Potential Risks in our Operations and Supply Chains
Our Operations
Nutrien does not consider any of its wholly
owned operations in Canada to carry a significant risk of Modern Slavery given our workforce and human resources policies and procedures. The employees within our reportable operating segments work in Canada only, which has a low prevalence of
Modern Slavery, a low risk of vulnerability to Modern Slavery and a reasonably robust government response to Modern Slavery.3 Moreover, our global workforce largely consists of skilled, qualified
and experienced individuals.
We also have a number of internal controls designed to safeguard the rights of our employees. These include our
internal policies and practices, including our recruitment, employee engagement and remuneration practices, our speak-up and investigations processes, our grievance resolution processes (applicable at our
unionized locations), and our commitment to respecting and observing all human rights, in accordance with applicable law and the principles set forth in applicable international standards.
Nutrien has no operations in countries with high levels of corruption risk as determined by Transparency Internationals 2022 Corruption Perception
Index (that is, the countries that are part of the 20 lowest rankings).
Our Supply Chains
Based on our Scoping Exercise and Risk Assessment conducted in 2023, which focused on our key suppliers representing a significant portion of our supply
chain by total supplier spend, we consider the overall risk of Modern Slavery in our supply chains to be low. The Risk Assessment indicated that the majority of the goods we purchased were from low-risk
jurisdictions4 and none of our direct third-party suppliers were identified as being high risk based on a review of information provided by global providers of risk data and publicly available
information.
We understand that certain manufacturing regions and materials carry higher risk of Modern Slavery by virtue of the prevalence of
Modern Slavery in particular countries. There are also risks linked to certain industries such as manufacturing and agriculture even in countries considered to have lower risks of Modern Slavery. We recognize that a large number of our direct
suppliers are likely to rely on extensive global supply chains for the goods and/or services provided to us which makes it particularly challenging for us to have direct and meaningful visibility across our supply chain beyond our direct suppliers.
Our governance, policies, and due diligence, as well as the Integrity Program, help us mitigate the potential risks in our supply chain. We
continuously work to improve our due diligence processes, including refining our Risk Assessment process, to assess and manage the risk of Modern Slavery in our supply chain.
REMEDIATION OF FORCED AND CHILD LABOUR AND LOSS OF INCOME
Based on our assessment of our activities and supply chain, as described above, in 2023, there were no measures taken to remediate the loss of income to
the most vulnerable families given that there was no Modern Slavery identified in our operations or supply chain.
3 Walk Free, Global Slavery Index 2023, at pp. 88-93 found here.
4 Walk Free, Global Slavery Index World Map, 2023, found here.
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