Corporate Governance

The main governance bodies are the General Shareholders' Meeting, Board of Directors, Advisory Committees to the Board, Fiscal Council and the Executive Board, which bodies work in complete synergy, aiming at maximizing the creation of value for the Company and its shareholders.

Disclosure of information in a consistent and transparent manner is the Company's priority. Performance is presented through the disclosure of quarterly results and annual financial statements, as well as through the Sustainability Report.

See details of the governance structure in Management.

  Number of members

 

Board

Independent directors

6

Other non-executive directors

8

Employee representatives

-

Executive Board

Executive directors

6

Total

20

 

Board member
14 members
Independent and/or non-executive Gender Cumulative years of mandate* Participation in Klabin's Advisory Committees
Amanda Klabin Tkacz – Titular – Board Chairwoman - Female 19 -
Alberto Klabin – Member - Male 22 -
Amaury Guilherme Bier – Member Yes  Male 0 Member of Audit and Related Parties Committee
Celso Lafer - Member Yes Male 17 -
Francisco Lafer Pati - Member - Male 5 -
Horacio Lafer Piva – Member - Male 12 -
Isabella Saboya de Albuquerque - Member Yes Female 0 -
Lilia Klabin Levine - Member - Female 6 -
Marcelo Mesquita de Siqueira Filho – Member Yes Male 0 -
Mauro Gentile Rodrigues da Cunha – Member Yes Male 3 -
Paulo Sergio Coutinho Galvão Filho – Member - Male 21 -
Roberto Luiz Leme Klabin – Member Yes Male 21 Sustainability Committee
Vera Lafer – Member - Female 21  
Wolff Klabin – Member - Male 4 Member of the People Committee

 

Board substitutes Independent and/or non-executive Gender Cumulative years of mandate* Participation in Klabin's Advisory Committees
Daniel Miguel Klabin - Male 21 -
Dan Klabin - Male 6 -
Victor Borges Leal Saragiotto Yes Male 0 -
Pedro Oliva Marcilio de Sousa Yes Male 0 Sustainability Committee
Luis Eduardo Pereira de Carvalho - Male 0 Member of Audit and Related Parties Committee
Francisco Amaury Olsen - Male 4 Member of the People Committee
Andriei José Beber Yes Male 0 -
João Adamo Junior - Male 6 Member of Audit and Related Parties Committee
Marcelo de Aguiar Oliveira Yes Male 0 -
Tiago Curi Isaac Yes Male 8 -
Maria Eugênia Lafer Galvão - Female 1 Sustainability Committee
Marcelo Bertini de Rezende Barbosa Yes Male 4 Member of the People Committee
Antonio Sergio Alfano - Male 1 -
Paulo Roberto Petterle  - Male 0 -

* The average tenure of directors on the Board of Directors is 10.7 years.
** More information of director's experience can be found at Management.

Average participation in Board of Directors meetings:

In 2022, the full members of the Board of Directors recorded an average participation of 93% in meetings.

Minimum required participation in meetings of the Board of Directors:

According to article 16 of the body's Internal Regulations (link), members must attend at least 75% of the meetings of the Board and/or Committees in which they are members, examining the documents made available, in order to to participate actively and diligently.

 

Non-Executive President/Chief Director

According to Klabin's Bylaws (Article 17, paragraph 1), the chairman of the Board of Directors is appointed by the Board itself, from among the board members elected by the controlling shareholder, and the choice of chairman must respect the principle of rotation, except for re-election, if there is a favorable vote of all elected directors, by proposal of the controlling shareholder. The current Chairman of the Board of Directors is Amanda Klabin Tkacz, who does not exercise an executive role at the Company.

Independence from the Board

The Board is made up of 14 effective members and 14 substitutes, elected at the General Meeting, six of whom are independent. The Board of Directors is responsible for defining and guiding the long-term strategy and taking decisions. Independent directors are defined pursuant to B3's Level 2 Listing Regulations.

Information in accordance with the Reference Form of July 12, 2023, Bylaws, and Charter of the Board of Directors.

Board Election and Nomination Process

The election of the members of the Company's Board of Directors will take place through the slate system. In the election by slate, each shareholder may only vote for one slate, with the candidates from the slate receiving the highest number of votes being declared elected. Alternatively, the election may take place through the multiple vote procedure, if shareholders representing together 5% (five percent) of the Company's voting capital, at least, request its adoption, pursuant to article 141 of Law 6,404/76 and CVM Resolution No. 70/22. In this case, the election will be carried out by candidate and each share will be assigned as many votes as there are seats to be filled on the Board of Directors through the multiple vote procedure, each shareholder being able to freely allocate their votes among the candidates, being elected the candidates who receive the highest number of votes.

Board Performance Review

In fiscal year 2021, the Company's Board of Directors hired an independent consultancy to facilitate the Board's self-assessment process and also conduct the external verification process. The steps included checks on the body's structure, dynamics of meetings, strategy, due diligence, human capital, monitoring of Financial Statements and risks and compliance.​

In addition, the methodology adopted for carrying out the work of the external consultancy consisted of document analysis, questionnaires and interviews with all members of the Board of Directors and key people from other governance and management bodies, consolidation of the information obtained in order to identify opportunities , promote collegiate discussions and validation of these results. As a result, in 2022, the Company's efforts were aimed at implementing improvements in the records of directors' interactions in the minutes of meetings of the Board of Directors and of the Advisory Committees of this body, as well as the creation of control of recommendations and requests made during the meetings as part of the process of improving the governance processes of the Board of Directors.

The results of external assessments are examined in light of statutory, regulatory and regulatory standards, good practices and benchmarks, in addition to the Company's strategic and business objectives. Based on the opportunities for improvement identified throughout the evaluation process and on the recommendations of the external consultancy, the evaluated bodies develop and implement, to the extent of their respective competences, action plans, with the support of the various bodies and managers of the Company.​

Information in accordance with the Reference Form of July 12, 2023

Compensation Policy and compensation-setting process

 

The purpose of the Company’s compensation policies includes: 

 

  • Aligning the interests of employees with the Company’s and the shareholders’ strategy; 
  • Enabling our employees’ compensation to remain competitive and attractive compared to the market at large;
  • Recognizing high-performing Klabin employees, fostering a meritocratic culture and attracting and retaining talent for the Company;
  • Causing executive compensation to reflect our short- and long-term results, in addition to their individual performance.

The Company’s fixed and variable compensation policies make no distinction in terms of gender, race, religion, or any other aspects not associated with individual or corporate performance. In addition, executives operate under goals associated with KODS (Klabin Sustainable Development Goals), that is, relative to one of the four proposed theme axes (renewable future, sustainable economy, prosperity for people, and technology & innovation). 

For the CEO’s compensation, the Company sets relative financial metrics and financial return, as shown below: 

Financial return: comparison of the Company’s annual average ROIC (Return on Invested Capital) and WACC (Weighted Average Cost of Capital). 

Relative financial metric: aligns compensation with the market performance of shares. Until 2022, this took place by means of TSR (Total Shareholder Return) and Ke (Cost of equity). The 2023 plan adopted the relative position between the Company’s TSR (Total Shareholder Return) and the TSR for the Peer Group of companies. 

Deferral of the CEO’s Short-Term Compensation Bonus

Concerning the breakdown of the CEO’s variable compensation, the following applies: : 

  • The CEO has the option to defer up to 50% of their short-term compensation into share purchases. 
  • The longest performance period that the executive compensation plan covers is five years, and the vesting period for variable compensation is five years as well.  

 

Required shareholdings:

Beginning in 2022, Statutory and Non-Statutory Officers have been required to hold a Minimum Stock Ownership. To comply with the program, the CEO must allocate 15 monthly fees (based on their fees at the end of each fiscal year) to the purchase of shares of the Company, and hold those shares (1.25 times the annual compensation). For Statutory and Non-Statutory Officers, the amount to be allocated and held is 11 monthly fees/salaries (0.92 times the annual compensation), as the case may be. 
 

Information in line with the Reference Form of July 12, 2023.

 

Highest paid individual's total annual compensation to the mean total annual compensation of all employees ratio

2022 2021 2020
136.70 114.53 116.41

 

Sustainability Governance Structure

 

Materiality

Klabin reviewed its entire materiality considering the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). The process of identifying material topics involved the following steps: (1) Identification of potential material topics; (2) Reprioritization of themes; (3) Analysis of results; (4) Validation from senior leadership.

1. Identification of potentially material topics

The identification of potential material topics involved consultations with more than 30 corporate management and business unit leaders. This process allowed for the assessment of risks and impacts (both positive and negative) associated with activities conducted in Klabin's four business units (forestry, paper, cellulose, and packaging). During this stage, risk and impact matrices were consulted, as well as processes used for engaging with stakeholders (e.g., mechanisms for complaints and feedback), and external references (secondary sources) of impacts related to the company's sector of operation (benchmarking with other companies, ratings, indices, etc.). 

2. Evaluation of impact relevance

The risks and impacts identified in the previous stage were grouped based on thematic convergence and analyzed considering the probability of occurrence and severity of the generated impact. In line with the principles of dual materiality, all impacts were assessed considering their influence on the company's value generation, including the stakeholders affected by financial losses. 

During the impact assessment, consultations were conducted with groups of company stakeholders, especially customers and suppliers. This process supported the definition of prioritized themes.

3. Analysis of results and prioritization of themes

A total of 23 priority material themes related to the environment, society, and governance were defined, considering the challenges of the company's expansion plan while addressing urgent global challenges. 

These themes guided the development of the Klabin Sustainable Development Objectives (KODS), which are materialized through short, medium, and long-term targets until 2030. These objectives represent the values that the company must deliver to society and the planet, prioritizing 14 out of the 17 objectives established in the global 2030 Agenda. 

 

Klabin agenda for sustainable development

The 23 material themes have been prioritized and are listed under the following structural axes:

BUILDING A RENEWABLE FUTURE CONTRIBUTION TO A SUSTAINABLE ECONOMY PROSPERITY OF PEOPLE TECNOLOGY AND INNOVATION
Wood avaliability Production and logistics Human capital development Mutiple uses of wood
Forest yeld Forest certification Management and engagement of professionals Innovation management
Energy Use Ethical conduct and integrity Klabin's culture Information security
Water Use Risk management Diversity
Waste management Local development and impacts on communities Occupacional health and safety
Climate change Supplier social and enviromental performance
  Costumers abd products
  Biodiversity

 

4. KODS Governance 

Klabin's 2030 Agenda is validated by Klabin's Fixed Sustainability Committee, the Executive Board, and the Board of Directors. The meeting agenda for both the Committee and the Fixed Sustainability Commission is defined based on the risk and urgency of the theme and the progress of the commitment. These meetings occur at least bimonthly. 

The alignment analysis of all new projects within the company is systematically conducted considering Klabin's sustainable development objectives. This includes internal audit processes and the periodic update of the company's Risk Matrix.

Starting in 2023, the individual goals of all Klabin executives include a Sustainability Index. The index comprises a set of goals related to Klabin's 2030 sustainable development agenda (KODS), which is selected at the beginning of each year based on the main challenges for the progress and risks of KODS during that period. This practice is mandatory for the company's directors and managers and encompasses safety, diversity, community relations, and environmental indicators.

For all employees at every level of the company, the long-term commitment to sustainability is extended by cascading the executive goals to teams in the short term. Additionally, employees can participate in the ILP Para Todos program, which enables them to acquire shares in the company. For more information, please refer to the Incentive Programs section.

Materiality Issues and Metrics for Enterprise Value Creation

Material Issue Climate Change Occupational Health and Safety Biodiversity
Business case  Climate change management is part of Klabin's strategy and is integrated into the agenda of risks and opportunities for the Company's business and its stakeholders. Among the main guiding principles are our Sustainability Policy and the Guidelines for the Management of Climate Change - Mitigation and Adaptation. In addition, we are committed to the Business Ambition for 1.5° C, a UN global campaign, which aims to reduce emissions considering science and neutralization of emissions by 2050. The climate risks and opportunities are inserted in the company's management and decision-making processes, especially those related to forest management, due to their relevance to the business. The forestry research area - Efficiency and Ecophysiology Department - monitors possible future climate scenarios, developing data modeling related to climate parameters and assessing the impact on planted forests. Among the potential risks mapped is, for example, the rise in temperature in the region where Klabin's main forestry area is located. The Corporate Life Safety Policy was launched in 2022 and aims to nurture a just culture that looks after the well-being of employees and business strategy, turning failures into learning that drives safer processes and activities throughout Klabin. Considered an extremely relevant theme for the company because it represents a risk directly associated with the continuity of the company's operations, productivity, and the quality of life of our employees and third parties, the theme is directly linked to the business strategy and is present in long-term goals and in the variable compensation of the company's executives. (Occupational Health and Safety Management Because of its forest-based business, Klabin is a pioneer in the implementation of mosaic planting: a system which mixes areas of preserved native forests, which correspond to almost half of our forest area, with planted pine and eucalyptus forests of different ages. Since the quality of planted forests also depends on the quality of native forests and their natural resources, Biodiversity is a material issue for the company, and has the largest set of 2030 targets within Klabin's Agenda for Sustainable Development. The loss of biodiversity threatens the capacity of ecosystems to provide resources and services (e.g. dispersal of pollen and seeds, natural plague control, water and climate regulation, soil and nutrient conservation etc.) that are essential for sustaining Klabin's plantations high yields.
Business impact  Risks  Risks  Risks 
Business strategies  The Company has a history of investments and adoption of low carbon technologies which has allowed that in recent years (2003 - 2020) there has been a 64%* drop in emissions of CO2 equivalent per ton of product generated. It is reinforced that among Klabin's Objectives for Sustainable Development (KODS) is the commitment to develop carbon reduction targets based on science. This means that Klabin's carbon reduction targets are challenging and have been approved by the Science Based Target initiative (SBTi), aligned with the global challenge of limiting the average temperature increase to 1.5°C. In the line of adaptation or climate risks/opportunities, the Company follows the recommendations of the Task Force on Climate-Related Financial Disclosure. In 2020, Klabin became a "TCFD Supporter", having implemented and improved actions in the pillars of governance, strategy, risk management and targets/metrics.  The management of this theme is foreseen in the Occupational Health and Safety Management System and is structured in 3 pillars: 
1. installation: Ensuring the safety and reliability of equipment. Improvement and maintenance of the work environment offered to our professionals. 
2. Method: Continuously improve the way we treat safety in our routine. Keep a critical eye on our accident prevention and mitigation procedures by creating and reviewing policies, guidelines and requirements; and
3. People: To value good practices and encourage our employees to take care of each other. Empower them regarding norms and procedures and bring the leadership closer to the routine.  
The Occupational Health and Safety Management System is guided by ISO 45001 in all manufacturing and forest units, with guidelines and procedures focused on loss prevention and continuous improvement of processes to preserve people's lives, health, and physical integrity.
 
Klabin has been assessing the impacts of this risk with the Continuous Monitoring Program for Fauna and Flora. In doing so, it is possible to understand the behavior of the species and adopt prevention and mitigation measures such as initiatives for reducing road accidents, rewilding actions, and scientific research. Klabin has a biodiversity study center within its Ecological Park, which aims to monitor and re-establish the quality levels of forests through the restoration of wildlife.  It is also responsible for bringing technological solutions to speed and scale the Biodiversity Monitoring program, which includes species tracking. Moreover, one of this topic’s long-term goals is linked to a Sustainability-Linked Bond, which increases the company’s commitment to its 2030 Agenda and its financial and strategic roadmap. 
In 2022, Klabin launched its Biodiversity Plan which is divided into 6 programs aimed at supporting the company in achieving Net Positive Impact on Biodiversity in an integrated manner. (Climate Transition Plan)
Long-term target 

As approved by the Science-based Targets Initiative, Klabin’s Climate Change targets are: 
i. Reduce scope 1 and 2 GHG emissions by 25% per ton of pulp, paper and packaging by 2025, and 49% per ton of pulp, paper and packaging by 2035.  
ii. Net capture of 45 million tons of CO₂eq from the atmosphere between 2020 and 2030. 
In 2023, the Company updated and submitted new targets to the SBTi validation, considering the 1.5°C scenario and expanding the inclusion of Scope 3 emissions, including new categories based on their relevance to the business. They consist of reducing absolute scope 1, 2 and 3 emissions in 42% by 2030 and in 90% by 2050 (net-zero goal). It will substitute these targets above as soon as the SBTi approves it. (Klabin Climate Transition Plan)

Lost time accident frequency rate (direct and indirected) below 1. Please refer to other long-term targets (Goals 2030)

Our goals/targets until 2030 are: (i) to reintroduce two extinct species and reinforce four other threatened species in forests by 2030; (ii) to donate 1 million native seedlings to partner areas; (iii) to have at least 6 research partnerships per year; (iv) to maintain or increase the number of native species dependent on forests; (v) to map 100% of the hotspots where fauna are run over and conduct actions to reduce occurrences. Klabin Biodiversity Plan is on track to soon disclose new targets related to its programs that address the Company’s Net Positive Impact approach (2040).

Target year  2035 2030 2030
Progress 14.3% of reduction (Climate Goals Below baseline (Health and Safety 21% - Target V (Biodiversity Goals)
Executive compensation

 As Klabin’s GHG reduction targets are part of its 2030 agenda, all company managers, from coordination to the executive board, have been committed to short-term targets in their compensation components. 100% of executive directors currently have a variable compensation tied to a Sustainability Index, which includes KPIs for water, residues and emissions management. Apart from them, line managers who are responsible for addressing the theme in the company (23%) also managed to develop variable compensation tied to the company’s Climate Change target. (Undertaking goals linked to the topic by executives)

As Klabin’s Occupational health and safety targets are part of its 2030 Agenda, all company managers, from coordination to the executive board, have been committed to the short-term targets, which will lead to the 2030 goals achievement, in their remuneration components. 100% of directors currently have a variable compensation tied to Health and Safety performance. Apart from them, 62% of line managers also managed to develop variable compensation tied to the company’s specific target. (Undertaking goals linked to the topic by executives) As Klabin’s biodiversity targets are part of its 2030 agenda, all company managers, from coordination to the executive board, have been committed to the short-term targets, which will lead to the 2030 goals achievement, in their remuneration components. 100% of directors (+ 21%-line managers who are responsible for achieving the goal) currently have a variable compensation tied to Biodiversity performance.  (Undertaking goals linked to the topic by executives)


Material Issues and Metrics for External Stakeholders

Material Issue for External Stakeholders Forest Certification, Water, Climate Change 

Local Development

Categories: Climate Transition and Physical Risks Category: Community Impact and Development
Cause of the Impact Operations; Supply chain (> 50% of business activity) Operations (> 50% of business activity)
External stakeholder(s)/ impact area(s) evaluated Society; Supply chain Society
Topic relevance on external stakeholders Both positive and negative: The Tragedy of Commons considers impacts arising from the uncoordinated actions of economic actors around a common element that can scarce if not managed collectively. The balance that Klabin must strike between forestry and 
Water-intensive industrial operations can impact not only water matters, land use and local dynamics. Since elements such as water, biodiversity, and land use are connected to a common issue, Klabin has defined commitments to these externalities and a management system focused on territorial water security by prioritizing:
  • Supplier certification: the sharing of socio-environmental skills for effective landscape planning (Legal Woods program), aiming at conserving natural resources and productivity while ensuring sustainably forest management. 
  • Hydrosolidarity management, which guides the Forestry water management, to maintain 60% of standing forests for the conservation of watersheds and water availability, both quantitatively and qualitatively.
Positive: The presence of Klabin, especially in forest territories with a paper industry, affects the local dynamics, while the company and its local suppliers rely on a good relationship and a politically robust society to gain social acceptance and obtain social license to operate. Municipalities with strong social fabric can contribute more effectively to sustainable development, and governments with strengthened capacities rely on collaborative planning to guide their progress. In this relationship, the company's positive influence on social dynamics safeguards local quality of life and social relationships. 
Klabin maintains an economic, social, and environmental agenda with the communities where it operates, encompassing projects related to education and workforce training, support for family farming, regional solid waste management, and a program to assist public management planning. Through the Program for Support to Public Management, Klabin works to promote significant advancements in municipalities prioritized for the company's operations (see criteria below) by providing training and consulting services to enhance their planning and the utilization of public resources generated from taxes related to the company's activities. The objective of this initiative is to foster participative public management in municipalities that demonstrate below-average development indicators compared to similar municipalities.
Output Metric Percentage of third-party areas covered by Matas Legais Program; Percentage of wood suppliers certified by FSC or similar methodology; Percentage of areas with hidrosolidarity management; Hectares sustainably managed; Hectares of restored native areas.

% of territories with participative management encouraged 

Impact Valuation Environmental value lost/gained - Shared natural resources management Quantified quality of life impacted - Increase in local sustainable development capabilities
Impact Metric Hectares of restored forests: Enhanced environmental skills for wood suppliers, Water availability, Enhanced Forest productivity for wood suppliers, Increased restored native areas (Legal Reserve) Quantified quality of life impacted - Increase in local sustainable development capabilities

 

Certifications 

In 2022, Klabin's Sustainability Policy was updated and, therefore, training was conducted at the units and also through Klabin's Business School. The Sustainability Policy training covers all new employees (during the onboarding process) and direct and indirect training through the headquarters of each industrial unit.

Klabin makes external voluntary commitments that reinforce its commitment aligned with sustainable development. Learn more at commitments page.

 

 ISO 14001 CERTIFICATION
   Direct Employees Indirect Employees  Total of Employees (Directs + Indirects) Percentage of Units Percentage of Revenue 
 Number of Employees at Units  15,541 9,675 25,216 74% 76%
Total of Kablin's Employees 18,353 10,185 28,538
Percentage of Employees covered by certification 85% 95% 88%

The industrial mills in Pilar (Argentina), Rio Negro (state of Paraná), Manaus (state of Amazonas) and Horizonte (state of Ceará) are not yet ISO 14.001 certified due to internal and external reasons - and as previously mentioned in the last year, have been preparing to do so, to get certified in 2024. Although 26% of the industrial units’ operations are not certified by a third-party, all of them undergo an internal audit by a specialised Klabin team, which holds the ISO 14001 standard auditor certificate. Those that are certified carry out internal audits of the management system. In this way, units that do not yet have formal certification prepare for the certification audit, re-scheduled for the second half of 2024. 

 ISO 9,001 CERTIFICATION
   Direct Employees Indirect Employees  Total of Employees (Directs + Indirects) Percentage of Units Percentage of Revenue 
 Number of Employees at Units  15,573 9,704 25,277 83% 77%
Total of Kablin's Employees 18,353 10,185 28,538
Percentage of Employees covered by certification 85% 95% 89%

 

 ISO 45,001 CERTIFICATION
   Direct Employees Indirect Employees  Total of Employees (Directs + Indirects) Percentage of Units Percentage of Revenue 
 Number of Employees at Units  8,786 2,658 11,444 26% 56%
Total of Kablin's Employees 18,353 10,185 28,538
Percentage of Employees covered by certification 48% 26% 40%

 

 ISO 50,001 CERTIFICATION
   Direct Employees Indirect Employees  Total of Employees (Directs + Indirects) Percentage of Units Percentage of Revenue 
 Number of Employees at Units  1,898 1,082 2,980 4% 27%
Total of Kablin's Employees 18,353 10,185 28,538
Percentage of Employees covered by certification 10% 11% 10%

 

 OHSAS 18,001 CERTIFICATION
   Direct Employees Indirect Employees  Total of Employees (Directs + Indirects) Percentage of Units Percentage of Revenue 
 Number of Employees at Units  553 222 775 4% 3%
Total of Kablin's Employees 18,353 10,185 28,538
Percentage of Employees covered by certification 3% 2% 3%

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

22/07/23