje. Sir, please go ahead.
Hello, everyone. Thank you for joining us for this event today. Sustainability has always been part of our DNA. Since our beginning, our founder's vision was to build a sustainable, highly productive, and deeply humane company. This is ingrained in our culture and in every business decision we have made ever since, as it has become our corporate philosophy. It is also why I am so proud to share with you today our new sustainability strategy, which, as you will see, positions our company to do more for people and the planet by setting transparent, far-reaching, ambitious goals. With it, we are better aligning our philosophy and purpose with our execution and defining the road to achieve tangible results consistent with the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals.
This strategy is the result of constantly looking for ways to expand the frontiers of how business can be done and how the interaction with our stakeholders can be improved to nourish the wellness of people and the planet. We know this won't be a simple journey, but we have a plan to get there. We are bakers in the grain-based food industry with a very close relationship with our consumers and want to be in their homes, on their tables every day. We know that by providing high quality products with high nutritional value, we can improve the lives of everyone we reach, and that our sustainability strategies are meaningful for all stakeholders, our associates, our investors, and the communities we serve.
Over the last decades, our sustainability strategy encompassed many different areas, like health and well-being, the planet, our relationship with the communities around us, and what we do for our associates. Over the years, we have made great strides, including in the 1960s, we started our social programs and promoted healthy lifestyles with Futbolito Bimbo. In 1991, we developed our first environmental policy. Our nutritional guidelines began to be measured in 2008, and by 2009, we signed the IFBA Global Responsible Marketing to Children policy. Later, in 2010 we signed the Mexican Marketing to Children pledge. In 2009, we launched our first biodegradable packaging. We continued our research and innovation efforts, and in 2019 developed our first compostable packaging for our Vital brand.
In 2012, we launched our first renewable energy effort with the Piedra Larga wind farm in Mexico. That same year, we launched the Good Neighbor program to improve the lives of the communities that surround us. In 2013, we became the first company in Mexico to build an electric vehicle through our subsidiary, Moldex. Since 2017, we have been recognized as one of the world's most ethical companies by the Ethisphere Institute. In 2018, we were the first company in Mexico to receive clean energy certificates, and that same year we signed RE100, committing to use 100% renewable energy by 2025. In 2021, we signed the commitment to reach net zero carbon emissions and by 2050 under the Science Based Targets framework and issued our first sustainability-linked loan.
However, we know that as the world evolves, so the needs of our stakeholders and the positive impact we can have on them. Because of this, we decided to undertake a more ambitious strategy with a goal of having a business model that is completely sustainable by design. This new sustainability strategy builds on what we have been doing and enable us to be more focused and make a bigger contribution to the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals. We are in a decade of action, and this means we need to increase our speed to reach our sustainability goals. In many areas, such as climate change and water management, if the world does not act more boldly, it may be too late.
We want to be a part of this acceleration, and that is how I can sum up everything that nourishing a better world is. It means nourishing the well-being of people and nature at the same time, because we can only make things better if we do both. It is about the planet and about the people that live on it. Rafa will now explain in more detail how we define this new strategy and what we plan to achieve. I just want to say that it will be a long journey, and it will come with its challenges. We're excited and ready to contribute towards building a better future. Everyone that interacts with us, including our customers and suppliers, will play a part in this. Together, we will be able to nourish a better world. Rafa, please go ahead.
Thank you, Daniel, and thank you everyone for being here. As Daniel said, sustainability is part of our DNA, and we have actually sometimes lead the way with our recipes for a better health, a better environment, and more fairness. However, at Grupo Bimbo, we feel that we can do more as we have accelerated. We have to accelerate the pace as challenges are mounting up. If you take a look at the next slide, if you can go to the next slide, you will see our planetary challenges of our era, both environmental and social. You will see climate change, malnutrition, natural resources crunch, and on the social change challenges, more and more inclusion needed on a more diverse world, and poverty, unacceptable poverty. Therefore, we could say that we're quickly transitioning from a situation of crisis to an emergency situation.
This is why, if you go to the next slide, please, this is why we have revisited our strategy with some clear directions. We have to move from mitigation to full regeneration. This means, as a first step, that we have to go from minimizing the impact of our operations to become soon sustainable by design. It is a bold move and a whole new level of ambition because it will require sometimes to develop new business models, number one. Number two, this means sharing and committing publicly, hoping that others will follow. Last but not least, with clear governance and quantitative objectives to be able to track and share progress. Moving on to our new strategy, if you could go to the next slide, please. Yes, thank you. We're working on.
We have been working with external and internal stakeholders on eight principles with the purpose to deliver real material impact, new solutions to the table, being true to our culture. These eight principles can be grouped in three buckets. Basically, one bucket is about better recipes and diets. The second bucket is about reducing to zero negative impact to nature. The third bucket deals with making sure progress delivered by our operations, delivered by humankind, brings more prosperity to more people. We do believe that we face brutal truths today. I said that we're transitioning from crisis to emergency. If you go to the next slide, please, you will see the brutal truths that we're facing as companies, and also the beautiful possibilities if we go on the right way. Beautiful possibilities that we think that bring also business opportunities.
I'm not going to elaborate on the five brutal truths, but I will talk about the beautiful possibility to have 100% of our products nutrient-rich, to embrace fertile farming with our purchasing power, to be sure that we're seeking renewable sources when searching for energy. In any case, I think that now we are ready to introduce the new sustainability strategy. Please go to video. This is our new sustainability strategy for nourishing a better world with recipes Baked for You, Baked for Life, and Baked for Nature. If we talk about Baked for You, and you can move, please, to the next two slides. The next one, please. Yes. Thank you very much. It is about Baked for You. It is about promoting planetary diets with nutritional diversity.
If we have to sum up this pillar in one single number, it is about 100%. Because by 2030, 100% of our recipes will be natural and simple. By 2030, in 100% of our organizations, in 100% of our portfolios, we will be able to deliver a substantial offer of healthy plant-based products. Before 2030, 100% of our labels will provide information enough to empower our consumers to make better choices. Up to date, our progress is quite promising. I would say that 96% of our daily consumption portfolio, we say daily consumption to those products that we are aiming and we are promoting for very frequent or daily consumption, 90% of our portfolio complies with internal and external consensus on maximum levels for nutrients to be limited.
For example, for those who come who live in Latin America, you will see that there are certain geographies that have a very restrictive front label legislation, or there are some new countries that are gonna come to have the same kind of labeling. I'm talking about Chile, Brazil, Argentina, Mexico, Uruguay, and Paraguay. Well, 100% of our bread portfolio has no stamps in such a restrictive legislation. We are advancing in that. If we go to the next two slides on Baked for Nature. The next one, please. If we said that the first pillar was about 100%, this pillar, which is about protecting and regenerating our natural system, it is about zero.
Because by 2050, we are committed to become a net zero carbon emissions company with a specific and public targets for 2030 and 2040. This also means 0% of our key ingredients by 2050 will come from non-sustainable agricultural practices. Therefore, full conversion in 2050 to regenerative agriculture. Last but not least, zero is the waste that we're planning to have on our packaging, water and food in 2050. The progress is also promising. By 2022, by the end of this year, 85% of the energy is coming from renewable sources.
90% of our packaging is recyclable, and 90% of our waste is recyclable too. By 2025, 100% of our energy will come from renewable energies, and 100% of our packaging will be fully recyclable. If we go to the last pillar, which is Baked for Life. Next page, please. Finally, Baked for Life is about to make sure progress turns into prosperity for all around us. To sum up very quickly, a new strategy with a whole new level of ambition, three pillars interconnected, clear and public commitments, and finally, good, promising progress and a lot to do. Back to you, Daniela.
Thank you. We will now conduct a Q&A session. If you would like to ask a question, please press the Raise Your Hand button located at the bottom of the screen. If you are connected via telephone, please dial star nine. We remind you that all lines have been placed on mute. When it is your turn to ask a question, you will be given permission to speak. You will then be able to unmute yourself and ask your question. We will now pause for questions. Our first question comes from Antonio Hernandez. Please state your company name and then ask your question.
Hi. Thanks for the space of questions. This is Antonio Hernandez from Barclays. My question regarding renewable energy, how different. I mean, your target is very clear, but how is it different, current position across your operating geographies? I mean, I guess, of course, you have higher penetration of renewable energy in some places, maybe in Mexico compared to other countries, but can you give a little bit more light on that, on which countries you're more advanced and which ones are lagging? Thanks.
Maybe Alejandra, who's the global-
Yeah, I can.
Sustainability director can give you the flavor. Actually, it's quite equal in many geographies. Please, Alejandra, go ahead.
Yeah. Thank you very much. I'm Alejandra Vázquez. I'm responsible for sustainability also all of these efforts. We have a lot of progress in different geographies. For example, in Mexico we have renewable. It's the same in Canada and U.S.A.. We have different ways to obtain the renewable energy. We can do it by some kind of contract with wind farms, but also we are working a lot on solar roofs. In fact, we have right now 90 solar roofs. Sorry, I'm a little bit nervous.
Well, we have 90 solar roofs. We also have different solar roofs in different geographies, in Argentina, in Latin America, Central America. We are working in different ways to obtain our renewable energy with wind farms, with solar roofs, and also with different contracts for renewable energies, mainly in Europe. At the end, we, as you already hear, at the end of the last year, we reached 85% of renewable energy, and we're looking to have it, the 100% in 2025, but these remain action lines.
Thank you, Alejandra. Our next question comes from Bernardo Malpica. Please state your company name and then ask your question.
Hi, Daniel, Rafael, Alejandra. Thank you for taking the time. My name is Bernardo Malpica from Compass Group. My question is just regarding how we will be able to track the evolution of these objectives? I mean, do you have a specific strategy to, I don't know, give some reports in the quarters, in the annual reports? Or how are we gonna be able to identify if the objectives are being fulfilled? Thank you.
Yeah. We are tracking our main. We define different KPIs for each one of the eight action lines that Rafa described. These KPIs we reported in the annual report. In fact, you can see already in our webpage the annual report. You can find that this annual report is also aligned with the GRI, but we also use a different ways to report. It depends of the topic. For example, for carbon, water, and forest, we also report in the CDP initiative. We define strategic KPIs that have been reported in our annual report annually.
Perfect. Thank you so much.
Thank you. Our next question comes from Samuel Epee-Bounya. If you could state your company name and ask your question, please. Thank you.
I don't know if you can hear me well. This is Sam Epee-Bounya from Wellington Management. Thank you for the comprehensive presentation on your sustainability effort. I'm curious about the costs associated with such an endeavor. I mean, have you sort of have an estimate of how much it will cost to reach your goals over the medium and long term? Specifically the net zero one, have you made some estimate? Thank you.
We still don't have a.
If I may.
Okay, go ahead, please, Daniel. Sorry.
No, just, I mean, we certainly, I mean, on the history of our renewable programs, we have done a lot of business models and in all cases, basically they render positive profitability. I would say that our path on renewables, it's one that we've been documenting all along the way, and it's been in all cases one that either it's done through third parties and we get some benefits or that we invest within the boundaries of the rates that we want for the internal rate of return.
In the case of the net zero initiative, we don't have a clear measure of the undertaking. It's something that we believe that we have to get into that commitment and work towards that end. What I can tell you is that we are investing, I think it's around $2 million this year, and we will enlarge that amount, maybe, Ale, you can give us the exact amount in the pilot tests that we are doing in different countries with different organizations to enlist the support of farmers.
This is gonna be a huge endeavor and one that we will be undertaking with the help of our suppliers and their suppliers. It's gonna be a multi-year effort. We hope that as many companies basically ask the same from their suppliers, it's gonna be basically the requirement of the market and it's gonna be something that is gonna be basically the new way to do business. I don't know, Ale, if you want to be more specific on the investments for this year.
Yeah. As Daniel said, we are working in different action lines in terms of net zero. The first one, we are not going to need a lot of money because we are working in energy efficiency to improve the way we use the fuels in our operations and also in our vehicles. The second one is, as you already hear all about the renewable energy, that I already have the number that we already have renewable energy in 20 countries where we operate. Also that, as Daniel said, most of these examples give us money or give us earnings in all of these efforts. The third one is that we're gonna try to look at different technologies.
Now we are working in our CapEx to include like mandatory best practices in all of the lines that we install with different best practices to reduce the use of energy in all the operations and also the vehicles. The other side of the way we need to reduce our Scope three is gonna be the regenerative agriculture. We are going to invest $50 million in terms of regenerative agriculture to reach our first stage of our goals, 200,000 hectares to these practices of regenerative agriculture. These practices are important because half of our carbon footprint comes from agricultural sources. That's why we have a lot of effort and challenge in terms of our regenerative agriculture program.
If I may, I would remind you that net zero, it is about energy, and energy we're seeing that some savings and earnings. It's also about waste, and waste is actually reduction of waste or recyclability of that waste is actually bringing savings. Last but not least, 50% of our carbon footprint is on agriculture. Regenerative agriculture, one way or another, will have to be done. But we are positively surprised by the outcomes of certain pilots that we have done directly or indirectly in Mexico, for example, where we see that regenerative practices bring more outcome, more yield per square meter, and that the carbon sequestration, which is very effective, is preventing climate change.
Climate change is the number one cause for crops and harvests to go wrong, and therefore prices to go up. We are very bullish on regenerative agriculture. As Daniel said, it is a job that has to be done together with our suppliers.
Only at the end, only to complement, another part of our net zero effort is gonna be in the mobility. We are working a lot in electromobility or to reduce the use of fossil fuels in our transportation with low carbon emission vehicles. That's the other part of our strategy in net zero. You can see in Science Based Targets our goals for the 2030 in terms of Scope one, two, and three.
Thank you, Ale. We have a question in the Q&A. It states, "We understand Scope three emissions are a big part of your footprint. How are you planning to reduce Scope three emissions?
Alejandra?
Yeah. Well, we
Go ahead.
I believe we explaining a little bit of this. Most of our Scope three comes from our supply chain, and the other one is in the agricultural sources of raw materials. In terms of raw materials, we are working to in this specific practices that is the regenerative agriculture strategy. In the supply chain, we're working to form alliances with our supply chain to reduce the carbon footprint with the different supply chain. It depends of the supplier, but we are working with them to reduce our carbon footprint in the supply chain.
In the part of our clients, we also are working with different clients to reduce our carbon footprint and to map our footprint with them to define a specific target with them. It depends on the size and the part of the scope is the source in our agricultural part.
Yeah. I would add that regenerative agriculture aims to reduce the use of water, energy, and fertilizers of any kind, thus reducing, if well done, the cost for farmers. On one side, you get more outcome per square meter. On the other side, with digitalization and breakthrough technologies, you can reduce or better aim the source of water, energy, and fertilizers to make sure that you don't overinvest. This tends to be yielding better margins. The big question is how to help farmers to do the step ahead, to do the transition from the old-fashioned way of doing things to the new way of doing things. This is where we are also focusing on. Awaring, making them aware of the new agricultural practices and help them transition so that they don't feel it is a risk to go for the new first crop of doing things.
Thank you, Rafa. Our next question comes from Christian Juarez. Please state your company name and then ask your question.
Hi, everyone. Regarding the carbon emissions that you talk about a little, I don't know if today you are in surplus or in deficit of carbon emissions. The question is because maybe in Europe you have a heavy rules. Now, if you have a surplus, you need to buy carbon bonds to compensate the emissions that you have. In Latin America and North America, we don't have it yet. No, but I don't know if in the short term could be a risk. Thank you.
Well, we are not thinking to compensate. We are working a lot inside of the company to reduce our carbon footprint in the ways that I already explained, in the sequestration, in the part of agricultural sources. The other one is reduce the use of fossil fuels and electromobility and all about new technologies in terms of change fossil fuels for another fuels. Our strategy comes from more to reduction to move to zero, and we are not thinking to compensate our carbon footprint.
Okay. That is in the future, no? Are you in a surplus or deficit on the carbon emissions?
Well, we have emissions of carbon that you can review in our annual report. That emissions is that versus our baseline are the ones that we're looking to reach or to get or to move to zero in 2050, but we have intermediate goals for 2030.
Okay. I'm going to review. Thank you very much.
Yeah.
Hi. I would just like to hand the call back over to Alejandra. If you could, state the investment amounts and time of the following years.
Sorry, can you repeat it again, please?
Yes. Thank you. If you could clarify on the investment that is, I think, $15 million in the next five years?
Yeah. It's $15 million in agricultural regenerative projects to reach the goal in 2030. That is gonna be 200,000 hectares of regenerative agriculture. My guess is, it's better in that way? It's clear?
Yeah. Thank you.
Thank you.
If I can elaborate on this pilot, we are. Our main aim is to make sure that wheat bread is in our tables today, tomorrow, and the day after tomorrow. This means that we are undertaking some kind of responsibility because it is linked to our baking mission is to make sure that we are testing here and there ways to make sure that the yield of wheat increases and that farmers can have a better living. That is why this pilot is starting in Mexico, Canada, and United States.
Those three countries are important for us for two reasons. Number one, those three countries are very important from a PNL point of view, the way that those countries still carry on our PNL. On the other side, those three countries are key wheat producer countries. That is the reason why we aim to develop this pilot test, then to scale on these three countries first.
Thank you, Rafa. Our next question comes from Alejandro Fuchs. Please state your company name and then ask your question.
Hello, Daniel, Rafael, Alejandra. Thank you very much for the presentation. Alejandro Fuchs from Itaú BBA. I have a quick question regarding key ingredients. You mentioned several key ingredients coming from not sustainable agriculture. Just wanted to ask by what year do you want to reach this goal? Also how much of the key ingredients come today from sustainable agriculture, and how has this number evolved over the last couple of years? Lastly, maybe touch on a point that someone already made, and I know it's difficult to quantify today how this could impact the cost in the future. But assuming that this could potentially impact, what efficiency programs is the company working today maybe to try to mitigate this in the future? Thank you very much.
I would start by saying that this goal is in 2050, right? I pass it to Alejandra, and then I will come back to me. Okay, Alejandra, why don't you elaborate on what are those key ingredients that we're talking about?
Most of the key ingredients that we're talking about is mostly wheat, corn, and potatoes. We are working because we are a bread company mostly, so that's why wheat is a really important key ingredient for us. We started in 2018 a program with the CIMMYT. CIMMYT is an International Center of Wheat and Corn, and we develop our framework to regenerative agriculture with them. We also are working with an EF, that is Earthworm Foundation, to develop our framework in terms of regenerative agriculture. In this last year, from 2018 to date, we reach almost 4,000 hectares of key ingredients, corn and wheat, from regenerative agriculture. That's our first step, develop our framework. With this framework, we are going to go to the goals for the 20 [audio distortion].
I would finish by saying that we have long-standing productivity and saving programs in place. I would add that this pandemic has helped us to really take a look at our portfolio in a whole different way. SKU simplification, reducing complexities, bringing a lot of money to the table. Same thing with lean manufacturing techniques. Why not with revenue growth management, which is turning us from doing pricing equals costing to pricing equals value. We have excellent deals in our portfolio that we are pricing at the right value, and we are compensating. So far we feel comfortable that this should not erode our margins in 2050.
Thank you very much.
Thank you, Rafa. We have time for one more question today and it's for the whole team, and it states: How are you thinking about the issuance of green bonds that are tied to specific green projects versus issuing sustainability-linked bonds?
Hi, everyone. This is Diego. Rafa, if it's okay, I can take this one. For the time being, we're not planning to issue any bonds at all. As you know, we do not have any short-term maturities. We have a very strong debt profile. For sure in the future, we will analyze the possibility to issue a sustainable bond or a green bond. A good example of this is our revolving credit facility that, as you know, is a sustainability-linked loan that was recently renewed few months ago. Once the time comes, we will define which is the best way to go.
Thank you, Diego. That concludes our question and answer session. I would now like to hand the call back over to Mr. Daniel Servitje for some closing remarks.
Well, thank you very much for attending this event. It's our first ever, and I hope that if you have any other questions, please reach our investor relations group, and we'll take it from there. Thank you very much.
That concludes today's call. You may now disconnect. Have a good day.