Hi everyone,
A few weeks ago, Sinergia responded to our review of them. Since then, we’ve exchanged several emails with Sinergia and ACE, and have taken steps to address misunderstandings.
Based in part on these exchanges, we’ve written an article addressing the key points from Sinergia’s response to our review. We shared a draft of this article with Sinergia and ACE eight days before publication, but neither decided to give pre-publication comments.
We’ve also invited Carolina (Sinergia’s director) to have a live discussion with us in a podcast format and talk over any remaining points of contention.
Thanks for reading, and if you have any questions, feel free to reach out or leave a comment.
Hello!
Thank you for your impact assessment efforts! I have some doubts about the implications of the points you raise.
On "JBS Ear Notching - Non-Existent Commitment" you say:
Emphasizing that the figure is in the millions suggests (at least to me!) that this difference is significant and that it implies a difference in impact that could alter funders' appreciation of Sinergia's work. However, ACE added the following clarification in the spreadsheet you refer to:
What do you think of this response? (Beyond the fact that you think “the numbers should be corrected—and doing so would not be particularly difficult,” as you say at the end of the article)
It seems to me that the whole point of an evaluation process such as the one you are conducting is to verify whether the promised impact is being achieved. If we realize that there is an error, even if it is “in millions,” in one of the figures without this altering the order of magnitude of the expected impact, why dwell on this error in the figures (instead of, for example, simply acknowledging that there is no real cause for concern on this point)?
On "JBS Gestation Crates - Pre-existing Policy Presented As a New Commitment" you say:
The footnote cites page 113 of the 2021 report, which states (emphasis added):
And on the following page, in the section “Initiatives and projects in Brazil,” subsection “Pork”:
These very concise excerpts raise many questions:
Charities' impact claims need to be examined with hindsight, but so do the agribusiness companies' statements about their ethics, and I wonder if you are jumping to conclusions a little too quickly in assuming that this document demonstrates that JBS was already “Committed to adopt crate-free system for the new units by 2023.”
(I'll stop there for today, I may comment on the rest of your article later!)