Banrisul carries out the continuous and integrated management of capital and credit, market, interest rate variation risks for the instruments classified in the banking portfolio – IRRBB; as well as liquidity, operational, social, environmental, climate and other risks considered relevant. Social, Environmental and Climate Risks (RSAC, in Portuguese) are some of the various types of risk to which the Institution in exposed and must be managed in an integrated manner with the other corporate risks.
The Social, Environmental and Climate Risk management structure includes the assessment of Stress Testing results, the monitoring of the risk indicators defined in the Risk Appetite Statement (RAS) and the periodic preparation of reports. In regard to Stress Testing, the Social, Environmental and Climate Risk is included in the other corporate risks since its impacts are mostly observed in credit and in civil and labor lawsuits.
Geared towards meeting the new requirements, Banrisul has developed action plans, which are being implemented and will improve the governance, analysis, management and reporting of social, environmental and climate risks.
When offering a new product, service, or solution, the Bank carried out an analysis to verify potential risks to public health, the environment, infringement of laws and regulations for social and environmental protection, contributing to or being affected by changes in climate patterns.
Through any of its members, the Fiscal Council is responsible for overseeing the Management’s acts and verifying compliance with their legal and statutory duties, according to the Fiscal Council’s Internal Regulation. Some risks are identified, managed and monitored focused on Operational Risk which, consequently, has its control compliance assessed by the Controls and Compliance department.
Even though Banrisul does not have a tax policy approved by the Board or validated by its committees, the Bank adheres to principles to always achieve excellence in adopting good practices to mitigate and reduce tax and fiscal risks. It relies on the internal and external audits as partners in the pursuit of excellence in the management of the institution’s tax matters.
In a broader sense, the responsibilities of the Fiscal and Tax Corporate Department include calculating the institution’s taxes and monitoring all the impacts on the related accessory obligations; supporting the other corporate departments responsible for tax-generating events, whether direct or as tax substitutes, in order to identify possible situations of risk that must be dealt with at the source of the information; in addition to the continuous monitoring of communication with the regulatory and oversight agencies, so as not to generate any burden, whether financial or reputational.
In 2021, Banrisul collected and provisioned R$1,010.9 million in own taxes and contributions. Taxes withheld and passed on, directly levied on financial intermediation and other payments, totaled R$915.2 million in the same period.
Banrisul’s organizational structure includes the Internal Audit department, subordinated to the Board of Directors, whose scope of activities considers all duties of Banrisul and the other companies in the conglomerate, in compliance with CMN Resolution 4,879/2020. Therefore, as of the publication of CMN Resolution No. 4,945, of September 15, 2021, an audit forecast was included in the Internal Audit planning for 2022.
The Board of Directors (BoD) is responsible for acting on behalf of the Institution in the Risk Appetite Statement (RAS) supported by the Risk Committee (RC), the Executive Board and the CRO. The Disclosure Policy is considered in assessing RWA amount and adequacy to PR. The Board of Directors mainly focuses on the review and approval of:
The Board of Directors (BoD) ensures that the institution complies with the policies, strategies and its own limits, considering possible timely corrections to structural deficiencies. Its responsibilities also include the capacity to approve significant changes to policies and strategies as well as systems, routines and procedures, such as:
Another responsibility of the Board is the capacity to ensure the appropriate and sufficient culture and resources to carry out the activities in an independent, objective and effective manner, based on the legislation in force. It is necessary to approve the appointment and removal of the officer in charge and the organizational structure for capital and corporate risk management.
Banrisul’s strategy is aims to set up partnerships to increase the number of microcredit operations. For the year 2022, the Bank plans to make progress in the partnership with the union of motorcycle couriers, offering microcredit lines at special conditions for the acquisition of new motorcycles, safety equipment for use in the activity of motorcycle couriers, and the financing of bicycles, contributing to the safe delivery of orders.
As regards loans to promote small businesses and community development, three credit operations were granted, totaling R$ 13,600.00 in 2021.
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The Bank does not use the positive screening criterion for Development Lines; however, the approach used excludes companies that are not in compliance with it, whether environmental or labor, and takes into account the applicable legislation and the requirements of the onlending agents (BNDES, FINEP and FGTS). Thus, the borrower’s legal, social and environmental compliance is monitored by the competent technical area. As for social and environmental criteria, Banrisul has adopted the practice of not granting credit to companies that carry out activities that do not comply with the proper environmental agency, i.e., companies that do not have an environmental license. If the borrower is included in the Ministry of the Economy’s list of employers that submit their workers to degrading forms of labor or keep them in conditions similar to forced labor is also considered a restriction for credit approval.
In order to mitigate social and environmental risks throughout the operation’s effectiveness, the Bank relies on contractual clauses for extraordinary or early maturity for cases of non-compliance with legislation, problems with environmental licensing, crimes against the environment, forced and child labor. There are no exclusions or limitations to audit coverage related to regions or products and services.
There is no specific sustainability policy for rural loans in the agribusiness sector, however, the legal obligations and the guidelines of the Rural Loan Manual, which addresses environmental and social compliance in credit assignment, must be followed. Products managed comply with the Bank’s credit and sustainability policies, in addition to the guidelines of onlending agents, always complying with new sustainable aspects. Accordingly, the Company relies on the Responsibility Policy (PRSAC in Portuguese), which guides the practices, processes and business, coupled with the Management of Social, Environmental and Climate Risks.
Banrisul is present in almost 93% of the municipalities. The Bank’s reach comprises service points located both in developed cities with great economic potential and in municipalities that are difficult to access, poorly developed and essentially rural, allowing Banrisul to exceed 99% coverage of the state’s GDP, considering its branches, Service Stations, Banripontos (Banking Correspondents) and Automated Teller Machines (ATMs or PAEs in Portuguese). Banrisul’s presence ensures that the community of the State of Rio Grande do Sul has access to the conveniences offered by the Bank in terms of its financial products and services, which ensure the financing of personal or corporate activities, fostering the State’s economy.
The Bank is continually prospecting cities that lack or have poor offer of banking services. The following table presents the presence of service points throughout the state.
Presence in Rio Grande do Sul | Number of municipalities | Municipalities coverage | Population coverage | GDP Coverage |
Branch | 347 | 69.8% | 96.5% | 96.9% |
Service Station | 81 | 16.3% | 2.1% | 1.9% |
Subtotal (Branches + Service Stations) | 428 | 86.1% | 98.6% | 98.8% |
Automated Teller Machines and Banriponto | 6 | 1.2% | 0.1% | 0.1% |
Automated Teller Machines | 15 | 3.0% | 0.3% | 0.2% |
Banriponto | 12 | 2.4% | 0.3% | 0.2% |
Subtotal (Automated Teller Machines and Banriponto) | 33 | 6.6% | 0.7% | 0.6% |
Total | 461 | 92.8% | 99.3% | 99.3% |
Total direct and indirect (Scope 1, 2 and 3) GHG emissions in metric tonnes of CO2 equivalent
Type of emission | 2020 Amount (in TCO2e)² | 2021 Amount (in TCO2e) |
Total direct emissions (Scope 1) | 639.7 | 958.9 |
Total indirect emissions (Scope 2) | 2,067.6 | 4,642.3 |
Total other indirect emissions (Scope 3) | 31.0 | 5,054.4 |
Biogenic emissions of CO2 | 6.9 | 871.9 |
Other - HCFC 22 (R22) | 2,970.7 | 3,010.0 |
Total¹ | 5,716.0 | 14,537.5 |
¹From the reference year 2020 to 2021, emissions from energy consumption increased mainly due to the growth in the emission factor, arising from the water crisis and the need to use energy from sources that contribute to Greenhouse Gas emissions. In 2021, the group’s companies were also included in the GHG Inventory, leading to an increase in emissions due to an improvement in data gathering.
²2020 was the year in which Banrisul prepared its first GHG inventory, using this year as the basis for its future inventories.
For purposes of calculating scope 1, 2 and 3 emissions, all gases (CO2, CH4, N2O, HFCs, PFCs, SF6, NF3) were considered, according to the methodology adopted by the Brazil GHG Protocol Program.
In the second GHG inventory, prepared in 2021, the Bank included rented cars in scope 1 emissions, as well as an analysis of electricity consumption at some leased venues in scope 2. In 2020, scope 3 included only business air travel, and for 2021, emissions related to transport and distribution (Upstream), business air and land travel, and employee commuting (home – work) were added.
Since the preparation of the first inventory in 2020, Banrisul has planned advancements and improvements in data gathering and in projects to mitigate emissions. For the upcoming cycle, the Institution plans to begin calculating emissions in the credit portfolio and in some other scope 3 categories, such as waste generation. In addition to officially disclosing the goal of reducing emissions by 2030, the Bank plans to adhere to some framework for managing its emissions.
The Renewable Energy Project is progress with the goal of migrating Banrisul’s energy consumption matrix to renewable sources, expected to start in 2022 and gradually transition the Bank’s branches and administrative buildings.
The Bank is exposed to transition risk arising from events associated with the transition to a low carbon economy, as well as legal and regulatory changes, technological innovations, changes in products and services supply and demand, unfavorable perception of clients, the financial market or society in general related to climate change.
Another risk that can impact the Institution is physical climate risk, which refers to the possibility of losses arising from frequent and severe weather conditions or long-term environmental changes. Examples of this type of risk include extreme weather conditions, such as droughts, floods, storms, cyclones, frosts and forest fires; and permanent environmental changes, including rising sea levels, scarcity of natural resources, desertification, and changes in rainfall or temperature patterns.
From the Integrated Risk Management process, in addition to monitoring the regulatory environment and customer perception, management includes consulting information on public lists and verifying the activities, products and services subject to social and environmental legislation. Therefore, the Institution seeks to ensure regularity at all levels of its operations. As for operations, Social, Environmental and Climate risks inherent to the activity’s economic industry are identified, based on the National Registry of Economic Activity (CNAE – Cadastro Nacional de Atividade Econômica) code.
Climate risk management costs are not calculated individually but are considered together with the resources allocated to the Institution’s risk management.
Since 2001, Banrisul has the Reciclar (Recycling) Program, aimed at encouraging and fostering environmentally friendly waste collection and recycling at the Institution, in line with the environmental legislation in force.
Recyclable waste (unserviceable paper, metals, plastics, glass, among others) are treated differently, according to their classification. Paper and cardboard are sent to recycling through partners that receive this material and properly dispose it. In 2021, 206.6 tons were sent to partners.
Metals are sent to a specialized partner in the steelmaking industry for subsequent recycling. In 2021, 114.1 tons of metal scraps were sent for recycling. For the institution’s unserviceable safes, Banrisul seeks to donate them to be reused. When this is not possible, they are sent for decharacterization, so that they can be recycled or the materials resulting from this process can be reused. In 2021, 16 units of safes were sent for proper disposal (donation or recycling), totaling 10.4 tons of these items.
With regard to plastic waste, Banrisul has been implementing the Copinho Zero Project to replace the plastic cups used by employees with mugs and squeezes, which will result in a significant reduction in the generation of this type of waste in the organization’s premises. Banrisul estimates that by the end of 2022 disposable cups will no longer be used, leading to a decrease in plastic waste generation.
Banrisul is concerned about the disposal of acrylic waste, which is sent to a partner that uses it as raw material, allowing its reinsertion in the production chain. As for electronic waste, the volume generated by the branch network and units is properly disposed of through the Sustentare/RS Program which, in turn, uses three destination options: donation, reconditioning and recycling. Accordingly, in 2021 alone, through this program, Banrisul directed 93.4 tons of electronic equipment to proper disposal.
Seeking to promote the reuse of unserviceable furniture, the Bank donates these items to non-profit institutions that want to reuse them. In 2021 alone, 4,999 furniture units were donated to charitable institutions such as schools, APAEs, and the Military Police. In turn, the furniture that cannot be donated is sent to institutions that dismantle and reuse the material for other purposes, such as, for example, Banrisul’s partnership with the State Penitentiary of Canoas in which the inmates transform the furniture into houses for animals, which are then installed in public places across the city.
Banrisul also properly disposes of fluorescent lamps by directing these components to a company hired for this purpose. As regards fabric and canvas scraps, the Bank has partnerships for their proper disposal, through co-processing, in which waste will be used as fuel for the cement industry’s furnaces.
The organic waste generated by the organization are directed for public collection in the cities where the branches and units are located. A company has been hired for the disposal of organic waste at the administrative headquarters building.
In terms of procurement, in 2021, Banrisul added sustainability standards in the purchasing and bidding criteria, in order to use them as conditions for purchases that are increasingly in line with social, environmental and climate matters.
The waste generated by the organization is managed centrally by Banrisul, through the Sustainability Corporate Department, which is responsible for receiving, sorting and disposing of waste in an environmentally correct way, relying on duly accredited partners for each class of waste.
All waste directed to the Bank’s waste management are qualitatively and quantitatively measured through control spreadsheets, and later, according to the type of waste are directed to the proper disposal. Therefore, waste disposal is monitored by issuing the Waste Transport Manifest (MTR in Portuguese) and the Waste Final Disposal Certificate (CDF in Portuguese).
Waste generated by type and disposal (t) | ||||
2019 | 2020 | 2021 | ∆2021/2020 | |
Non-hazardous waste - Class II¹ | ||||
Safes - Recycling and donation | 5.8 | 0.0 | 10.4 | - |
Metal (scraps) - Recycling | 179.1 | 45.4 | 114.1 | 151.5% |
Banners, shredded cards and acrylic - Recycling | 0.2 | 0.0 | 2.8 | - |
Paper - Recycling | 211.22 | 128.5 | 206.6 | 60.8% |
Electronics - Recycling | 50.3 | 49.7 | 93.4 | 87.8% |
Co-processing | 26.6 | 0.3 | 1.5 | 427.6% |
Total waste generated | ||||
Total waste diverted from disposal - Non-hazardous | 446.6 | 223.6 | 427.3 | 91.1% |
Total waste directed to disposal - Non-hazardous | 26.6 | 0.3 | 1.5 | 427.6% |
Overall total | 473.2 | 223.9 | 428.8 | 91.6% |
¹As for the organic waste generated in the organization, these are destined for public collection in the locations where agencies and units are located. In the administrative headquarters building there is a company hired to dispose of organic waste. There is no mapping of the amount of organic waste generated. | ||||
Waste generated by type and disposal (unit) | ||||
Hazardous waste - Class I | ||||
Lamps - Recycling | 5,713.0 | 1,652.0 | 2,060.0 | 24.7% |
Total waste diverted from disposal - Hazardous | 5,713.0 | 1,652.0 | 2,060.0 | 24.7% |
Non-hazardous waste - Class II | ||||
Donation of furniture - Reuse | 5,724.0 | 2,127.0 | 4,999.0 | 135.0% |
Total waste diverted from disposal - Non-hazardous | 5,724.0 | 2,127.0 | 4,999.0 | 135.0% |
Total waste generated | ||||
Total waste diverted from disposal | 11,437.0 | 3,779.0 | 7,059.0 | 86.8% |
Overall total | 0,0 | 0,0 | 0,0 | - |
2020 | 2021 | ∆2021/2020¹ | |
Non-renewable fuels consumption | |||
Diesel | 94.8 | 270.2 | 185.1% |
Electricity consumption | |||
Electricity from concessionary | 120.6 | 132.1 | 9.5% |
Total energy consumption | 215.4 | 402.3 | 86.8% |
¹There was an increase in diesel consumption due to the instabilities in energy supply from the distribution network. Additionally, the collection process gathered data that had not been accounted for in the previous cycle, such as energy consumption in leased venues.
²In the Inventory of GHG emissions, an additional 20 liters of diesel oil and 38,545 kWh of electricity consumed were reported, and the values presented in the table, for the year 2021, have been corrected.
Note: Only the Brazil GHG Protocol Program methodology was used.
Source for data conversion factors: 2021 National energy balance (reference year 2020). Available at: https://www.epe.gov.br/sites-pt/publicacoes-dados-abertos/publicacoes/PublicacoesArquivos/publicacao-601/topico-596/BEN2021.pdf
Banrisul is committed to investing in the regional culture and development, therefore, it seeks to support cultural and sports projects in the state’s different regions. Projects are assessed considering their relationship with regional development and their practical extension in several social aspects. These initiatives impact the local community through the economic development and accessibility improvements and contribute thought the preservation of tangible and intangible cultural heritage, in addition to fostering Rio Grande do Sul’s innovation ecosystem. As regards sports and education, projects offer better access to education, encourage young people and children to take up sports and contribute to fostering citizenship, human development and respect for equality in the population of Rio Grande do Sul.
Through sponsorships, Banrisul strives to be part of society by fostering projects that, preferably, contribute to employment and income generation. Such projects are linked to culture, sports, social responsibility education and technological innovation, and their achievements are of public interest, so as individuals and the community are positively impacted. In turn, the Bank’s brand is associated to social and environmental projects, which contribute to a broad disclosure to the population.
After the Management Proposal is published, the shareholders make nominations for the Board of Directors, which are subsequently submitted to the Chief of Staff of the Government of the State of Rio Grande do Sul for approval. If the nominations are approved, their names and information will be forwarded to the Treasury Department for the opening of an administrative proceeding via the PROA system. Upon the receipt of the Administrative Proceeding, the Eligibility and Compensation Committee analyzes the nominee, taking into consideration the eligibility requirements outlined in the Nomination and Succession Policy, which determine that the background and experience of the nominees for the Board of the Directors should be assessed, as well as their time availability to perform the duties, diversity, knowledge, experience, behavior, cultural aspects, age group, and gender. The Committee’s opinion is forwarded to the State Attorney General’s Office for a final decision about the fulfillment of the requirements and the absence of impediments. Once the nomination has been approved by the State Attorney General’s Office, the proceeding returns to the Company, so that the election can be held.
Every two years, before the Annual and Extraordinary Shareholders’ Meeting, shareholders submit their candidates for the highest governance body. The controlling shareholder makes its nominations considering the criteria set forth in the current legislation (Federal Law 13,303/16; Federal Law 6,404/46 and State Decree RS 54,110/18).
In 2022, the Nomination and Succession Policy was updated and stated that the election of Banrisul’s Board of Directors members, should include seats for Diversity groups as of 2023, as follows: I – the shareholder, or group of shareholders, with a right to nominate 25-40% of seats on Banrisul’s Board of Directors, shall be responsible for allocating at least one of the openings for members of the Diversity group; II – the shareholder, or group of shareholders, with a right to nominate for Banrisul’s Board of Directors any percentage higher than that established in item I must allocate two or more openings for members of the Diversity group; III – Grupo Banrisul must adjust the composition of the Boards of Directors, which shall respect the minimum percentage of 30% for openings aimed at the Diversity group, by 2030.
Independence criteria must also be considered, as provided for in article 22 of the Bylaws, which can be read here.
Banrisul’s current eligibility process involves several spheres (State Department of Finance, State Chief of Staff and State Attorney General’s Office, among others). This verification flow conveys security and reliability to all stakeholders.
The Institution is grounded on its values defined in its Code of Ethics as transparency, ethics, commitment, integration and efficiency, as well as in principles and guidelines, such as integrity, respect for diversity, people, appreciation of work, social and environmental responsibility, respect for competition, respect for the image and excellence in rendering services.
The commitments refer to internationally recognized intra-governmental instruments, namely the Brazilian Central Bank, Febraban, National Monetary Council, UN Global Compact Guidelines and SDG 16.
These guidelines/policies set forth responsibilities and consequences for all levels.
Banrisul manages capital and credit, market, interest rate variation risks for the instruments classified in the banking portfolio – IRRBB- in a continuous and integrated manner; as well as liquidity, operational, social, environmental, climate and other risks considered relevant.
Social risk, defined as the possibility of the Institution incurring in losses from events related to the violation of fundamental rights and guarantees or by acts that are harmful to the common interest, is one of the relevant risks included in the Risk Management Policies.
Banrisul does not have a specific human rights policy.
Human rights are rules that recognize and protect the dignity of all human beings and govern how individual human beings live in society and among themselves, as well as their relationship with the State and the obligations that the State has in relation to them. In this regard, as a signatory to the Global Compact since 2013, Banrisul reaffirms its commitment to the well-being of its employees, as well as to seeking to ensure the rights of its customers, suppliers and all stakeholders to which it engages. The Bank manages social risk, particularly, in order to mitigate possible actions that may occur under the human rights aspect.
The stakeholder categories to whom the Organization pays special attention in this commitment are employees, customers, suppliers and vulnerable publics.
Policy commitments should be approved by the Board of Directors. These commitments apply to management members, board members, employees, interns, members of the Banrisul Group, business partners, suppliers and the Group’s service providers.
An Administrative Instruction is issued stating that all employees must sign a Compliance Agreement, which is published in the Institutional Manual (Chapter 04 of Banrisul’s Code of Ethics and Conduct).
All employees receive training on the Code of Ethics and Conduct and the Anti-Corruption Policy. Banrisul has other institutional policies and makes a whistleblowing channel available both on the internal and external websites. The commitments of the Code of Ethics and the Anti-Corruption Policy are available to the public.
The responsibilities of the Eligibility and Compensation Committee are:
(i) drafting the compensation policy for Management of the Bank and its subsidiaries, suggesting to the respective Boards of Directors various forms of fixed and variable compensation, in addition to benefits and special recruiting and severance programs;
(ii) proposing to the Boards of Directors of the Bank and subsidiaries the overall Management compensation amount to be submitted to the respective Shareholders’ Meetings, pursuant to Article 152, of Law 6,404, of 1976;
(iii) assessing future internal and external scenarios and their possible impacts on the Management compensation policy of the Bank and its subsidiaries;
(iv) analyzing the Management compensation policy of the Bank and its subsidiaries vis-à-vis market practices in order to identify significant discrepancies compared its peers, proposing the necessary adjustments.
As per CMN Resolution 3,921/10, the Eligibility and Compensation Committee is responsible for assisting in the process of determining compensation. The Committee is composed of three independent members, all of whom are natural persons residing in Brazil, with higher education degrees and technical skills suitable for the position they hold. The members also meet the criteria for holding positions in statutory bodies of financial and other institutions authorized to operate by the Brazilian Central Bank.
The board members convene in ordinary and extraordinary meetings, and their considerations are recorded in minutes. In turn, shareholders can express their opinions at the Annual/Extraordinary Shareholders Meeting.
The Board of Directors members are only entitled to fixed monthly compensation as fees, and are not entitled to variable compensation or direct and/or indirect benefits. Executive Board members are entitled to monthly compensation in the form of monthly wage plus a representation fee, the annual amount of which must not exceed the overall management compensation amount set by the Extraordinary and Annual Shareholders’ Meeting. They are also entitled to Banrisul’s Profit Sharing Program (PLR, in Portuguese), calculated in accordance with the rules established by the Board of Directors, considering the rules applicable to the payment of PLR to employees, as defined in the Banking Employees’ Collective Bargaining Agreement. In addition to the PLR, the Banrisul Conglomerate may pay variable compensation to its executive officers, provided it is included in the overall compensation approved by the Shareholders’ Meeting, observing the limits established by the legislation in force and based on criteria that may be defined by the Board of Directors.
The report is published every year and this reporting period is between January 1, 2022 and December 31, 2022.
Contact: Sustainability Corporate Department, Rua Caldas Júnior, 108, 6º andar
E-mail: Sustentabilidade@banrisul.com.br
No information has been restated in previous reporting periods.
The composition of the Board of Directors ensures a seat for common minority shareholders, preferred minority shareholders and a representative of the employees, who is chosen by internal election, according to the Board of Directors Charter. Thus, stakeholder groups are engaged in the Board of Directors meetings.
The Board of Directors is responsible for the Company’s overall direction of business, institutional guidelines and goals. As regards Integrated Capital and Corporate Risk Management, the Board is responsible for:
a) Establishing the Institution’s risk appetite levels in the Risk Appetite Statement (RAS) and reviewing them supported by the Risk Committee, the Executive Board and the Chief Risk Officer (CRO);
b) Ensuring compliance with the Institution’s policies, strategies and risk management limits;
c) Whenever necessary, authorizing exceptions to policies, procedures, limits and risk appetite levels set out in the RAS;
d) Ensuring that the Institution’s compensation structure does not encourage behaviors that are incompatible with risk appetite levels set out in the RAS;
e) Ensuring that the Institution keeps adequate and sufficient capital and liquidity levels;
f) Having a broad and integrated knowledge of risks that can hinder capital.
As for Corporate Risk Management, the Board of Directors, the Risk Committee, the CRO and the Executive Board have seral joint responsibilities, including:
a) Understanding, in a broad and integrated way, risks that can impact the Institution’s capital and liquidity;
b) Understanding the limits of information included in capital and risk management reports;
c) Ensuring that the Institution complies with the content of the RAS;
d) Understanding the limits and uncertainties related to the assessment of risk models, even when they are developed by a third party, and the methodologies used in risk management structure; and
e) Ensuring the Institution’s different levels understand and continually monitor risks.
The Board of Directors meets periodically to evaluate changes to the capital and corporate risk management policies, as well as management reports on the main risks to which the Institution is exposed. At Management level, Banrisul relies on the Corporate Risk Committee and the Control and Risk Executive Office and, statutorily, on the Statutory Risk Committee.
In compliance with CMN Resolution 4,945, of September 15, 2021, Banrisul’s Social, Environmental and Climate Responsibility Policy (PRSAC, in Portuguese) determines that it is incumbent upon the Executive Board, a governance body elected by the Board of Directors, to:
a) provide input and participate in the decision-making related to the drafting and review of the PRSAC, assisting the Board of Directors;
b) support the implementation of actions to ensure this Policy’s effectiveness;
c) monitor and evaluate implemented actions;
d) ensure that implemented actions are improved whenever possible deficiencies are identified;
e) help and encourage the adequate and reliable dissemination of mandatory information;
f) manage the PRSAC at Banrisul. The responsibilities of the Board of Directors include ensuring that the Institution complies with the PRSAC and taking measures to ensure its effectiveness.
Banrisul has a the Social, Environmental and Climate Responsibility Committee (CRSAC, in Portuguese), an advisory body to the Board of Directors, whose duties and responsibilities are to:
a) make recommendations to the Board of Directors on the drafting and review of the Social, Environmental and Climate Responsibility Policy;
b) evaluate if the actions implemented are in compliance with the Social, Environmental and Climate Responsibility Policy and, whenever necessary, make recommendations for improvement;
c) keep records of its deliberations and decisions;
d) evaluate and monitor the Bank’s sustainable performance and the effectiveness of the actions laid down in the Sustainability Plan;
e) monitor advancements in sustainability, seeking to identify opportunities and risks, in order to create value for the Bank and its stakeholders;
f) propose and follow-up the execution of initiatives that improve the Bank’s socio-environmental performance;
g) assisting the Board of Directors in incorporating sustainability into the Company’s business strategy and administrative practices and follow up its progress;
h) analyze, monitor and issue recommendations and opinions to support the Board of Directors’ decisions on policies and practices related to its field;
i) fulfil other duties determined by the Board of Directors.
The Message from the CEO can be found in the Sustainability Report on page 4.
The number of workers who are not employees and whose work is controlled by the organization amounts to 2,204, of whom four are supernumeraries and 2,200¹ are interns.
Most common workers are interns, whose contractual relationship is established through an integration agent called Center for Company and School Integration (CIEE, in Portuguese). Interns serve bank customers, act as cashiers, provide documents to customers and perform collection activities. They also provide supporting services to the branches and other Bank departments, manage the flow of bank bags, clear documents and control documents in the archives.
The methodology and assumptions used to obtain this indicator gather data from the internal database. The significant change in the number of workers is due to the duration of the internship contract, which is up to two years.
¹ The 2022 Administration Report shows 2,293 trainees. The difference is due to the criteria used in the consultation, which also included those who left during the month. After adjustments, those who left during the month were disregarded for the purposes of the Sustainability Report.
The ratio of the annual total compensation for the organization’s highest-paid individual to the median annual total compensation for all employees is 12.0%, while the ratio of the percentage increase in the annual total compensation for the organization’s highest-paid individual to the median percentage increase in the annual total compensation for all employees is 0.8%.
Annual salary increases occur in April (regulatory promotions retroactive to January) and in September (collective bargaining agreement).
For calculation purposes, the CEO, who is not a Bank employee, was considered as the highest-paid individual. The other workers who are not employees were not considered in the calculation. The total compensation (salaries, bonuses, job commission, full performance bonus, annual bonus, overtime, singing bonus, relocation bonus, management, retirement bonus, and retirement incentive) was considered in calculating compensation.
Banrisul operates in the public and private sectors. The Bank and its affiliates currently have several types of suppliers: lawyers; consultants; system analysts; sellers of perishable and non-perishable goods; international IT companies; armored truck companies; and numerous other service providers.
The number of direct suppliers, in 2022, is estimated at 1,093. The Bank hires suppliers to provide services and products unrelated to its core activity, i.e., they provide supporting services and products, including security, cleaning, transportation of valuables, acquisition of IT systems, telephone and internet services, acquisition of furniture, building rental, acquisition of sundry items.
Banrisul acts as a financial agent for customers, from industry, agriculture, transport, service, trade and health sectors. Most of them are located in Brazil’s South region.
Stakeholder categories with whom Banrisul engages are:
The Institution has identified the need to create a stakeholder engagement program to strengthen its relationship with these groups and provide greater business opportunities and chances to listen to them. The goal is that this program enables the Institution to explore relationship channels with several groups.
For preparing its materiality, Banrisul surveyed all its target audiences, creating an opportunity to get to know their interests.
The Chair of the Board of Directors is not the Company’s CEO.
100% of employees are covered by collective bargaining agreements.
In compliance with Law 13,303/16, every year, elected Management members attend specific training on corporate and capital market legislation, disclosure of information, internal controls, code of conduct, Law 12,846, of August 1, 2013 (Anti-Corruption Law) and other topics related to the activities of a publicly held company or government-controlled company. In 2022, ESG was included in the list of topics. Additionally, Management members may participate in other courses/events with themes pertinent to their responsibilities in the respective governance bodies, if said theme is interesting for the Company.
Suspicions or evidence of non-compliance with Banrisul’s Code of Ethics and Conduct, policies, standards and institutional regulations in force should be reported through the Whistleblowing Channel, which allows the anonymous reporting of the misconduct, ensuring the right to confidentiality and protection against retaliation. The internal and external channels are available, respectively, on the Corporate Intranet and on Banrisul’s website (www.banrisul.com.br) and are intended for receiving misconduct reposts and complaints from employees and other stakeholders. The Control and Compliance Department is the independent area responsible for managing this channel.
Every six months the Board of Directors reviews a report on Banrisul’s Whistleblowing Channel. In compliance with article 3, paragraph 2, of CMN Resolution 4,859/2020, the Control and Compliance Department prepares a report with the following minimum information:
I – the number of reports received;
II – the nature of the reports;
III – the departments responsible for handling the situation;
IV – the average response time; and
V – the measures adopted by the Institution.
In 2022, there were 1,085 significant instances of non-compliance with laws and regulations, of which only one incurred in fine (one instance of irregular waste disposal). 720 Municipal Tax Unit (UFM, in Portuguese) (R$3,554.06) repaid by the outsourced cleaning company (as set forth in the contract) and other non-monetary penalties. Out of the 1,084 administrative or judicial proceedings that did not incur in fines, 1,082 are social in scope: six are events related to accessibility, 20 to over-indebtedness, one to customer moral harassment, 1,055 are labor complaint events (according to CMN Resolution 4,943/21), one environmental event (disposal of recyclable waste in an organic waste container), one climate-related event (collection lawsuit to recover the amounts from the plaintiff’s property insurance policy, affected by a storm).
Additionally, Banrisul received 262 notifications in this reporting cycle, 45 of which were fines for instances of non-compliance with laws, and all of these were paid during previous reporting periods.
Banrisul’s Board of Directors identifies and manages conflicts of interest based on, but not limited to, applicable legal standards provided for in Article 156 of the Brazilian Corporate Law and article 25 of its Bylaws. Furthermore, the Code of Ethics and Conduct is widely disseminated to management members, board members, employees, interns, members of the Banrisul Group, business partners, suppliers and service providers. In the event of a potential conflict of interest, members of the Board of Directors, the Audit Committee and the Ethics Committee must abstain from resolving on matters in which this conflict is identified. Another important document governing this topic is the Related-Party Transactions Policy that outlines the conditions credit transactions and other related-party transactions.
The item “SUBORDINATION, SERVICE OR CONTROL RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN THE ISSUER’S MANAGEMENT AND ITS SUBSIDIARIES, AFFLIATES AND OTHERS” of the Company’s Reference Form informs the interest held by Banrisul management in management of other companies in the Banrisul Group. The only controlling shareholder is the State of Rio Grande do Sul.
Related-party transactions, as well as measures taken by Banrisul, can be found in Note 29, pages 118 and 119, to the 2022 Financial Statements, available here.
The Control and Risk Executive Office is responsible for managing the Institutions’ corporate risks.
As regards Integrated Capital and Corporate Risk Management, the Chief Risk Officer (CRO) is responsible for the Corporate Risk Management Department and his/her duties include ensuring that the risk process monitors, controls, evaluates and plans capital need and goals and identifies, measures, monitors, reports, controls and mitigates credit, market, IRRBB, liquidity, operational, social, environmental and climate risks associated with the Prudential Conglomerate, communicating said risks to the Risk Committee, the CEO, the Board of Directors and regulatory agencies.
The Corporate Risk Executive Superintendent reports to the CRO on the Institution’s risk management. At least every year, risk management reports are submitted to the Board of Directors for consideration.
The credit policies definitions are available in internal regulations and are also parameterized in the “Customer Registration”, “Negative Incidents” and “Risk Calculation” systems. The Bank currently checks with external agencies whether the customer, either an individual or a company, has been listed as an “Employer that uses Forced Labor” or as causing “Environmental Damage” (conviction for environmental damage in actions filed by Brazil’s environmental protection agency (IBAMA, in Portuguese)).
Customers identified as “Employer of Forced Labor” are prevented from contracting any type of credit operations. We also monitor customers who already have a relationship with us and who may be included in those lists, taking specific actions to discontinue the business relationship.
All employees receive training on the Code of Conduct and Ethics and on Anti-Corruption. Banrisul has other institutional policies and makes a whistleblowing channel available both on the internal and external websites.
Banrisul’s Whistleblowing Channel is a communication tool that allows employees, customers, users, partners or suppliers to report possible misconduct of any nature related to the Institution’s activities that affect its reputation and violate its internal controls and Banrisul’s Compliance Program.
The Whistleblowing Channel recorded stable figures in 2018 and 2019, receiving 155 and 153 reports, respectively. In the following years, the number of reports spiked significantly to 536 in 2020 and 433 in 2021. This increase had two main reasons: first, the Institution made a channel available to external stakeholders, offering more visibility, thus increasing the number of reports; and second, the pandemic, which altered the service routine at the branches, leading Customers to use this channel to request information from the Bank.
In 2022, there was a significant reduction, only 234 contacts were made, reflecting the acculturation of the correct use of the channel.
Banrisul’ participates in Febraban’s committees and squads, in AMCHAM’s ESG Committee and the Interinstitutional Committee on Environmental Education (CIEA in Portuguese).
Banrisul is concerned about the credibility of its information disclosed to the market and submits its sustainability report to independent external limited assurance by Deloitte, which also audits the financial statements.
The assurance letter can be found in the Sustainability Report on page 119.
Performance evaluation is an essential step to assess effectiveness, contributing to enhance the Organization’s governance. The Board of Directors carries out an annual formal evaluation of the Executive Board and its Chair performance, as well as of its own performance, a process that include self-evaluation questions. The annual evaluation is carried out according to procedures previously defined by the Board of Directors and is anonymous and individual.
All answers to the evaluation questionnaires are compiled into a report, which is sent to the Eligibility and Compensation Committee for prior analysis and then presented to the Board of Directors for consideration. The body itself suggests improvements in carrying out their duties.
Banco do Estado do Rio Grande do Sul (Banrisul) is a government-controlled corporation. Banrisul’s General Management, its administrative headquarters, is located in the city of Porto Alegre, Rio Grande do Sul state.
2020 | 2021 | 2022 | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Men | Women | Total | Men | Women | Total | Men | Women | Total | |
Permanent and full-time employees | 5,129 | 4,151 | 9,280 | 4,946 | 4,056 | 9,002 | 4,729 | 3,929 | 8,658 |
¹Banrisul does not have temporary, non-guaranteed hours and part-time employees.
²All permanent employees are full-time employees.
Region¹ | 2020 | 2021 | 2022 |
---|---|---|---|
Midwest | 9 | 7 | 8 |
South | 9,214 | 8,939 | 8,600 |
Southeast | 57 | 56 | 50 |
Total | 9,280 | 9,002 | 8,658 |
¹Banrisul does not have employees in the North and Northeast regions.
Data were gathered from a proprietary system, considering total employees for the reference period.
The consolidated financial statements include the operations of Banrisul, its offices abroad, its subsidiaries (Banrisul Armazéns Gerais S.A., Banrisul S.A. Corretora de Valores Mobiliários e Câmbio, Banrisul S.A. Administradora de Consórcios, Banrisul Soluções em Pagamentos S.A., Banrisul Seguridade Participações S.A.) and investment fund quotas in which Banrisul substantially takes or incurs in risks and benefits. We explain the Banrisul Group in detail, which comprises six subsidiaries and four affiliated companies.
Name | Executive or non-executive position | Independent | Term of Office |
---|---|---|---|
Jorge Luís Tonetto | Chairman - non-executive position | No | 2021 - 2023 |
Claudio Coutinho Mendes | Vice chairman - executive position | No | 2021 - 2023 |
Irany de Oliveira Sant’Anna Junior | Member - executive position | No | 2021 - 2023 |
Márcio Gomes Pinto Garcia | Member - non-executive position | No | 2021 - 2023 |
Eduardo Cunha da Costa | Director - non-executive position | No | 2021 - 2023 |
Ramiro Silveira Severo | Member - non-executive position | Yes | 2021 - 2023 |
João Verner Juenemann | Member - non-executive position | Yes | 2021 - 2023 |
Rafael Andréas Weber | Member elected by minority common shareholders - non-executive position | Yes | 2021 - 2023 |
Adriano Cives Seabra | Member elected by minority preferred shareholders non-executive position | Yes | 2021 - 2023 |
Márcio Kaiser | Member - appointed by the employees - non-executive position | No | 2021 - 2023 |
Name | Executive or non-executive position | Independent | Term of Office |
---|---|---|---|
Bruno Pinto de Freitas | Sitting member, elected by majority shareholders- non-executive position | No | 2021 - 2023 |
Rogério Costa Rokembach | Sitting member, elected by majority shareholders- non-executive position | Yes | 2021 - 2023 |
Gustav Penna Gorski | Sitting member, elected by minority common shareholders - non-executive position | Yes | 2021 - 2023 |
Reginaldo Ferreira Alexandre | Sitting member, elected by preferred shareholders - non-executive position | Yes | 2021 - 2023 |
Bruno Queiroz Jatene | Alternate, elected by majority shareholders - non-executive position | No | 2021 - 2023 |
Tanha Maria Lauermann Schneider | Alternate, elected by majority shareholders - non-executive position | Yes | 2021 - 2023 |
Vicente Jorge Soares Rodrigues | Alternate, elected by majority shareholders - non-executive position | Yes | 2021 - 2023 |
Paulo Roberto Franceschi | Alternate, elected by preferred shareholders - non-executive position | Yes | 2021 - 2023 |
Name | Executive or non-executive position | Independent | Term of Office |
---|---|---|---|
João Verner Juenemann | Coordinator - non-executive position | Yes | 2020 - 2022 |
Carlos Biedermann | Member - non-executive position | Yes | 2021 - 2023 |
Eraldo Soares Peçanha | Member - non-executive position | Yes | 2021 - 2023 |
Name | Executive or non-executive position | Independent | Term of Office |
---|---|---|---|
Arnaldo Bonoldi Dutra | Member - non-executive position | Yes | 2021 - 2024 |
José Luiz Castro Mendel | Member - non-executive position | Yes | 2021 - 2024 |
Giusepe Lo Russo | Member - non-executive position | No | 2021 - 2024 |
Name | Executive or non-executive position | Independent | Term of Office |
---|---|---|---|
João Zani | Coordinator - non-executive position | Yes | 2022 - 2024 |
José Luis Campani Lourenzi | Member - non-executive position | No | 2022 - 2024 |
Carlos Eduardo Schonerwald da Silva | Member - non-executive position | Yes | 2022 - 2024 |
Luanda Pereira Antunes | Member - non-executive position | Yes | 2021 - 2023 |
Márcio Gomes Pinto Garcia | Member - non-executive position | Yes | 2021 - 2023 |
Member | Executive or non-executive position | Independent | Term of Office |
---|---|---|---|
Claíse Muller Rauber | Coordinator - Non-executive position | No | 2022 - 2023 |
Wagner Lenhart | Member - non-executive position | No | 2022 - 2023 |
Marivania Ghisleni Fontana | Member - non-executive position | No | 2022 - 2023 |
Jorge Luís Tonetto | Member - non-executive position | No | 2022 - 2023 |
Marilene de Oliveira Ramos Murias dos Santos | Member - non-executive position | Yes | 2023-2023¹ |
¹ Sworn in February 2023.
Name | Executive or non-executive position | Independent | Term of Office |
---|---|---|---|
Claudio Coutinho Mendes | CEO - executive position | No | 2021 - 2023 |
Irany de Oliveira Sant’Anna Junior | Deputy CEO and Risk and Controls Officer - executive position | No | 2021 - 2023 |
Claíse Muller Rauber | Products, Segments and Digital Channels Officer - executive position | No | 2021 - 2023 |
Fernando Postal | Distribution and Retail Officer - executive position | No | 2021 - 2023 |
Jorge Fernando Krug Santos | IT and Innovation Officer - executive position | No | 2021 - 2023 |
Marcus Vinícius Feijó Staffen | CFO and IRO - executive position | No | 2021 - 2023 |
Osvaldo Lobo Pires | Credit Officer - executive position | No | 2021 - 2023 |
Wagner Lenhart | Institutional Officer - executive position | No | 2021 - 2023 |
Marivania Ghisleni Fontana | Administrative Officer - executive position | No | 2021 - 2023 |
In 2022, Banrisul conducted a complete materiality assessment to define its material topics, which encompassed peer benchmarking, as well as analysis of the Company’s internal documents and industry literature, such as ESG ratings and standards. A list of material topics for the industry was prepared based thereon. This list was discussed and validated with important stakeholders through interviews (the CEO, Sustainability Corporate Department and Executive Board) and, then it was prioritized through an online survey with a larger stakeholder group.
At the same time, based on the analysis of internal risk documents, the Company assessed possible impacts related to each topic, which were duly classified as regards their nature and then added to the consolidated materiality results.
Results were assessed using a methodology that weighted the answers according to each stakeholder group. The results of the online survey were consolidated to the topics’ impact study to prepare the final list of material topics.
A total of 1,315 people from the following stakeholder groups participated in the online survey:
Prioritization and final approval:
Sustainability Corporate Department, CEO and Administrative Executive Board. The materiality results were also presented to the Sustainability Committee, the Social, Environmental and Climate Responsibility Committee and the Executive Board.
List of material topics:
Compared to 2021, the following new topics were added to the materiality list: “Diversity and inclusion”, “Corporate governance and integrity”; “Data privacy and security”; “Partner and supplier management”, “Human capital development”, “Eco-efficiency” and “Financial inclusion and education”.
In 2022, the topics “Risk approach and opportunities related to climate change” and “Quality of customer service and services provided” were added to the “Environmental, social and climate risk strategy” and “Sales practices and customer satisfaction”, respectively. The topic “Management of risks that can significantly impact business” was also added to “Environmental, social and climate risk strategy”.
Furthermore, topics “Management of energy consumption and solid waste generation”, “Criteria for financing assignment, positive impact and delinquency”, “Social investment in the external community” and “Business expansion strategy” have been excluded in this new step.
After the Management Proposal is published, the shareholders make nominations for the Board of Directors, which are subsequently submitted to the Chief of Staff of the Government of the State of Rio Grande do Sul for approval. If the nominations are approved, their names and information will be forwarded to the Treasury Department for the opening of an administrative proceeding via the PROA system. Upon the receipt of the Administrative Proceeding, the Eligibility and Compensation Committee analyzes the nominee, taking into consideration the eligibility requirements outlined in the Nomination and Succession Policy, which determine that the background and experience of the nominees for the Board of the Directors should be assessed, as well as their time availability to perform the duties, diversity, knowledge, experience, behavior, cultural aspects, age group, and gender. The Committee’s opinion is forwarded to the State Attorney General’s Office for a final decision about the fulfillment of the requirements and the absence of impediments. Once the nomination has been approved by the State Attorney General’s Office, the proceeding returns to the Company, so that the election can be held.
Every two years, before the Annual and Extraordinary Shareholders’ Meeting, shareholders submit their candidates for the highest governance body. The controlling shareholder makes its nominations considering the criteria set forth in the current legislation (Federal Law 13,303/16; Federal Law 6,404/46 and State Decree RS 54,110/18).
In 2022, the Nomination and Succession Policy was updated and stated that the election of Banrisul’s Board of Directors members, should include seats for Diversity groups as of 2023, as follows: I – the shareholder, or group of shareholders, with a right to nominate 25-40% of seats on Banrisul’s Board of Directors, shall be responsible for allocating at least one of the openings for members of the Diversity group; II – the shareholder, or group of shareholders, with a right to nominate for Banrisul’s Board of Directors any percentage higher than that established in item I must allocate two or more openings for members of the Diversity group; III – Grupo Banrisul must adjust the composition of the Boards of Directors, which shall respect the minimum percentage of 30% for openings aimed at the Diversity group, by 2030.
Independence criteria must also be considered, as provided for in article 22 of the Bylaws, which can be read here.
Banrisul’s current eligibility process involves several spheres (State Department of Finance, State Chief of Staff and State Attorney General’s Office, among others). This verification flow conveys security and reliability to all stakeholders.
According to Banrisul’s Anti-Corruption Policy, all those subject to the Policy are responsible for fostering an ethical culture and for creating an environment of permanent corruption control and prevention, in which it is possible to monitor and identify, through Due Diligence procedures, operations from customers and non-customers – individuals and companies – and actions or suspected corruption crimes, as well as enforcing the internal integrity and auditing mechanisms and procedures, encouraging whistleblowing and the effective application of Banrisul’s Anti-Corruption Policy and Code of Ethics and Conduct.
Moreover, in 2021, a Social, Environmental and Climate Risks (RSAC, in Portuguese) assessment questionnaire was developed for operations over R$10 million, which includes anti-corruption questions.
Operational risk management includes identifying and assessing external fraud events, the possibility of employee misconduct that offers or results in undue advantage and operational flaws in developing processes to assess or identify suspicious operations.
The Bank is subject to Brazilian and foreign anti-corruption legislation. These laws require the adoption of integrity procedures in order to mitigate the risk that any person, acting on behalf of the Bank, may offer an undue advantage to a public agent, in order to obtain benefits of any kind. The transnational scope legislations, including, but not limited to, the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act of 1977 and the UK Bribery Act of 2000, in addition to Federal Law no. 12,846/13, provide for the adoption of specific policies and procedures for the prevention and fight against illegal acts related to corruption of public administration entities and government representatives, which aim at ensuring any kind of advantage. They also require the Bank to keep its books and records accurate and rely on an internal controls system to certify their respective veracity, in addition to the prevention of illegal activities.
The responsibilities of the Eligibility and Compensation Committee are:
(i) drafting the compensation policy for Management of the Bank and its subsidiaries, suggesting to the respective Boards of Directors various forms of fixed and variable compensation, in addition to benefits and special recruiting and severance programs;
(ii) proposing to the Boards of Directors of the Bank and subsidiaries the overall Management compensation amount to be submitted to the respective Shareholders’ Meetings, pursuant to Article 152, of Law 6,404, of 1976;
(iii) assessing future internal and external scenarios and their possible impacts on the Management compensation policy of the Bank and its subsidiaries;
(iv) analyzing the Management compensation policy of the Bank and its subsidiaries vis-à-vis market practices in order to identify significant discrepancies compared its peers, proposing the necessary adjustments.
As per CMN Resolution 3,921/10, the Eligibility and Compensation Committee is responsible for assisting in the process of determining compensation. The Committee is composed of three independent members, all of whom are natural persons residing in Brazil, with higher education degrees and technical skills suitable for the position they hold. The members also meet the criteria for holding positions in statutory bodies of financial and other institutions authorized to operate by the Brazilian Central Bank.
The board members convene in ordinary and extraordinary meetings, and their considerations are recorded in minutes. In turn, shareholders can express their opinions at the Annual/Extraordinary Shareholders Meeting.
The Board of Directors members are only entitled to fixed monthly compensation as fees, and are not entitled to variable compensation or direct and/or indirect benefits. Executive Board members are entitled to monthly compensation in the form of monthly wage plus a representation fee, the annual amount of which must not exceed the overall management compensation amount set by the Extraordinary and Annual Shareholders’ Meeting. They are also entitled to Banrisul’s Profit Sharing Program (PLR, in Portuguese), calculated in accordance with the rules established by the Board of Directors, considering the rules applicable to the payment of PLR to employees, as defined in the Banking Employees’ Collective Bargaining Agreement. In addition to the PLR, the Banrisul Conglomerate may pay variable compensation to its executive officers, provided it is included in the overall compensation approved by the Shareholders’ Meeting, observing the limits established by the legislation in force and based on criteria that may be defined by the Board of Directors.
The composition of the Board of Directors ensures a seat for common minority shareholders, preferred minority shareholders and a representative of the employees, who is chosen by internal election, according to the Board of Directors Charter. Thus, stakeholder groups are engaged in the Board of Directors meetings.
The Board of Directors is responsible for the Company’s overall direction of business, institutional guidelines and goals. As regards Integrated Capital and Corporate Risk Management, the Board is responsible for:
a) Establishing the Institution’s risk appetite levels in the Risk Appetite Statement (RAS) and reviewing them supported by the Risk Committee, the Executive Board and the Chief Risk Officer (CRO);
b) Ensuring compliance with the Institution’s policies, strategies and risk management limits;
c) Whenever necessary, authorizing exceptions to policies, procedures, limits and risk appetite levels set out in the RAS;
d) Ensuring that the Institution’s compensation structure does not encourage behaviors that are incompatible with risk appetite levels set out in the RAS;
e) Ensuring that the Institution keeps adequate and sufficient capital and liquidity levels;
f) Having a broad and integrated knowledge of risks that can hinder capital.
As for Corporate Risk Management, the Board of Directors, the Risk Committee, the CRO and the Executive Board have seral joint responsibilities, including:
a) Understanding, in a broad and integrated way, risks that can impact the Institution’s capital and liquidity;
b) Understanding the limits of information included in capital and risk management reports;
c) Ensuring that the Institution complies with the content of the RAS;
d) Understanding the limits and uncertainties related to the assessment of risk models, even when they are developed by a third party, and the methodologies used in risk management structure; and
e) Ensuring the Institution’s different levels understand and continually monitor risks.
The Board of Directors meets periodically to evaluate changes to the capital and corporate risk management policies, as well as management reports on the main risks to which the Institution is exposed. At Management level, Banrisul relies on the Corporate Risk Committee and the Control and Risk Executive Office and, statutorily, on the Statutory Risk Committee.
In compliance with CMN Resolution 4,945, of September 15, 2021, Banrisul’s Social, Environmental and Climate Responsibility Policy (PRSAC, in Portuguese) determines that it is incumbent upon the Executive Board, a governance body elected by the Board of Directors, to:
a) provide input and participate in the decision-making related to the drafting and review of the PRSAC, assisting the Board of Directors;
b) support the implementation of actions to ensure this Policy’s effectiveness;
c) monitor and evaluate implemented actions;
d) ensure that implemented actions are improved whenever possible deficiencies are identified;
e) help and encourage the adequate and reliable dissemination of mandatory information;
f) manage the PRSAC at Banrisul. The responsibilities of the Board of Directors include ensuring that the Institution complies with the PRSAC and taking measures to ensure its effectiveness.
Banrisul has a the Social, Environmental and Climate Responsibility Committee (CRSAC, in Portuguese), an advisory body to the Board of Directors, whose duties and responsibilities are to:
a) make recommendations to the Board of Directors on the drafting and review of the Social, Environmental and Climate Responsibility Policy;
b) evaluate if the actions implemented are in compliance with the Social, Environmental and Climate Responsibility Policy and, whenever necessary, make recommendations for improvement;
c) keep records of its deliberations and decisions;
d) evaluate and monitor the Bank’s sustainable performance and the effectiveness of the actions laid down in the Sustainability Plan;
e) monitor advancements in sustainability, seeking to identify opportunities and risks, in order to create value for the Bank and its stakeholders;
f) propose and follow-up the execution of initiatives that improve the Bank’s socio-environmental performance;
g) assisting the Board of Directors in incorporating sustainability into the Company’s business strategy and administrative practices and follow up its progress;
h) analyze, monitor and issue recommendations and opinions to support the Board of Directors’ decisions on policies and practices related to its field;
i) fulfil other duties determined by the Board of Directors.
The ratio of the annual total compensation for the organization’s highest-paid individual to the median annual total compensation for all employees is 12.0%, while the ratio of the percentage increase in the annual total compensation for the organization’s highest-paid individual to the median percentage increase in the annual total compensation for all employees is 0.8%.
Annual salary increases occur in April (regulatory promotions retroactive to January) and in September (collective bargaining agreement).
For calculation purposes, the CEO, who is not a Bank employee, was considered as the highest-paid individual. The other workers who are not employees were not considered in the calculation. The total compensation (salaries, bonuses, job commission, full performance bonus, annual bonus, overtime, singing bonus, relocation bonus, management, retirement bonus, and retirement incentive) was considered in calculating compensation.
The Chair of the Board of Directors is not the Company’s CEO.
In compliance with Law 13,303/16, every year, elected Management members attend specific training on corporate and capital market legislation, disclosure of information, internal controls, code of conduct, Law 12,846, of August 1, 2013 (Anti-Corruption Law) and other topics related to the activities of a publicly held company or government-controlled company. In 2022, ESG was included in the list of topics. Additionally, Management members may participate in other courses/events with themes pertinent to their responsibilities in the respective governance bodies, if said theme is interesting for the Company.
The Business Partnership and Open Banking Department has been working constantly with Bem Promotora on the Prevention of Money Laundering and Terrorist Financing (PLDFT, in Portuguese). In September 2022, Banrisul published its New Policy on Prevention of Money Laundering, Terrorist Financing and the Distribution of Weapons of Mass Destruction, which is a mandatory reading for all those operating the corresponding assets. This document was read by 1,440 operators.
Suspicions or evidence of non-compliance with Banrisul’s Code of Ethics and Conduct, policies, standards and institutional regulations in force should be reported through the Whistleblowing Channel, which allows the anonymous reporting of the misconduct, ensuring the right to confidentiality and protection against retaliation. The internal and external channels are available, respectively, on the Corporate Intranet and on Banrisul’s website (www.banrisul.com.br) and are intended for receiving misconduct reposts and complaints from employees and other stakeholders. The Control and Compliance Department is the independent area responsible for managing this channel.
Every six months the Board of Directors reviews a report on Banrisul’s Whistleblowing Channel. In compliance with article 3, paragraph 2, of CMN Resolution 4,859/2020, the Control and Compliance Department prepares a report with the following minimum information:
I – the number of reports received;
II – the nature of the reports;
III – the departments responsible for handling the situation;
IV – the average response time; and
V – the measures adopted by the Institution.
Strictly speaking, the Bank did not identify incidents of corruption in the form of offering or requesting of undue advantages. Banrisul did not terminate or refuse to renew contracts due to the involvement or possible involvement of a correspondent in corruption. Neither the Organization nor its employees are parties to corruption-related lawsuits.
Banrisul’s Board of Directors identifies and manages conflicts of interest based on, but not limited to, applicable legal standards provided for in Article 156 of the Brazilian Corporate Law and article 25 of its Bylaws. Furthermore, the Code of Ethics and Conduct is widely disseminated to management members, board members, employees, interns, members of the Banrisul Group, business partners, suppliers and service providers. In the event of a potential conflict of interest, members of the Board of Directors, the Audit Committee and the Ethics Committee must abstain from resolving on matters in which this conflict is identified. Another important document governing this topic is the Related-Party Transactions Policy that outlines the conditions credit transactions and other related-party transactions.
The item “SUBORDINATION, SERVICE OR CONTROL RELATIONSHIPS BETWEEN THE ISSUER’S MANAGEMENT AND ITS SUBSIDIARIES, AFFLIATES AND OTHERS” of the Company’s Reference Form informs the interest held by Banrisul management in management of other companies in the Banrisul Group. The only controlling shareholder is the State of Rio Grande do Sul.
Related-party transactions, as well as measures taken by Banrisul, can be found in Note 29, pages 118 and 119, to the 2022 Financial Statements, available here.
The Control and Risk Executive Office is responsible for managing the Institutions’ corporate risks.
As regards Integrated Capital and Corporate Risk Management, the Chief Risk Officer (CRO) is responsible for the Corporate Risk Management Department and his/her duties include ensuring that the risk process monitors, controls, evaluates and plans capital need and goals and identifies, measures, monitors, reports, controls and mitigates credit, market, IRRBB, liquidity, operational, social, environmental and climate risks associated with the Prudential Conglomerate, communicating said risks to the Risk Committee, the CEO, the Board of Directors and regulatory agencies.
The Corporate Risk Executive Superintendent reports to the CRO on the Institution’s risk management. At least every year, risk management reports are submitted to the Board of Directors for consideration.
Performance evaluation is an essential step to assess effectiveness, contributing to enhance the Organization’s governance. The Board of Directors carries out an annual formal evaluation of the Executive Board and its Chair performance, as well as of its own performance, a process that include self-evaluation questions. The annual evaluation is carried out according to procedures previously defined by the Board of Directors and is anonymous and individual.
All answers to the evaluation questionnaires are compiled into a report, which is sent to the Eligibility and Compensation Committee for prior analysis and then presented to the Board of Directors for consideration. The body itself suggests improvements in carrying out their duties.
Banrisul’s Whistleblowing Channel is a communication tool through which employees, customers, users, partners or suppliers report possible misconducts of any nature related to the Institution’s activities that affect its reputation and violate its internal controls and Banrisul’s Compliance Program. The whistleblowing channel is available on the Bank’s institutional website or on the intranet, where a registration form can be filled out anonymously.
The internal and external channels for submitting complaints and queries covered by the Policy are disclosed, respectively, on the Corporate Intranet and on Banrisul’s website – www.banrisul.com.br, in the section Whistleblowing Channel.
In the event of non-compliance with this Policy and related regulations, actions will be taken according to the level of the offender’s relationship with the Bank:
– if an Employee, sanctions provided for in item Sanctions of the Personnel Regulations will be adopted, appropriate to address the non-compliance;
– if an Officer or Board/Committee Member, the non-compliance will be reported by the Internal Audit to the Board of Directors, complying, when applicable, to Banrisul’s Whistleblowing Policy;
– if an Intern or Outsourced Employee, sanctions provided for in the agreement will be adopted.
If managers, other employees and/or other related parties become aware of misconducts and do not report them to the Personnel Department or the Whistleblowing Channel, they will also be held accountable.
Regardless of the degree of relationship with Banrisul and the penalty adopted, anyone who fails to comply with the organizational policies may be held civilly or criminally liable for proven misconduct.
Name | Executive or non-executive position | Independent | Term of Office |
---|---|---|---|
Jorge Luís Tonetto | Chairman - non-executive position | No | 2021 - 2023 |
Claudio Coutinho Mendes | Vice chairman - executive position | No | 2021 - 2023 |
Irany de Oliveira Sant’Anna Junior | Member - executive position | No | 2021 - 2023 |
Márcio Gomes Pinto Garcia | Member - non-executive position | No | 2021 - 2023 |
Eduardo Cunha da Costa | Director - non-executive position | No | 2021 - 2023 |
Ramiro Silveira Severo | Member - non-executive position | Yes | 2021 - 2023 |
João Verner Juenemann | Member - non-executive position | Yes | 2021 - 2023 |
Rafael Andréas Weber | Member elected by minority common shareholders - non-executive position | Yes | 2021 - 2023 |
Adriano Cives Seabra | Member elected by minority preferred shareholders non-executive position | Yes | 2021 - 2023 |
Márcio Kaiser | Member - appointed by the employees - non-executive position | No | 2021 - 2023 |
Name | Executive or non-executive position | Independent | Term of Office |
---|---|---|---|
Bruno Pinto de Freitas | Sitting member, elected by majority shareholders- non-executive position | No | 2021 - 2023 |
Rogério Costa Rokembach | Sitting member, elected by majority shareholders- non-executive position | Yes | 2021 - 2023 |
Gustav Penna Gorski | Sitting member, elected by minority common shareholders - non-executive position | Yes | 2021 - 2023 |
Reginaldo Ferreira Alexandre | Sitting member, elected by preferred shareholders - non-executive position | Yes | 2021 - 2023 |
Bruno Queiroz Jatene | Alternate, elected by majority shareholders - non-executive position | No | 2021 - 2023 |
Tanha Maria Lauermann Schneider | Alternate, elected by majority shareholders - non-executive position | Yes | 2021 - 2023 |
Vicente Jorge Soares Rodrigues | Alternate, elected by majority shareholders - non-executive position | Yes | 2021 - 2023 |
Paulo Roberto Franceschi | Alternate, elected by preferred shareholders - non-executive position | Yes | 2021 - 2023 |
Name | Executive or non-executive position | Independent | Term of Office |
---|---|---|---|
João Verner Juenemann | Coordinator - non-executive position | Yes | 2020 - 2022 |
Carlos Biedermann | Member - non-executive position | Yes | 2021 - 2023 |
Eraldo Soares Peçanha | Member - non-executive position | Yes | 2021 - 2023 |
Name | Executive or non-executive position | Independent | Term of Office |
---|---|---|---|
Arnaldo Bonoldi Dutra | Member - non-executive position | Yes | 2021 - 2024 |
José Luiz Castro Mendel | Member - non-executive position | Yes | 2021 - 2024 |
Giusepe Lo Russo | Member - non-executive position | No | 2021 - 2024 |
Name | Executive or non-executive position | Independent | Term of Office |
---|---|---|---|
João Zani | Coordinator - non-executive position | Yes | 2022 - 2024 |
José Luis Campani Lourenzi | Member - non-executive position | No | 2022 - 2024 |
Carlos Eduardo Schonerwald da Silva | Member - non-executive position | Yes | 2022 - 2024 |
Luanda Pereira Antunes | Member - non-executive position | Yes | 2021 - 2023 |
Márcio Gomes Pinto Garcia | Member - non-executive position | Yes | 2021 - 2023 |
Member | Executive or non-executive position | Independent | Term of Office |
---|---|---|---|
Claíse Muller Rauber | Coordinator - Non-executive position | No | 2022 - 2023 |
Wagner Lenhart | Member - non-executive position | No | 2022 - 2023 |
Marivania Ghisleni Fontana | Member - non-executive position | No | 2022 - 2023 |
Jorge Luís Tonetto | Member - non-executive position | No | 2022 - 2023 |
Marilene de Oliveira Ramos Murias dos Santos | Member - non-executive position | Yes | 2023-2023¹ |
¹ Sworn in February 2023.
Name | Executive or non-executive position | Independent | Term of Office |
---|---|---|---|
Claudio Coutinho Mendes | CEO - executive position | No | 2021 - 2023 |
Irany de Oliveira Sant’Anna Junior | Deputy CEO and Risk and Controls Officer - executive position | No | 2021 - 2023 |
Claíse Muller Rauber | Products, Segments and Digital Channels Officer - executive position | No | 2021 - 2023 |
Fernando Postal | Distribution and Retail Officer - executive position | No | 2021 - 2023 |
Jorge Fernando Krug Santos | IT and Innovation Officer - executive position | No | 2021 - 2023 |
Marcus Vinícius Feijó Staffen | CFO and IRO - executive position | No | 2021 - 2023 |
Osvaldo Lobo Pires | Credit Officer - executive position | No | 2021 - 2023 |
Wagner Lenhart | Institutional Officer - executive position | No | 2021 - 2023 |
Marivania Ghisleni Fontana | Administrative Officer - executive position | No | 2021 - 2023 |
The joint development of commitments, indicators, and targets proposed by the Bank’s departments has been showing the topic’s greater maturity within the institution and the leadership’s stance. The main guideline is the Bank’s strategic planning, established by the ESG pillar.
The methodology used to create the agenda enabled a greater engagement of the units and executive offices, which had to work together and expand their knowledge. his is an ongoing process, but it is already possible to see advancements in the governance front. In order to prepare the ESG Agenda, Banrisul assessed internal and external information to obtain an overview of the efforts required to position itself aligned to market expectations. The Company used data from interviews with senior management and online stakeholder survey to prepare its materiality matrix, and meetings and workshops with key departments to get their opinion on suggested actions, targets and indicators.
The effectiveness of this measures is yet unknown, as their results will be seen after the due implementation of the 2030 Agenda.
Impact | Classification (positive or negative) | Event (potential or actual) | Time frame (short-term or long-term) | Systemic or one-time impact | Irreversibility (high, medium, low - only for negative impacts) | Production chain process or activity that causes impact | Resource / stakeholder group impacted |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
ESG Agenda is not prioritized by Senior Management | Negative | Actual | Short-term | One-time | Medium | Definition of the Company’s strategy. | Shareholders and Investors, Employees, Suppliers, Banrisul’s Operations. |
Lack of ESG information to the market | Negative | Actual | Short-term | Systemic | High | Preparing external contents. | Shareholders and Investors, Banrisul’s Operations. |
Conflict of Interests, leading to controversial management | Negative | Potential | Short-term | Systemic | Medium | Senior management processes and activities. | Shareholders and Investors, Banrisul’s Operations. |
The Fiscal Council, through any of its members, is responsible for overseeing Management’s acts and verifying compliance with legal and statutory duties, according to the Fiscal Council’s Internal Regulation.
Banrisul does not have a policy on tax risk management. Some of the tax risks are identified, managed and monitored focused on Operational Risk, e.g., compliance with the legislation and rules.
The Operational Risk department identifies risks, whose control compliance are assessed by the Controls and Compliance department. Moreover, the Company has a whistleblowing channel, with a general scope that can receive reports on taxes.
Banrisul does not have a policy on tax risk management. Some of the tax risks are identified, managed and monitored focused on Operational Risk, e.g., compliance with the legislation and rules. The Fiscal Council, through any of its members, is responsible for overseeing and assessing Management’s acts and verifying compliance with legal and statutory duties, according to the Fiscal Council’s Internal Regulation. The Operational Risk department identifies risks, whose control compliance are assessed by the Controls and Compliance department.
Tons of CO2 equivalent p.a. | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Type of emissions | 2020 | 2021 | 2022 | △ 2022/2021 |
Scope 1 (Direct emissions) | 639.7 | 958.9 | 728.3 | -24.0% |
Scope 2 (indirect emissions) | 2,067.6 | 4,642.3 | 1,446.8 | -68.8% |
Scope 3 (other indirect emissions) | 31.0 | 5,054.4 | 7,685.0 | 52.0% |
Total emissions (Scope 1, 2 and 3) | 2,738.3 | 10,655.6 | 9,860.2 | -7.5% |
Total Biogenic emissions of CO2 in Scope 3¹ | 13.8 | 900.3 | 1,463.4 | 62.6% |
Other - HCFC 22 (R22) | 2,970.7 | 3,010.0 | 1,007.5 | -66.5% |
¹Considers scope 1 and 3 emissions
As for fugitive emissions, which are encompassed in Scope 1 emissions, Banrisul began a process to modernize its air conditioning equipment, in order to reduce fugitive gas emissions. In this sense, we believe it is already possible to see a slight reduction in fugitive emissions due to this program.
As for mobile combustion, Banrisul will change the fuel used by its proprietary and leased vehicle fleet to ethanol in 2023. The goal is to have the entire fleet using this fuel whenever available (given that not every gas station offers ethanol, especially when the vehicles are located in smaller cities), in order to reduce emissions from mobile combustion.
The reduction seen in emissions for reference year 2022 was due to a reduction in the reference conversion factor used by the GHG Protocol tool. In 2021, the average annual factor (tCO2/MWH) was 0.1264 and, in 2022, it was 0.0426, which explains the decrease in tCO2 equivalent emissions.
Measurement of Scope 3 emissions improved after one year. For the 2022 inventory, Banrisul included additional information in the Upstream Transport category, related to light ATM maintenance vehicles that were not included in the previous inventories. Similarly, cash and money deposit bag transportation increased significantly, in absolute number of liters of fuel used from 562,557 in 2021 to 986,962 in 2022, largely due to the gradual recovery of the economy after the pandemic.
There are no reduction targets defined, since the Bank intends to increase the number of categories included in the Scope 3, leading to an upturn in emissions.
Climate change management at Banrisul includes transition and physical Climate Change Risks, as defined by CMN 4,943/21:
Transition climate change risks: possibility of the Institution incurring in losses arising from events associated with the transition to a low carbon economy;
Examples of transition climate change risks include legal and regulatory changes; technological innovations; changes in products and services supply and demand; unfavorable perception from clients the financial market or society in general; events related to the transition to a low-carbon economy and that negatively impact the Institution;
Physical climate change risks: possibility of the Institution incurring in losses arising from events associated with short and medium-term frequent and severe weather events or long-term environmental changes that can be related to changes in climate patterns.
Climate risk events can lead to financial and reputational losses, as well as to process inefficiencies. Possibilities of losses associated with the other types of risks to which the Institution is exposed, especially operational and credit risks, can be identified.
In addition to monitoring the regulatory environment and customer perception, management includes consulting information on public lists and verifying the activities, products and services subject to social and environmental legislation. As for the operations, Social, Environmental and Climate Risks inherent to the activity’s economic industry are identified, based on the National Registry of Economic Activity (CNAE – Cadastro Nacional de Atividade Econômica) code). Climate risk management costs are not calculated individually, but are considered together with the resources allocated to the Institution’s risk management.
Banrisul’s organizational structure includes the Internal Audit department, reporting to the Board of Directors, whose scope of activities considers all duties of Banrisul and the other companies in the conglomerate, in compliance with CMN Resolution 4,879/2020.
Therefore, as of the publication of CMN Resolution 4,945, of September 15, 2021, an audit forecast was included in the Internal Audit planning for 2022. Works began in August 2022 and were completed in February 2023. For 2023, a social, an environmental and climate risk management audit is planned according to CMN Resolution 4,557, of February 23, 2017.
The internal audit department is responsible both for the past and for the future audit, as per:
– CMN Resolution 4,945, of September 15, 2021
– CMN Resolution 4,557, of September 23, 2017
Below, we list some Internal Audit findings that are currently being monitored. We must note that all the findings/reports issued by the Internal Audit are in compliance with the Policy on Management of Internal Audit Findings, approved by the Conglomerate’s Board of Directors:
– Actions to ensure PRSAC’s Effectiveness: drafting/preparation and validation of indicators relates to the Sustainability Agenda. Expectation to hire an external consulting firm to assist in this process. Timetable/deadlines will be established by the managing department.
– Dissemination of Complete and Updated Information: combined actions of the Sustainability Corporate Department and the Institution’s other departments, in addition to the creation of working groups for mapping sustainable products and sensitive sectors as regards social, environmental or climate aspects, as well as the forecast for hiring external consultants to assist in this project. Timetable/deadlines will be established by the managing department.
– Implementation of the PRSAC: initiatives to enable the implementation of social, environmental and climate responsibility principle and guidelines established in the PRSAC, as well as to ensure their compatibility and integration with the Institution’s other policies. Expectation to hire an external consulting firm to assist in this process. Timetable/deadlines will be established by the managing department.
For policies and commitments related to this material topic, the Board of Directors approved the Social, Environmental and Climate Risk Policy (PRASC in Portuguese), which was published in June 2022 and aims to set out the guidelines for the Bank’s and Banrisul Group subsidiaries’ social, environmental and climate responsibility activities, aligned to the nature of their activities and the complexity of their products and services. The PRSAC seeks to foster sustainability, balancing business opportunities with social, economic, environmental and climate responsibilities, contributing to the sustainable development of the regions where Banrisul operates.
The Institutional Policy on Social, Environmental and Climate Risk Management, updated in 2022 based on new regulatory framework, is targeted at outlining the management processes, seeking to mitigate these risks and, consequently, safeguard the assets and interests of its customers, shareholders, employees and other stakeholders.
To manage the topic and its related impacts, Banrisul manages social, environmental and climate risks by identifying, measuring, assessing, monitoring, reporting, controlling and mitigating other corporate risks in an integrated way, keeping risk exposure at a level the Institution is willing to take and ensuring adherence to its Institutional Policies.
The Institution controls and mitigate potential negative impacts through initiatives and strategies that aim to keep exposure to social, environmental and climate risks at adequate levels. Risk treatment options are described and formalized through initiatives that can have one or more procedures and mitigate one or more risks.
Banrisul adopts a series of actions to mitigate potential negative impacts, mainly regarding the exposure of its credit operations, when applicable, i.e.:
– Contractual clauses determining that the borrower must comply with the respective legislation and adopt periodic monitoring;
– Contractual clauses foreseeing the possibility of early maturity of the operations in case of irregularities of this nature;
– Checking if environmental licenses and certificates are valid;
– Requiring the Biosafety Quality Certificate (CQB, in Portuguese), issued by the National Biosafety Technical Commission (CTNBio, in Portuguese);
– Applying the Survey of Indications of Contamination in Urban Properties (LIC, in Portuguese) form;
– Applying the social, environmental and climate risk analysis questionnaire, for operations above R$10 million;
– Monitoring agribusiness credit operations through the Social and Environmental Compliance System.
As regards its activities, Banrisul mitigates its exposure to potential negative impacts by adopting, among others, the listed action:
– In relevant contracting and procurement processes, it identifies the contracting risk matrix and social and environmental requirements.
The Institution identifies and remedies actual negative Social, Environmental and Climate (SAC, in Portuguese) impacts by consulting information in public lists and checking the activities, products and services subject to social and environmental legislation. As for operations, Social, Environmental and Climate Risks inherent to the activity’s economic industry are identified, based on the National Registry of Economic Activity (CNAE – Cadastro Nacional de Atividade Econômica) code.
As for the credit portfolio as a whole, Banrisul is developing a climate stress test model aimed at measuring the impact of climate events on the overall capital index, demonstrating the financial impact and defining new strategies for significant events.
The characteristics of the Institution’s products, services, activities and processes as well as the activities of its counter parties, controlled companies, suppliers and relevant outsourced service providers are assessed for potential risks of violation of fundamental rights and guarantees or acts harmful to the common interest; environmental degradation, including the excessive use of natural resources; and changes in weather patterns.
For each operational risk event, the Operational Losses Database identifies, when applicable, the operational losses linked to the Social, Environmental and Climate Risk. This scope is highlighted in civil and labor lawsuits, administrative proceedings, fines and other events.
To manage the positive impacts, the “Contribution to the Green Economy” indicator is monitored on a monthly basis to measure how much of the corporate credit portfolio is made up of economic sectors with a certain level of environmental and/or social contribution. This indicator is monitored by following up the percentage variation. The higher the percentage, the higher the active balance in financing to industries with a positive social and/or environmental impact, representing a higher contribution from the Institution.
The efficiency tracking processes are evaluated periodically, including assessing the internal and external audits, the Controls and Compliance department’s follow ups, operational risk analysis cycles, among other procedures. The Institution’s exposure to climate risk is monitored on a monthly basis, through the follow-up of the active balance of the corporate credit portfolio, allocated to industries with highly and moderate risk impacts.
The Bank also actively participates in FEBRABAN’s Committees and Working Groups, where it debates current relevant guidelines for this topic, participates in public consultations, and shares best practices with other companies in the industry.
As for goals, targets and indicators to assess progress based on Banrisul ESG Agenda’s recommendations, themes and strategic pillars were defined, and the Company set indicators and targets for strengthening management of social, environmental and climate risks and reducing climate risk.
Even though the Bank has robust risk management, there are still many opportunities to make progress in managing social, environmental and climate risks, especially in defining sensitive sectors and drafting restrictive policies. The recommendations of the ESG Agenda are based on Banrisul’s ongoing or planned actions/projects and the most prominent/most adopted actions by the financial industry.
In order to prepare the ESG Agenda, Banrisul assessed internal and external information to obtain an overview of the efforts required to position itself aligned to market expectations. The Company used data from interviews with senior management and online stakeholder survey to prepare its materiality matrix, and meetings and workshops with key departments to get their opinion on suggested actions, targets and indicators.
Moreover, Banrisul joined the Carbon Disclosure Project (CDP in Portuguese) and the Brazilian GHG Protocol program to enhance its technical and institutional capacity in managing greenhouse gas emissions in order to take stock and report.
Impact | Classification (positive or negative) | Event (potential or actual) | Time frame (Short-term or long-term) | Systemic or one-time impact | Irreversibility (high, medium, low - only for negative impacts) | Production chain process or activity that causes impact | Resource / stakeholder group impacted |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Climate change impacts on the Bank’s operation and the sale of its products and services (risk for the agribusiness segment - delinquency) | Negative | Actual | Medium-term | One-time | Medium | Credit assignment for agribusiness. The high concentration of the credit portfolio in customers whose economic industry is more likely to suffer financial impacts from climate change increases the Bank's exposure to physical climate risk. | Shareholders and Investors, Employees, Customers, Suppliers, Banrisul’s Operations. |
Violation of fundamental rights and guarantees or acts harmful to the common interest | Negative | Potential | Long-term | Systemic | Medium | Financing to customers listed as employers of forced or compulsory labor | Shareholders and Investors, Employees, Customers, Suppliers, Banrisul’s Operations. |
Contribution to a green economy | Positive | Actual | Short-term | Systemic | - | Credit assignment based on an economic model that results in improved human welfare and social equality, while reducing environmental risks and ecological scarcity. | Shareholders andInvestors, Employees, Community, Customers, Suppliers, Environment, Banrisul’s Operations. |
Events related to the transition to a low-carbon economy | Negative | Potential | Long-term | Systemic | Medium | The high concentration of the credit portfolio in customers whose economic activity is connected to high GHG emissions increases the Bank's exposure to transition climate risk. | Shareholders and Investors, Employees, Suppliers, Environment, Banrisul’s Operations. |
Reduction of the exposure to loss ratio | Positive | Actual | Long-term | Systemic | - | Transition of the credit portfolio to less carbon-intensive industries | Shareholders andInvestors, Employees, Customers, Suppliers, Banrisul’s Operations. |
Operational, financial and reputational impact from the response time to critical events (related to operational and credit risk) | Negative | Potential | Short-term | One-time | Medium | Comercial relationship with sensitive and carbon-intensive industries. | Shareholders and Investors, Employees, Customers, Suppliers, Banrisul’s Operations. |
Waste generated by type and destination (t) | |||
---|---|---|---|
2020 | 2021 | 2022 | |
Hazardous waste (Class I) - diverted from disposal | |||
Batteries- Recycling | 0 | 0 | 0,1 |
Non-hazardous waste (Class II) - diverted from disposal | |||
Banners, shredded cardboard and acrylic - Recycling | 0 | 2,8 | 0 |
Structured network cables - Reverse logistics | 0 | 0 | 0,1 |
Vaults - Recycling¹ | 0 | 10,4 | - |
Electronic devices - Recycling | 49,7 | 93,4 | 31,4 |
Paper and cardboard - Recycling | 128,5 | 206,6 | 233,5 |
Metal scraps -Recycling | 45,4 | 114,1 | 76,4 |
A) Total waste diverted from final disposal | 224 | 427,3 | 341,6 |
Non-hazardous waste (Class II) - directed tod disposal | |||
Co-processing | 0,3 | 1,5 | 0 |
Waste directed to landfills² | 0 | 0 | 125,0 |
B) Total waste directed to final disposal | 0,3 | 1,5 | 125,0 |
Total generated waste in tons (A+B) | 223,9 | 428,8 | 466,6 |
1In 2022, we did not have vaults sent for recycling, with only the donation of these items for reuse. In this case, as it is a donation, they are considered in units in the item dealing with the donation of furniture.
2The organic solid waste generated in the organization is destined for public collection in the localities where the agencies are present. In the administrative headquarters building there is a company contracted to dispose of organic waste. Until 2021 there was no measurement of the amount of this waste generated.
Waste generated by type and destination (units) | |||
---|---|---|---|
2020 | 2021 | 2022 | |
Hazardous waste (Class I) - directed to disposal | |||
Lamps - Recycling | 1.652 | 2.060 | 2.734 |
Tonners - Reverse logistics³ | - | - | 621 |
A) Total waste diverted from final disposal | 1.652 | 2.060 | 3.355 |
Non-hazardous waste (Class II) - diverted from disposal | |||
Furniture donation - Reuse⁴ | 2.127 | 4.999 | 2.391 |
B) Total waste diverted from final disposal | 2.127 | 4.999 | 2.391 |
Total generated waste in units (A+B) | 3.779 | 7.059 | 5.746 |
3From 2022, we started to inform the data regarding tonners forwarded to reverse logistics
4The safes donated for reuse are added to this item.
As part of its commitment to the material topic, Banrisul uses renewable energy. The Bank joined the Carbon Disclosure Project (CDP) and the Brazilian GHG Protocol program to enhance its technical and institutional capabilities to manage greenhouse gas emissions, including calculation and reporting.
Energy efficiency and ESG in the supplier chain: the Organization has committed to managing the topic, and the quality analysis is based on regulatory compliance with Federal Law 13,589/2018.
The appropriate mapping of these processes with definition of the destination of each type of waste generated goes beyond compliance with environmental legislation, embodying the Organization’s social and environmental commitment to the community where it is inserted, and the natural resources used.
To manage energy efficiency and ESG aspects in the supplier chain, ESG criteria are used in project design, construction works and engineering services (carried out by the Construction and Maintenance departments); air quality analysis; contract management conducted by the Maintenance department; and publication of certificates to users.
At Banrisul, waste is managed by the Sustainability department, administratively linked to the Property Management Unit. This department is responsible for defining processes related to the appropriate management of solid waste produced by the Organization and for internal decision-making processes, which are validated by specific committees, when necessary.
In order to prevent and mitigate negative and potential impacts, in 2028, Banrisul implemented a Solid Waste Management Plan (PGRS, in Portuguese), which describes and recommends the appropriate handling of waste and the routine procedures necessary to comply with the legal environmental requirements.
It also controls monthly waste generation and fills out mandatory Waste Transportation Manifests (MTR, in Portuguese) with information on the transported waste, as required by the state environmental protection agency (FEPAM, in Portuguese). For each destination, specific documents are generated, such as the Waste Transportation Manifest and, at the end of the operation, the Final Disposal Certificate (CDF, in Portuguese), presenting all the information related to the waste handled.
Waste disposal processes also include concerns about stakeholders, as the disposal of certain types of waste is linked to social impact projects, including working with convicts, in the case of the decharacterization of unusable furniture, or training of vulnerable persons, as in the destination of electronic waste, through the Sustentare project, led by the Rio Grande do Sul state government, in which Banrisul has been a partner since the beginning of the initiative.
Banrisul offers its internal public distance-learning programs on sustainability and waste management, as well as in-person lectures and informational campaigns on the intranet.
One of the points identified for improving waste management processes is the update of the Solid Waste Management Plan, which will enable a review of all the incorporated practices and determine if there are gaps to be closed, as this process is conducted by a consulting firm hired for this specific purpose.
Similarly, the Bank identified the need to make the most up-to-date version of the PGRS available to the entire internal public, as well as reinforce campaigns to spread knowledge on appropriate waste sorting practices.
As an example of positive feedback from a stakeholder related to the effectiveness of waste management, there is the destination of electronic waste to the Sustentare program of the Rio Grande do Sul state government, which partners with companies, entities and associations interested in reconditioning and/or recycling electronics.
The effectiveness of renewable energy use is tracked through regular reports presented to the Administrative Officer. Energy efficiency is tracked by monitoring energy consumption at Banrisul’s premises. The air quality analysis is based on reports issued by laboratories. ESG effectiveness in the supplier chain is tracked through the inspection of the works and services with the issuance of a technical monitoring report.
Banrisul transferred consumer units to the free energy market (ACL, in Portuguese) from October to December 2022. It also delivered spaces featuring energy-efficient components and equipment, such as occupancy sensors to turn lights on and off, LED panels, inverter air conditioning equipment and sunshades. For the air quality analysis, an air collection and analysis procedure is conducted every six months at Banrisul’s premises (including both units that do and do not serve customers). Waste generation is not constant at the Organization, which makes it difficult to establish individual targets.
The Bank identified the need to have a manager that has already been hired to monitor operational and support procedures in the issuance of reports and control and track the use of renewable energy and energy efficiency. Regarding air quality, it is necessary to monitor the publication of resolutions and standards issued by regulatory and supervision agencies.
The greenhouse gas mitigation plan is designed to reduce scope 1 and 2 GHG emissions and offset all remaining emissions with the annual carbon neutral project; maintain the air-conditioning equipment at the branches within its useful life (10 to 15 years) until 2030; and sustain improvements in eco-efficiency projects. Waste management is monitored through monthly waste volume indicators, which include individual controls for each type of waste.
Impact | Classification (positive or negative) | Event (potential or actual) | Time frame (short-term or long-term) | Systemic or one-time impact | Irreversibility (high, medium, low - only for negative impacts) | Production chain process or activity that causes impact | Resources / stakeholder group impacted |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Increase in the use of renewable energy | Positive | Actual | Short-term | One-time | - | During energy purchase. | Shareholders and Investors, Environment, Banrisul’s Operations. |
Energy Efficiency | Positive | Actual | Short-term | One-time | - | By purchasing inputs and hiring suppliers | Shareholders and Investors, Environment, Banrisul’s Operations. |
Incentive to ESG practices in the supply chain | Positive | Potential | Long-term | Systemic | - | In managing and operating outsourced contracts. | Shareholders and Investors, Employees, Customers, Suppliers, Environment, Banrisul’s Operations. |
As of 2021, Banrisul has adopted a manual that establishes sustainability criteria for procurement and bidding processes. This tool enabled the inclusion in the Organization’s procurement flow of product and service analyses related to the evaluation of the inputs used in production. As for the upstream chain, in 2022, Banrisul issued the Supplier Manual, a document with general guidelines on the Institution’s relationship with suppliers and a chapter dedicated to environmental responsibility, including guidelines on appropriate waste management at the supplier, always in compliance with the current environmental legislation.
Waste generated by Banrisul’s own activities came into the spotlight as of 2001, with the launch of the Reciclar (Recycle) program, designed to encourage and promote the environmentally friendly collection and final disposal of the waste generated by the Institution, seeking to reduce the negative environmental impact of its activities.
On the other hand, in order to reduce the generation of single-use plastic waste, Banrisul implemented Copinho Zero (Zero Cups), a project designed to encourage all employees to replace plastic cups with reusable coffee mugs and water bottles. Banrisul also has a project to streamline back-office operations in its branches with the aim to reduce the volume of paper used in the issuance of reports. Safes that are no longer used by the Institution are donated so that they can be reused. If this is not possible, they are decharacterized, and the resulting material is recycled or reused.
Electronic waste generated by the branches and units is sent to the Sustentare/RS Program, with three possible destinations: donation, reconditioning and recycling. In order to appropriately handle the furniture that the Institution no longer uses, Banrisul donates these items to non-profit institutions interested in reusing them. Banrisul also disposes of fluorescent lamps in an environmentally friendly manner by sending these components to a company hired for this purpose. In 2022, 2,734 fluorescent lamps were sent for recycling. There is also reverse logistics for materials such as batteries, structured cables and printer toner refills.
The organic waste generated by the Organization is sent for public collection in the locations where the branches are located. The waste generated by the Organization is centrally managed by Banrisul through the Sustainability Department, in particular, the waste management unit, which is responsible for managing contracts related to waste and for the receipt, temporary storage and environmentally friendly disposal of waste, through partners duly hired to handle each type of waste. Waste sent for disposal is controlled through the issuance of Waste Transportation Manifests (MTR, in Portuguese) and Final Destination Certificates (CDF, in Portuguese). All the waste destined for the Bank’s waste management is measured quantitatively through control spreadsheets and later appropriately disposed of according to the type of waste. The waste disposal is demonstrated through the issuance of Waste Transportation Manifests and Final Destination Certificates.
Energy consumption within the Organization (GJ) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
2020 | 2021 | 2022 | ∆2021/2022 | |
Non-renewable fuels (diesel) | 94.8 | 270.2 | 218.1 | -19.3% |
Electricity purchased from the concessionaire1 | 120,590.6 | 132,062.5 | 122,276.3 | -7.4% |
Total energy consumption | 120,685.4 | 132,332.7 | 122,494.4 | -7.4% |
¹In 2020, as it was the first inventory carried out by the institution, only Banrisul’s energy consumption was verified, without considering the other companies in the group (Bagergs and Banrisul Pagamentos), which was measured from the following inventories.
The contracts entered into by Banrisul, and its associate companies focus on the appropriate treatment of their technical staff, who has a direct role in the provision of services. The contractor is responsible for ensuring this appropriate treatment, while the Bank assumes joint responsibility for supervising these practices, complying with state laws and the Federal Constitution. All contracts have provisions on social criteria, and all contracts entered into by Banrisul have specific clauses related to labor and social issues, in compliance with the specific legislation.
After the creation of the Sustainability department, all contracts started including analyzed environmental criteria, which are analyzed and defined according to the scope of each contract. As contracts may have specific sustainability criteria, such as the use of sheets with the FSC seal, equipment with lower impact on ozone emissions and appropriate disposal of construction waste, among others, it is estimated that all contracts signed by Banrisul go through an analysis of environmental criteria.
To govern supplier relations, Banrisul uses the Bidding Process Law (Federal Laws 8,666/93 and 13,303/2016), as well as other related federal and state laws. It also uses the Internal Regulations on Bidding Processes and Contracts (RILC, in Portuguese), which is published on the Institution’s transparency website. The transparency website also features other documents governing supplier relations, including the Supplier Relations Manual (which governs supplier behavior in bidding processes and the contracting of Banrisul Group companies) and Banrisul’s Supplier Manual (created to help Banrisul’s suppliers know and understand the procedures that the Company uses in its business relations for the acquisition of goods and services).
For the measures taken to manage the topic and its related impacts, there is not a specific position within the Organization to manage these impacts. They are mitigated throughout the supplier management chain, with different levels in charge of different tasks. For example, the Contract Management department is responsible for checking the documentation proving the bidder’s technical qualification in a bidding process; after the bidder becomes a contractor, the Contracting department is responsible for checking if the supplier has any impediments and if it has all the necessary certificates of good standing, among other things.
The measures to prevent or mitigate potential negative impacts include the existence of an Outsourcing Supervision department, which checks if the labor rights of outsourced workers that provide services for Banrisul are being respected. In order to mitigate impacts, Banrisul also created the Sanctioning Processes department, which is responsible for conducting administrative sanctioning processes that investigate negative incidents caused by the contractor and impose penalties, if applicable.
There are measures to face actual negative impacts, such as public contracting regulations, including a tool that mitigates the actual impact of the lack of supply of services or products by the contractor: emergency contracts. This legal provision enables the Bank to hire contractors to provide a portion of a service on an urgent basis, i.e., the services are provided first, and the internal administrative procedures set out in the regulations are completed later, formalizing the contract.
The Outsourcing Supervision department works to mitigate risks, but there is not yet a routine that provides information on how many defenses of complaints are successful. Regarding the Sanctioning Processes department, more penalties have been imposed over the periods, given that the managing departments understood the importance of effectively monitoring the performance of the contract and should request the determination of responsibility in case of irregularity in the provision of services by the contractor.
The effectiveness of the actions is felt qualitatively, as previously described, when the managing units are more concerned about describing possible penalties for the poor performance of the contract in the contracting processes; the managing units seek new ways to choose service providers through more robust qualifications in bidding processes; contractors try to anticipate future problems of understanding in requests of performance to the contractor, avoiding the filing of a sanctioning process; and contractors understand the importance of sending labor documentation to be effectively monitored by the Supervision department. The departments responsible for mitigating risks share what they have learned, guiding the continuous improvement of processes so that, given the right/duty of the managing department to start proceedings to determine responsibility in case of poor performance of the contract by the contractor, the contracting process is moralized, preventing possible market suppliers with bad intentions from participating in contracting procedures. Similarly, the effectiveness of Outsourcing Supervision can be reducing the number of labor complaints in which the Bank is jointly and severally liable.
Impact | Classification (positive or negative) | Event (potential or actual) | Time frame (short-term or long-term) | Systemic or one-time impact | Irreversibility (high, medium, low - only for negative impacts) | Production chain process or activity that causes impact | Resources / stakeholder group impacted |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Reputational impact by association with irregular suppliers and commercial partners (labor and environmental issues) | Negative | Actual | Short-term | One-time | Low | Hiring of suppliers | Shareholders and Investors, Employees, Customers, Suppliers, Banrisul’s Operations. |
Reputation problems related to outsourced workers or commercial partners behaviors (such as discrimination and banking correspondents) | Negative | Actual | Short-term | One-time | High | Hiring of suppliers | Shareholders and Investors, Employees, Customers, Suppliers, Banrisul’s Operations. |
Operational problems related to outsourced workers strike | Negative | Potential | Short-term | One-time | Low | Services rendered by suppliers | Shareholders and Investors, Employees, Community, Customers, Suppliers, Banrisul’s Operations. |
Leakage of confidential information by the supplier | Negative | Potential | Long-term | One-time | High | Services rendered by suppliers | Shareholders and Investors, Customers, Suppliers, Banrisul’s Operations. |
Operational problems due to suppliers not rendering services/delivering products | Negative | Actual | Short-term | One-time | Low | Services rendered by suppliers | Shareholders and Investors, Employees, Customers, Suppliers, Banrisul’s Operations. |
Performance Assessment per Category³ | 2020 | 2021 | 2022 | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Men | Women | Men | Women | Men | Women | |
Managers¹ | 23.7% | 38.7% | 21.6% | 36.0% | 25.6% | 41.3% |
Supervisors | 62.2% | 76.4% | 60.6% | 72.2% | 59.2% | 71.3% |
Total² | 31.4% | 48.5% | 28.9% | 44.1% | 31.2% | 47.3% |
¹ It includes the following employee categories: account manager, market manager, agribusiness relationship manager and business manager (corporate, other states and government).
² It considers all of the Company’s employees.
³ Only those categories that receive performance and competence assessments as a result of the in-house training courses specified in note 1 were taken into account.
Average training hours per employee, by gender | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Gender | 2020 | 2021 | 2022 | Δ 2021/2022 |
Men | 37.1 | 45.7 | 67.0 | 46.5% |
Women | 32.4 | 42.7 | 65.3 | 52.9% |
Total training hours | 34.5 | 47.3 | 66.1 | 39.9% |
Average training hours per employee, by employee category | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Employee category | 2020 | 2021 | 2022 | Δ 2021/2022 |
Superintendent | 14.3 | 20.3 | 44.4 | 118.5% |
Manager | 59.6 | 57.5 | 114.7 | 99.5% |
Analyst | 11.9 | 29.7 | 39.6 | 33.3% |
Assistant | 11.4 | 19.6 | 31.3 | 59.7% |
Without commissioned position | 33.6 | 38.8 | 64.3 | 65.7% |
Interns | 16.8 | 36.4 | 55.8 | 53.4% |
Other | 78.7 | 31.1 | 66.0 | 112.1% |
Training Program – Business Managers and Business Managers from Other States
The program trains and develops professionals to work at the branch network serving corporate customers. Its contents are focused on developing commercial and technical skills desired in a future Business Manager, such as negotiating products and services; prospecting, attracting, and following up customers through efficient tools and approaches, thus optimizing their business actions.
Training Program – Account Managers
The program promotes the integration, training and development of the employees selected to work in the new Account Manager position, developing the required skills and attitudes for performing their activities well, with emphasis on the development of interpersonal competencies focused on preparing them for building a relationship with high-income individual customers.
Training Program – Business Operators
The program trains employees selected to work in the new Business Operator position, aiming to prepare professionals to serve and address the Bank’s Individual Customers. Its contents include specific technical knowledge with efficient tools and approaches to optimize business with customers.
Training Program – Supervisors
The program prepares and develops professionals to work as Supervisors in the branch network, serving the Bank’s internal and external public. It develops and enhances basic, technical and job-related skills, as well as skills related to other positions in the bank and managerial ones, focused on planning, organizing and executing the position. Aligned to the Bank’s Strategic Planning, it aims at achieving administrative and commercial goals.
Training program – Market Managers
The program trains and develops employees selected for the new Market Manager position in the branch network, to work serving the Bank’s Corporate and Individual Customers. The program enhances and develops technical and behavioral skills, focused on negotiating, prospecting, attracting and following-up with customers. Training Program for Agribusiness Relationship Managers.
Training Program – Agribusiness Relationship Managers
These professionals will manage a pre-established customer portfolio of the respective banking stations at the Suregs, focused on medium- and high-income rural produces. This position aims to serve a customer niche who demands special and exclusive treatment.
Training Program – Agribusiness Managers
The program prepares employees selected for the new Agribusiness Manager position, developing technical skills focused on the agribusiness segment, expanding their knowledge of rural credit products and services, aiming at attracting and managing new business in this segment.
Training Program – Corporate Business Managers
The program aims to train professionals to manage large companies. It is important to note that this position serves a customer niche who demands special and exclusive treatment.
Training Program – Government Business Managers
The Training Program for Government Business Managers aims to prepare professionals to work at the superintendencies, in line with the Government Business Unit’s goals.
GRI 404-2
Participants in training programs | ||
---|---|---|
Training program | Total participants | |
2021 | 2022 | |
Managers¹ | 138 | 175 |
Business operators | 70 | 202 |
Supervisors | 0 | 11 |
Total | 208 | 388 |
¹ It includes business managers in the categories: corporate, other states and government; account managers, market managers, and agribusiness relationship manager.
GRI 404-2
Distance Learning - Banrisul | |||
---|---|---|---|
Distance Learning - Progress of courses offered over the past years | |||
Distance learning training hours | 2020 | 2021 | 2022 |
Students enrolled | 128,376 | 303,415 | 412,801 |
Employed on December 31 | 34,367 | 89,760 | 151,280 |
Average training hours per employee | 9,280 | 9,002 | 8,658 |
Number of classes offered in the platform | 13.8 | 33.7 | 47.7 |
Distance learning training hours | 1,420 | 1,869 | 2,734 |
Career transition assistance programs focused on facilitating continued employability and end of career management due to retirement or termination of employment contract – specially for retired employees are not being offered at the moment. As regards continued employability, the Bank follows-up with the participants of the Pescar Project and the Young Apprentice Program in order to monitor their insertion in the job market after completing their experience at Banrisul.
The policies or commitments focused on human capital development are part of the “Strengthening People” front of Banrisul’s strategic planning, considering that employees are the means for achieving organizational success, thus the need for a fresher look and continuous encouragement to developing and improving people.
The People Development Superintendence Department – Corporate University is responsible for managing this topic and its impacts and reporting to the Executive Board. Its duties include “to manage the development, implementation and monitoring of in-person and distance education programs, seeking learning technologies solutions and contributing to the culture of innovation at Banrisul”. Furthermore, the HR areas share strategies and decision-making. The Annual Training Plan, which brings together all areas and Regional Superintendencies in its development, is analyzed jointly and submitted to the Committees and the Board of Directors for approval, accompanied by the respective budget plan.
The actions taken to address potential negative impacts include: onboarding of new employees; training programs for career development; academic incentive program, encompassing undergraduate, specialization, master’s and doctorate degrees; enrollment in paid external courses, refresher webinars on products, services, legislation and topics of interest, symposiums, congresses, among others; international missions; the reach of coursed offered via Moodle platform, favoring the ongoing development and incentive to self-development, regardless of geographical location.
Actions taken to address actual negative impacts include adapting educational technologies in order to provide a better experience for colleagues working at the branches by, for example, offering training sessions with audio and subtitles, enabling a better participation in the courses; organization of trails in different formats, promoting employees self-development. Offering more webinars on topics that attract a large audience, with the option of watching the recorded version for employees who, for different reasons, were not able to watch the presentation live.
Actions to manage actual and potential positive impacts: developing educational strategies and programs through co-production by integrating the branch network’s and general management’s point of view, focused on using knowledge to enhance productivity and provide better service; using inclusive and integrative language to inform about programs and development tracks; strengthening capacity building by bringing all units and Regional Superintendencies closer together through the employees’ academic research; making the final papers of graduating employees available so that research can be accessed by other employees and taken further.
In order to track the effectiveness of these actions, Banrisul monitors investments made, course attendance, certificates received, mandatory courses, career progression based on training programs; surveys the participants of courses and webinars; and verifies the applicability of academic research; among others.
The Annual Training and Development Plan’s strategy involves several stages, i.e., online survey available to all employees; focus groups with representatives from the Branch Network and General Management; analysis of strategic planning guidelines, market trends and gaps reported to the HR departments.
Banrisul evaluates corporate education based on the following indicators: investment, number of employees who attended courses, number of employees who received certification, training hours per employee, courses/events satisfaction level, courses/events quality level.
Periodically, quantitative data on trained employees are shared with the Executive Board and the entire staff in articles published in the internal portal. Moreover, every time Banrisul identifies a position that needs to be filed, specific training is developed to prepare professionals to meet the requirements of the job as market managers, business operators, agribusiness relationship managers, among others. Incentive to academic research encourages employees to share their work via banritalks and the virtual library, making knowledge accessible to the entire staff. Employees can request external and internal courses, such as webinars, via workflow, which enables the analysis, monitoring and conclusion of the process. Information on distance learning courses is published monthly, highlighting free and mandatory programs, in compliance with the legislation.
Given that finance is the Bank’s expertise and that employees should handle their own personal finances, a program was developed to offer financial education to all employees.
The branch network and General Management producing knowledge together enable sharing points of view that enhance the Annual Training Plan, as well as strategies for its implementation. Furthermore, the exchange with universities and innovation centers makes it possible to share challenges and solutions both for internal stakeholders and external groups and institutions.
Impact | Classification (positive or negative) | Event (potential or actual) | Time frame (short-term or long-term) | Systemic or one-time impact | Irreversibility (high, medium, low - only for negative impacts) | Production chain process or activity that causes impact | Resources / stakeholder group impacted |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Loss of qualified human capital to the market | Negative | Actual | Medium-term | Systemic | Low | Individual stage, where the employee does not perceive that his/her professional development is aligned to the periodicity and or benefits offered by the market, according to his/her qualification. | Shareholders and Investors, Employees, Banrisul’s Operations. |
Human capital development | Positive | Actual | Medium-term | Systemic | - | Incentive to Higher Education and access to the extensive portfolio of external and internal technical courses offered by Banrisul’s Distance Learning Platform and more assertive communication and more fluid processes. | Shareholders and Investors, Employees, Suppliers, Banrisul’s Operations. |
Reduction in turnover | Positive | Actual | Medium-term | Systemic | Initiatives to promote quality of life and benefits for internal stakeholders | Shareholders and Investors, Employees, Banrisul’s Operations. | |
Increase internal engagement | Positive | Actual | Medium-term | Systemic | - | Internal communication initiatives, events/campaigns focused on internal stakeholders | Shareholders and Investors, Employees, Banrisul’s Operations. |
Increased investments in talent hiring, attraction, retention and training | Positive | Actual | Short-term | Systemic | Incentive to capacity building, training and succession plan considering management of competencies. | Shareholders and Investors, Employees, Banrisul’s Operations. |
Gender | 2020 | 2021 | 2022 |
---|---|---|---|
Men | 85.0% | 90.0% | 88.1% |
Women | 15.0% | 10.0% | 11.9% |
Age group | 2020 | 2021 | 2022 |
---|---|---|---|
Under 30 years old | 0.0% | 0.0% | 0.0% |
30-50 years old | 32.5% | 27.5% | 26.2% |
Over 50 years old | 67.5% | 72.5% | 73.8% |
Employee category | Gender | 2020 | 2021 | 2022 |
---|---|---|---|---|
Superintendent | Men | 70.1% | 66.2% | 66.7% |
Women | 29.9% | 33.8% | 33.3% | |
Manager | Men | 61.8% | 61.1% | 60.1% |
Women | 38.2% | 38.9% | 39.9% | |
Analyst | Men | 62.7% | 61.4% | 60.5% |
Women | 37.3% | 38.6% | 39.5% | |
Assistant | Men | 55.9% | 63.5% | 55.8% |
Women | 44.1% | 36.5% | 44.2% | |
Without commissioned position | Men | 51.2% | 50.2% | 49.7% |
Women | 48.8% | 49.8% | 50.3% | |
Interns | Men | 43.0% | 43.2% | 39.5% |
Women | 57.0% | 56.8% | 60.5% | |
Other | Men | 53.7% | 55.7% | 54.8% |
Women | 46.3% | 44.3% | 45.2% |
Employee category | Age group | 2020 | 2021 | 2022 |
---|---|---|---|---|
Superintendent | Under 30 years old | 0.0% | 0.0% | 0.0% |
30-50 years old | 37.3% | 32.4% | 31.9% | |
Over 50 years old | 62.7% | 67.6% | 68.1% | |
Manager | Under 30 years old | 2.0% | 1.6% | 1.7% |
30-50 years old | 68.2% | 69.0% | 69.9% | |
Over 50 years old | 29.9% | 29.5% | 28.4% | |
Analyst | Under 30 years old | 2.0% | 2.0% | 2.1% |
30-50 years old | 61.7% | 65.3% | 66.2% | |
Over 50 years old | 36.2% | 32.7% | 31.7% | |
Assistant | Under 30 years old | 7.2% | 2.0% | 0.0% |
30-50 years old | 69.7% | 68.9% | 66.2% | |
Over 50 years old | 23.0% | 29.1% | 33.8% | |
Without commissioned position | Under 30 years old | 7.3% | 4.2% | 2.2% |
30-50 years old | 67.9% | 68.5% | 67% | |
Over 50 years old | 24.8% | 27.3% | 30.8% | |
Interns | Under 30 years old | 86.7% | 89.4% | 88.0% |
30-50 years old | 12.8% | 10.6% | 11.6% | |
Over 50 years old | 0.5% | 0.1% | 0.4% | |
Other | Under 30 years old | 1.8% | 0.5% | 0.5% |
30-50 years old | 59.8% | 57.1% | 57.4% | |
Over 50 years old | 38.4% | 42.4% | 42.1% |
Employee percentage per employee category, by color or race¹ | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Employee category | Color or race | 2020 | 2021 | 2022 |
Superintendent | Black | 0.0% | 0.0% | 0.0% |
Multiracial | 0.0% | 1.5% | 1.4% | |
White | 100% | 98.5% | 98.6% | |
Indigenous people | 0.0% | 0.0% | 0.0% | |
Yellow | 0.0% | 0.0% | 0.0% | |
Manager | Black | 1.4% | 1.5% | 1.8% |
Multiracial | 2.1% | 2.1% | 2.6% | |
White | 96.3% | 96.2% | 95.3% | |
Indigenous people | 0.1% | 0.1% | 0.1% | |
Yellow | 0.1% | 0.1% | 0.2% | |
Analyst² | Black | 2.4% | 2.5% | 2.7% |
Multiracial | 2.2% | 2.7% | 2.9% | |
White | 94.9% | 94.4% | 94.1% | |
Indigenous people | 0.1% | 0.1% | 0.1% | |
Yellow | 0.3% | 0.3% | 0.2% | |
Assistant | Black | 4.3% | 4.7% | 2.6% |
Multiracial | 2.6% | 2.0% | 1.3% | |
White | 93.1% | 93.2% | 96.1% | |
Indigenous people | 0.0% | 0.0% | 0.0% | |
Yellow | 0.0% | 0.0% | 0.0% | |
Without commissioned position | Black | 2.3% | 2.2% | 2.0% |
Multiracial | 3.2% | 3.0% | 2.7% | |
White | 94.3% | 94.5% | 95.1% | |
Indigenous people | 0.1% | 0.1% | 0.1% | |
Yellow | 0.2% | 0.2% | 0.2% | |
Other | Black | 2.4% | 2.2% | 2.3% |
Multiracial | 2.8% | 3.2% | 2.9% | |
White | 94.6% | 94.3% | 94.5% | |
Indigenous people | 0.0% | 0.0% | 0.0% | |
Yellow | 0.2% | 0.2% | 0.3% |
¹Interns not are not included in this calculation.
²3 analysts chose not to report their race.
The year 2022 was very important for the progress of the Diversity, Equity & Inclusion agenda, as this topic was internally institutionalized, and formal Governance mechanisms were introduced to move this work forward. To ensure diversity and collaboration that this topic requires, Banrisul created three initial Affinity Groups: Gender Equity, whose main goal is the pursuit of gender equity; People with Disabilities, with the main purpose of fostering the inclusion of colleagues with disabilities; and Race, whose goal is to promote racial equity.
To support and coordinate these Affinity Groups Banrisul created a Diversity, Equity & Inclusion Committee, composed of members from various backgrounds and the Affinity Groups’ coordinators, ensuring the necessary diversity and representativeness to address the agendas. The diversity indicators are still being developed to provide the grounds to monitor related impacts.
Impact | Classification (positive or negative) | Event (potential or actual) | Time frame (short-term or long-term) | Systemic or one-time impact | Irreversibility (high, medium, low - only for negative impacts) | Production chain process or activity that causes impact | Resources / stakeholder group impacted |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bank’s reputation and image | Positive | Potential | Long-term | Systemic | - | Management of this topic within the Organization, from the public service exam to the termination of the employment contract. | Shareholders and Investors, Employees, Community, Customers, Suppliers, Banrisul’s Operations. |
Increase in the share of minority groups in the Organization and in leadership positions | Positive | Potential | Long-term | Systemic | - | Management of this topic within the Organization, from the public service exam to the termination of the employment contract. | Shareholders and Investors, Employees, Banrisul’s Operations. |
Greater employee awareness of this topic | Positive | Actual | Long-term | Systemic | - | Management of this topic within the Organization, from the public service exam to the termination of the employment contract. | Shareholders and Investors, Employees, Suppliers, Banrisul’s Operations. |
Development of more humane and inclusive management | Positive | Potential | Long-term | Systemic | - | Leadership development | Employees, Customers, Banrisul’s Operations. |
The Ombudsman’s Office classifies the complaints received by its channels into topic, item and root cause. Regarding subject, there is a “bank secrecy” item, which is under the topic “other subjects” and the root cause “LGPD” (Brazilian General Data Protection Law). In 2022, five customer complaints were filed related to bank secrecy and/or LGPD, including in external agencies; four of these complaints were classified as invalid and only one was classified as valid (not resolved). In the latter, there was proof of a data breach.
The report classified was valid was received through the Consumer Protection Agency (Procon, in Portuguese)/RS (external agency).
Card-related losses incurred in the reporting period totaled R$1.8 million.
The management of this topic started with the structuring of the Data and Analytics Management department, in 2019, and included the appointment of the Data Protection Officer (DPO), who is responsible for conducting internal activities to ensure compliance with the General Data Protection Act (LGPD, in Portuguese) and serve as a focal point between the Organization, the holders of personal data and the National Data Protection Authority (ANPD, in Portuguese).
The Data Privacy and Protection Governance Program was created to mitigate potential negative impacts. As part of the Program, a quarterly report is sent to the Internal Audit for compliance reporting. The Program covers several fronts, including:
• Mapping of all activities involving personal data processing, identifying the data life cycle, from collection to deletion, as well as the appropriate legal framework;
• Creation of a customer service channel for holders of personal data, ensuring the full exercise of all the rights set out in the LGPD;
• Formalization in a Standard of a flow of adaptation of contracts with third parties for compliance with the LGPD, including the definition of a methodology to help identify the Processor x Controller x Joint Controllers and define the flow for indicating LGPD clauses for business and administrative contracts;
• Implementation of the Privacy by Design and Privacy by Default methodologies in order to ensure the privacy and protection of personal data in the design of new products and services;
• Creation of specific guidelines for handling or responding to security incidents involving personal data considering the requirements imposed by the LGPD in order to complement Banrisul’s existing Information and Cyber Security Policy; and
• Development of internal training for all the staff on the main points addressed by the Law and their impacts on the workplace, as well as creation of a website featuring content that helps disseminate a culture of data privacy and protection in the Institution.
In order to address the actual negative impacts, Banrisul has approved the reporting flow of data breach incidents and created Guidelines for Prevention and Response to Personal Data Incidents. These documents are designed to ensure the prevention of personal data incidents related to Banrisul and its customers, including the means/processes that should be implemented to mitigate and/or remedy any adverse impacts thereof, as well as appropriately respond to and deal with these incidents.
To track the effectiveness of the actions, quarterly reports are made to the Audit Committee and information is provided to any internal audits. The Bank organizes an annual calendar of activities of the Data Privacy and Protection Governance Program, covering all the goals and targets for the period.
The plan is designed based on the Regulatory Agenda of the National Data Protection Authority and best market practices, taking into account sustainability aspects.The annual plan of the Privacy and Data Protection Governance Program defines indicators, which, after approved by the Executive Board, are submitted to and monitored by the Strategy and Planning department. The Program runs continuously.
Impact | Classification (positive or negative) | Event (potential or actual) | Time frame (short-term or long-term) | Systemic or one-time impact | Irreversibility (high, medium, low - only for negative impacts) | Production chain process or activity that causes impact | Resources / stakeholder group impacted |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Incidents with customers’ and employees’ personal data | Negative | Actual | Short-term | Systemic | Medium | In the activities or database that uses customer personal data, in the event of a failure in data security systems. | Shareholders and Investors, Customers, Banrisul’s Operations. |
Process credibility and credibility and sharing personal data | Positive | Actual | Short-term | Systemic | - | In information flow controls, through the preservation of confidentiality and integrity of information. | Shareholders and Investors, Employees, Customers, Suppliers, Banrisul’s Operations. |
Greater autonomy for the holder to control personal data | Positive | Actual | Short-term | Systemic | - | Information availability, protected at all times, kept complete and available only to those entitled to access it. | Shareholders and Investors, Employees, Customers, Suppliers, Banrisul’s Operations. |
Greater transparency as regards access and use of personal data | Positive | Actual | Short-term | Systemic | - | Availability and authorization to use the information only to those entitled to access it. | Shareholders and Investors, Employees, Community, Customers, Suppliers, Environment, Banrisul’s Operations. |
Loss of market and competitiveness due to information security incidents | Negative | Potential | Short-term | One-time | Medium | Maintenance of Information Security. | Shareholders and Investors, Employees, Customers, Suppliers, Banrisul’s Operations. |
There is no percentage of assets subject to positive or negative social or environmental screening.The Agribusiness Department does not use screening criteria. However, before contracting a transaction, the department runs a social and environmental compliance check to verify social issues (forced labor, IBAMA and ICMBio embargoes, administrative improbity and ineligibility) and environmental issues (overlap of the area to be financed with land reform settlement areas, indigenous land, quilombola territory, conservation units, areas embargoed by IBAMA or ICMBio, areas susceptible to flooding, archaeological sites and areas with deforestation alerts. Moreover, in order to grant rural credit, the Bank requires environmental licensing of the financed activity.
The Company does not have a specific sustainability policy for rural credit; however, it complies with state and federal environmental legislation for contracting these transactions. Moreover, Banrisul follows the rules set out in the Rural Credit Manual that addresses social and environmental compliance, which must be verified during the proposal stage, before credit is granted, and during the effectiveness of the contract. Internal credit standards should also be followed. Banrisul’s Social, Environmental and Climate Risk Management Policy and Social and Environmental Responsibility Policy are also complied with.
The policies or commitments focused on this material topic are the Social, Environmental and Climate Responsibility Policy (PRSAC, in Portuguese) that regulates processes and business in a comprehensive way; however, the Green Bureau will be soon implemented by the Central Bank (for the Agribusiness segment), which will allow rural credit benefits to be granted to customers who fit the Program’s sustainability criteria.
As regards actions taken to manage this topic and its related impacts, focused on strengthening the offer of rural credit, the Programa Sementes (Seeds Program) and Operation 365 were expanded, which encourage the preservation and maintenance of the chemical, physical and biological quality of the soil, thus increasing productivity. Branch network’s employees receive training, almost every month, on sustainable rural credit products to support the offer of financing for the production of biofertilizers.
In the credit granting process, Banrisul prepares a risk assessment report for transactions totaling more than R$10 million including a social, environmental and climate analysis of the company. To improve and speed up the credit granting process, documents are digitalized and input into a social and environmental compliance system for credit proposals.
The social and environmental compliance system also verifies if the company receiving the financing has any restrictions for the granting of rural credit, e.g., conservation units, IBAMA and ICMBio embargoes, and being listed as a company that use forced labor; therefore, this tool is used to address actual negative impacts arising from this topic. Banrisul also relies on a network of associated technician for preparing projects/budgets.
To track actions taken, the data collected in the system undergo internal and external audits, benchmarking process, and inspections by both the Brazilian Central Bank and the BNDES. Banrisul also hired a consulting company specialized in agribusiness to monitor the internal movements, suggesting process improvements.
These measures aim to comply with the environmental legislations and review the Company’s internal regulations, in order to keep them up to date. Through courses, training programs and verification of the compliance system in all financial departments, Banrisul was able to share and improve the knowledge about social and environmental compliance.
As regards economic impacts, in granting agribusiness credit, the feasibility of the proposals is verified by checking projects and cash flow estimates. To manage positive social impacts, Banrisul does not grant credit to people who have restrictions and makes specific allocations available for small and medium-sized producers. The Bank also offers a crop insurance product called Proagro Mais that covers production costs and funds to maintain the producer’s costs in case of problems with the harvest.
We are always analyzing market trends, proposing projects to develop our reposition products, services, and fees with other product management areas through research, suggestions received through the ombudsman, and benchmarking with the areas. The goal is to increase the granting of rural credit with a sustainable bias.
Focused on creating an investment fund that integrates ESG matters, in 2022, Banrisul held meetings with renowned consulting companies to survey the resources needed to implement this new process. A working group responsible for the “sustainability” topic has been set up in the Company, which has the task of assessing the issue in greater depth and implementing the actions required for the creation/inclusion of ESG investment products in the portfolio.
Impact | Classification (positive or negative) | Event (potential or actual) | Time frame (short-term or long-term) | Systemic or one-time impact | Irreversibility (high, medium, low - only for negative impacts) | Production chain process or activity that causes impact | Resources / stakeholder group impacted |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Fostering micro and small entrepreneurs | Positive | Actual | Long-term | Systemic | - | The impact will be generated according to the purpose of the credit granted, usually working capital credit, which will enable the enterprise’s maintenance, as well as small improvements and expansions. | Shareholders and Investors, Community, Customers, Banrisul’s Operations. |
Increase family income | Positive | Actual | Long-term | Systemic | - | After credit granting, when the credit facility starts to have financial returns to the creditor. | Customers, Suppliers, Banrisul’s Operations. |
Contamination of soil and bodies of water, and impacts on biodiversity and human health | Negative | Actual | Long-term | Systemic | Medium | Indirectly caused by the granting of credit to rural producers, who use agrochemicals in the soil and generate the impact. | Community, Environment, Banrisul’s Operations. |
Increase in renewable energy consumption | Positive | Actual | Long-term | Systemic | - | The rural producer install solar panels or other type of renewable energy source at his/her property, contributing to the increase of clean energy consumption and reduction of conventional energy consumption. | Environment, Banrisul’s Operations. |
Expansion of the agricultural frontier, leading to deforestation or agriculture and livestock activities in forbidden areas | Negative | Actual | Long-term | Systemic | Medium | The rural producer, whether an Individual or Company, who deforests areas without permission to increase the cultivated area, as well as the producer who develops his/her enterprise in a restricted area, such as indigenous lands, Quilombola areas, conservation units, among others. | Community, Environment, Banrisul’s Operations. |
Impact on business results for not having ESG-related products in the portfolio yet | Negative | Potential | Short-term | One-time | High | Banrisul Corretora de Valores is aware that it may lose customers for not having ESG-related products in its portfolio yet, as investors, especially younger generations, seek to relate to sustainable or purpose-driven companies. | Shareholders and Investors, Employees, Community, Customers, Suppliers, Banrisul’s Operations. |