2023 UNIVERSAL REGISTRATION DOCUMENT

General and financial elements

Main performance indicators in 2023

  • Lost-time workplace accident frequency rate, worldwide:
    • VINCI employees (*): 5.66 in 2023 (5.71 in 2022 (**) and 6.10 in 2018)
    • Temporary staff: 12.98 in 2023 (13.03 in 2022 (**) and 15.03 in 2018)
  • Workplace accident severity rate (VINCI employees) (*): 0.37 in 2023 (0.40 in 2022 (**) and 0.42 in 2018)
  • Percentage of Group companies with no lost-time workplace accidents in 2023: 74% (72% in 2022 (**) and 72% in 2018)
  • Number of training hours in health and safety: 2.6 million in 2023, equating to 44% of training hours (2.5 million and 44% respectively in 2022(**))

Definitions

  • Lost-time workplace accident frequency rate = (number of lost-time workplace accidents × 1,000,000)/number of hours worked
  • Workplace accident severity rate = (number of days lost due to workplace accidents × 1,000)/number of hours worked

(*) These indicators were verified with a reasonable level of assurance by an independent third party.

(**) Data for 2022 does not include Cobra IS.

4.3 Duty of vigilance with regard to human rights

VINCI has made public commitments to respect, protect and promote the rights of people and local communities that may be impacted by its projects and activities. The Group continuously strengthens its procedures to assess and prevent human rights risks, while also assisting its entities to be proactive in this area and develop operational responses. It considers that the human rights challenges faced and the solutions to be implemented are best tackled locally, close to its people and operations. Because it understands that these issues are complex, VINCI also engages in ongoing dialogue and collaboration with its stakeholders and peers.

4.3.1 Major risk identification and analysis

A Human Rights Steering Committee, comprised of the human resources directors of all business lines and divisions, was set up at the end of 2015 to undertake the extensive work required to identify the Group’s major risks. Employee consultations and discussion forums were held, at which representatives of organisations or companies outside the Group sometimes participated to share their experience. The steering committee also took into account international standards, specialist research, guidelines and previous work produced by the Group (such as its handbook on fundamental social rights or standards for workers’ accommodation).

Main international standards and conventions underlying VINCI’s approach

  • Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR)
  • International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR)
  • International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICESCR)
  • Eight fundamental conventions of the International Labour Organisation (ILO)
  • Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises
  • United Nations Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights

This analysis of risks and issues was also informed by the human rights impact assessment commissioned by VINCI in Qatar and carried out by an independent third party, Business for Social Responsibility (BSR), in 2015. The methodology used for the impact assessment was to identify, in the different sets of codified rights, those issues that were salient to the Group’s activities. Interviews were held with key VINCI stakeholders, such as the Building and Wood Workers’ International (BWI), the International Labour Organisation (ILO), the International Organisation for Migration (IOM), the French National Consultative Commission on Human Rights (CNCDH), the Danish Institute for Human Rights, and non-governmental organisations having worked on human rights issues in that region (Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch, Engineers Against Poverty, Business & Human Rights Resource Centre, etc.).

In 2016, the Human Rights Steering Committee validated five salient issues, broken down into 17 specific themes. They describe areas where VINCI’s activities can have a significant impact on human rights, which include those of employees, subcontractors, temporary workers, local residents and local communities. Since their publication, the relevance of the salient issues identified has been tested by various Group entities and validated by feedback from operational teams in different countries. Furthermore, dialogue with members of the European Works Council has not led to any change in the risk map to date.