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Thursday / April 18. 2024
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The company recorded double-digit percentage gains in the Europe/Middle East/Africa and Asia/Pacific regions, but saw sales fall in Latin and North America, mainly due to lower volumes.

The Bayer Group experienced a slow start to 2023 as expected. “Sales were on a par with the exceptionally strong prior-year quarter,” CEO Werner Baumann said on Thursday when presenting the Quarterly Statement for the first quarter. The normalization in the glyphosate business has accelerated, although this effect was largely offset by growth in the other parts of the Crop Science business, he explained. Group earnings were mainly weighed down by the glyphosate business and inflation, and were also impacted by R&D investment at Pharmaceuticals, which remained high.

In the agricultural business (Crop Science), sales declined by 1.1 percent (Fx & portfolio adj.) to 8.351 billion euros. Excluding the glyphosate business, Crop Science sales were up around 8 percent (Fx & portfolio adj.). The division recorded double-digit percentage gains in the Europe/Middle East/Africa and Asia/Pacific regions, but saw sales fall in Latin and North America, mainly due to lower volumes. Sales at Herbicides decreased by 24.3 percent (Fx & portfolio adj.) due to lower volumes and prices for glyphosate-based products. By contrast, Corn Seed & Traits saw sales rise by a substantial 15.8 percent (Fx & portfolio adj.), primarily driven by higher prices in the North America and Europe/Middle East/Africa regions. Sales at Insecticides rose by 12.6 percent (Fx & portfolio adj.), with significant price and volume increases in Europe/Middle East/Africa thanks to Movento™ and in Latin America due to Curbix™ more than offsetting lower volumes in North America. Sales were also up at Soybean Seed & Traits, which registered growth of 1.4 percent (Fx & portfolio adj.) that was mainly driven by higher volumes in Latin America. Sales at Fungicides came in at the prior-year level, with higher prices in all regions offsetting lower volumes in Latin and North America in particular.

EBITDA before special items at Crop Science decreased by 11.0 percent to 3.267 billion euros, mainly due to the fall in sales in Latin and North America. Earnings were also diminished by an increase in particular in the cost of goods sold, which was due to high inflation. There was a positive currency effect of 54 million euros (Q1 2022: 98 million euros). The EBITDA margin before special items declined by 4.3 percentage points to 39.1 percent.

Baumann confirmed the Group outlook for full-year 2023 based on the average monthly exchange rates from 2022. However, for the remainder of the year Bayer sees potential risks mainly arising from the significantly reduced market price expectations for glyphosate-based products, he said. “We continue to expect performance to improve in our other businesses in the second half of the year,” Baumann noted. “Overall, we expect target attainment to come in at the lower end of our guidance.”

The company recorded double-digit percentage gains in

For shaping a water-resilient agriculture system with key contribution in rice.

 Bayer is launching its new water strategy at the UN 2023 Water Conference in New York. The company is making water an integral part of its business decisions, investments and selection of suppliers. Bayer’s water strategy reflects its position as a key player in the fields of health and agriculture and aims to have an impact that goes beyond the company’s own business.

“The world is facing a severe water crisis affecting ecosystems, food security and human health,” explains Bayer CEO Werner Baumann. “As a leader in health and nutrition we have an intrinsic motivation to address the water crisis and make a valuable contribution. With our global footprint and strong supplier engagements, Bayer will create value and encourage sector-wide action. Our ambition is to play a leading role in promoting corporate water stewardship and rallying other businesses to take action to protect the world’s water resources.”

Bayer’s commitments go beyond the company’s own operations and are reflecting its ambition to generate impact. The activities will encompass the entire value chain, from Bayer’s own operations to the farmers Bayer serves. Key elements of the water strategy are:

Resilient agriculture: On average, 70 per cent of global freshwater withdrawals are in agriculture. Bayer commits to driving positive change in water productivity in water scarce regional cropping systems, starting with rice, which is responsible for up to 43 per cent of the world’s irrigation water withdrawals. The company is committed to improving water use per kilogram of crop by 25 per cent by 2030, by transforming rice-cropping systems for smallholder customers in the relevant regions where Bayer operates. In addition, Bayer’s existing commitment of reducing the environmental impact of its crop protection portfolio by 30 per cent by 2030 also contributes to water quality.

Business and investment: Bayer is developing a concept to integrate water quality and quantity into business decisions and processes that will be rolled out from 2024 onwards. The company will develop a methodology to place a value on water and incorporate it into investment processes. Already in 2021, water and wastewater matters represented approx. 10 per cent of Bayer’s total CapEx projects.

Suppliers and growers: Bayer evaluates the sustainability performance of all key suppliers and of selected high-sustainability-risk suppliers using a sustainability risk classification that includes water. As an important step forward, Bayer has launched its new Supplier Code of Conduct, with dedicated items to address water and wastewater. At the same time the company will continue to drive improvements in water-use efficiency with growers across seed production.

“Until now, the topic of water has been overlooked in the climate debate despite the many interlinkages, but with the UN 2023 Water Conference it is gaining momentum. There are new opportunities to take the right sustainable actions, and we must seize these opportunities now. This is why we make water an integral part of our business and investment decisions across the entire value chain. With these decisions, we will contribute to climate resilience and to more sustainable water usage,” says Cristina Alonso Alija, Head of Sustainability, Safety, Health & Environment, and responsible for the water strategy at Bayer.

For shaping a water-resilient agriculture system with