DSM Integrated Annual Report 2022

Glossary

Explanation of some concepts and ratios

General

Better-for-you (BFY) products

Products that have added beneficial ingredients, or else have had undesirable ingredients removed. BFY products are generally low in fat, salt, and/or sugar, and high in fiber and/or vitamins.

Biosciences1

Biosciences are any of the sciences that deal with living organisms.

Brighter Living Solutions Plus

Brighter Living Solutions Plus (BLS+) is DSM’s program for the development of sustainable, innovative solutions with environmental and/or social benefits, creating shared value for our stakeholders. BLS+ are products, services and technologies that, considered over their life cycle, offer a benefit recognized by key stakeholders, underpinned with substantiating evidence, whilst having no urgent negative signals. Three performance levels are defined, where the product is:

  • ‘Outperforming’ its peers within the market
  • ‘Performing’ within the market
  • ‘In Transition’, to identify products that either do not meet the DSM minimum requirements, or where an urgent negative signal has been identified

More information and definitions can be found on the company website.

Eubiotics

The general term ‘Eubiotics’, is derived from the Greek term ‘Eubiosis’ (meaning microbial balance within the body) and describes feed ingredients that support an optimal balance of microbiota in the gastrointestinal tract of livestock animals. Eubiotics promote efficient gut performance so as to produce well-nourished animals that get the most from their feed, while at the same time sustaining their health and welfare and protecting the environment.

Integrated Reporting Framework – Value Creation model

The Value Creation diagram is based on the International Integrated Reporting Council’s Integrated Reporting framework and gives an overview of how we create value for our stakeholders based on six capital inputs.

Human capital (People)

We employ skilled and talented people from diverse backgrounds. We strive to provide employees with a safe and inspiring workplace as well as with the tools and training they need to be effective and to develop their abilities. We reward employees with competitive benefit packages.

Societal & relationship capital (People)

We engage with various stakeholders to ensure close alignment between our aims and societal needs. We generate value for stakeholders outside our direct value chains of employees, suppliers, customers and end-users; these include employees’ families, governments, local communities and civil society.

Natural capital (Planet)

We recognize that the world is an interconnected system of resources. This represents a responsibility and a business opportunity. We aim to improve the environmental impact of our supply chain, operations and products and services, while developing innovative solutions that deliver sustainability benefits to customers and beyond.

Financial capital (Profit)

Providers of capital – shareholders and bondholders, banks and the financial markets – supply funds that we use in our business to create value, driving growth and delivering sustainable returns.

Intellectual capital (Profit)

We manufacture and distribute high-quality products and services safely, efficiently and responsibly, and strive to develop valuable, collaborative and long-term relationships with customers and suppliers. We pursue open innovation, connecting and collaborating with partners and investing in start-ups.

Manufactured capital (Profit)

We have unique competences in Health, Nutrition & Bioscience and connect these to deliver innovative solutions that nourish, protect and improve performance.

Omics

Any of several areas of biological study defined by the investigation of the entire complement of a specific type of biomolecule or the totality of a molecular process within an organism. In biology the word omics refers to the sum of constituents within a cell. The omics sciences share the overarching aim of identifying, describing, and quantifying the biomolecules and molecular processes that contribute to the form and function of cells and tissues.

Plant-forward

A trend descriptor coined by Innova Market Insights in 2021 to signal the plant-based foods category’s push towards broader consumer appeal and expansion into more market categories and regions of the world.

People

Equal pay and gender pay gap

Equal pay is a legal requirement for men and women to be paid the same for performing the same or similar work or work that has been rated as being of equal value (by job evaluation). The gender pay gap zooms in on the difference between what men typically earn overall in an organization compared to women, irrespective of their role or seniority.

Frequency Index (FI)

The Frequency Index is a way to measure safety performance. The number of accidents of a particular category per 100 employees per year. DSM reports frequency indexes in the areas of Lost Workday Cases, Process Safety Incidents and Recordable injuries.

Recordable injuries occupational safety

The REC rate occupational safety DSM-all is the number of recordable injuries per 100 DSM employees and contractor employees in the past 12 months: REC rate = 100 * (number of RECs (past 12 months)/average effective manpower including contractor employees (past 12 months)).

Lost Workday Cases occupational safety

The Lost Workday Case (LWC) rate DSM-own is the number of lost workday cases per 100 DSM employees in the past 12 months: LWC rate = 100 * (number of LWCs (past 12 months)/average effective manpower (past 12 months)).

Process Safety Incidents

The PSI rate is the number of Process Safety Incidents per 100 DSM employees and contractor employees in the past 12 months: PSI rate = 100 * (number of PSIs (past 12 months)/average effective manpower including contractor employees (past 12 months)).

Recordable injuries occupational health

The REC rate occupational health DSM-all is the number of occupational health cases per 100 DSM employees and contractor employees in the past 12 months: REC rate = 100 * (number of RECs (past 12 months)/average effective manpower including contractor employees (past 12 months))

Global South

The term Global South is used to describe countries whose economies are not yet fully developed and which face challenges such as low per capita income, excessive unemployment, and a lack of valuable capital. These countries are located largely in the southern hemisphere.

Inclusion Index

The Inclusion Index is a subset of items in the Employee Engagement (Pulse) Survey to specifically measure Inclusion. Inclusion is: “A working environment where all employees are a full and equal member of a team; where diverse perspectives are valued, and investment is made in their development; where people are respected and able to contribute as they are and not having to conform; where they can reach their potential, and where they can speak up without fear of retribution.”

Living wage

The remuneration received for a standard working time by an employee in a particular place sufficient to afford a decent standard of living for the employee and his/her family. Elements of a decent standard of living include food, water, housing, education, healthcare, transport, clothing, and other essential needs, including provision for unexpected events.

Safety, Health and Environment (SHE)

DSM’s policy is to maintain business activities and produce products that do not adversely affect safety or health, and that fit with the concept of sustainable development. The company does this by setting the following objectives: to provide an injury-free and incident-free workplace; to prevent all work-related disabilities or health problems; to control and minimize the risks associated with DSM’s products for their whole life cycle and to choose production processes and products such that the use of raw materials and energy is minimized; to evaluate and improve DSM’s practices, processes and products continuously in order to make them safe and acceptable to its employees, the customers, the public and the environment.

United Nations’ Universal Declaration of Human Rights

On 10 December 1948, the General Assembly of the United Nations adopted and proclaimed the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Following this historic act, the Assembly called upon all Member countries to publicize the text of the Declaration and “to cause it to be disseminated, displayed, read and expounded principally in schools and other educational institutions, without distinction based on the political status of countries or territories.”

Planet

Biofuel

A fuel which is derived from renewable organic resources, as distinct from one which is derived from non-renewable resources such as crude oil and natural gas.

Carbon footprint

The total set of direct and indirect greenhouse gas emissions expressed as CO2eq.

Carbon price

The price that is paid to emit one ton CO2eq into the atmosphere. DSM implements an internal carbon price of €100/t CO2eq.

Circular economy

Circular economy refers to an economy that is restorative and in which materials flows are of two types: biological nutrients, designed to re-enter the biosphere safely, and technical nutrients, which are designed to circulate at high quality without entering the biosphere throughout their entire lifecycle.

CO2

Carbon dioxide, a gas that naturally occurs in the atmosphere. It is part of the natural carbon cycle through photosynthesis and respiration. It is also generated as a by-product of combustion. Carbon dioxide is a greenhouse gas.

Chemical Oxygen Demand (COD)

COD is an indicator of the degree of pollution of wastewater by organic substances.

Eco-efficiency

Eco-efficiency is a concept (created in 1992 by the WBCSD) that refers to the creation of more goods and services while using less resources and creating less waste and pollution throughout their entire life cycle. In the context of DSM’s SHE targets, eco-efficiency relates specifically to the reduction of emissions and energy and water consumption, relative to the production volumes of DSM’s plants.

Energy

Primary energy is energy that has not yet been subjected to a human engineered conversion process. It is the energy contained in unprocessed fuels.

Final (consumed) energy is the energy that is consumed by end-users. The difference between primary energy and final consumed energy is caused by the conversion process between the two as well as any transmission losses.

Essential for life

Essential for life refers to substances that have a proven beneficial nutritional or pharmaceutical effect when used at the officially recommended dose.

Greenhouse gas emissions (GHG)

DSM applies the Greenhouse Gas Protocol, which defines GHG as “atmospheric gases that absorb and emit radiation within the thermal infrared range and that contribute to the greenhouse effect and global climate change.” We report GHGs based on their global warming potential over 100 years in carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2eq).

Scope 1 + 2

Scope 1: Direct GHG emissions occur from sources that are owned or controlled by the company (i.e., emissions from combustion in owned or controlled boilers, furnaces, vehicles, etc.).

Scope 2: Indirect GHG emissions relate to the generation of purchased energy (i.e., electricity, heat or cooling) consumed by the company. Purchased energy is defined as energy that is purchased or otherwise brought into the organizational boundary of the company. Scope 2 emissions physically occur at the facility where the energy is generated.

Scope 3

Scope 3 emissions are all indirect emissions (not included in scope 2) that occur in the value chain of the reporting company, including both upstream and downstream emissions.

Net-zero emissions

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change states: “Net-zero emissions are achieved when anthropogenic emissions of greenhouse gases to the atmosphere are balanced by anthropogenic removals over a specified period. Where multiple greenhouse gases are involved, the quantification of net-zero emissions depends on the climate metric chosen to compare emissions of different gases (such as global warming potential, global temperature change potential, and others, as well as the chosen time horizon)”.

Market-based emissions

Reflects GHG emissions from electricity supplies (scope 2) that companies have purposely chosen (or their lack of choice) and contracted. Corresponding emission factors:

  • Supplier specific emission factor (provided by the supplier)
  • Residual emission factor (country-based grid factor, corrected for allocated purchased electricity from renewable resources)

Location-based emissions

Reflects the average GHG emissions intensity of grids on which electricity consumption (scope 2) occurs (using mostly national grid-average emission factor data). Corresponding emission factor: in most cases, the country emission factor.

Greenhouse gas emissions (GHG) efficiency improvement

The GHGE efficiency improvement is the amount of GHG emissions per unit of output (specific emissions) in a given year compared to the specific emissions in the prior year.

GRI

The Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) has developed Sustainability Reporting Guidelines that strive to increase the transparency and accountability of economic, environmental, and social performance. The GRI was established in 1997 in partnership with the UN Environment Programme. It is an international, multi-stakeholder and independent institution whose mission is to develop and disseminate globally applicable Sustainability Reporting Guidelines. These Guidelines are for voluntary use by organizations for reporting on the economic, environmental, and social dimensions of their activities, products and services.

Guarantee of origin (GO)

A guarantee of origin is defined in EU Directive 2009/28/EC as “an electronic document which has the sole function of providing proof to a final customer that a given share or quantity of energy was produced from renewable sources as required by Article 3(6) of Directive 2003/54/EC.” The requirements of a GO are explained in Article 15 of the same Directive.

Loss of Primary Containment (LOPC)

Loss of Primary Containment is an unplanned or uncontrolled release of material from the container that is in direct contact with the material.

Mass-balance

Mass-balance accounting is a well-known approach that has been designed to trace the flow of materials through a complex value chain. The mass-balance approach provides a set of rules for how to allocate the bio-based and/or recycled content to different products to be able to claim and market the content as ‘bio’-based or ‘recycled’-based.

Mass spectrometry

Mass spectrometry is an analytical tool useful for measuring the mass-to-charge ratio (m/z) of one or more molecules present in a sample. These measurements can often be used to calculate the exact molecular weight of the sample components as well. Typically, mass spectrometers can be used to identify unknown compounds via molecular weight determination, to quantify known compounds, and to determine structure and chemical properties of molecules.

Mycotoxins

Mycotoxins are toxic compounds that are naturally produced by certain types of molds (fungi). Molds that can produce mycotoxins grow on numerous foodstuffs such as cereals, dried fruits, nuts and spices.

NOx

Nitrogen oxides. These gases are released mainly during combustion.

Renewable resource

A natural resource which is replenished by natural processes at a rate comparable to, or faster than, its rate of consumption by humans or other users. The term covers perpetual resources such as solar radiation, tides, winds and hydroelectricity as well as fuels derived from organic matter (bio-based fuels).

SO2

Sulfur dioxide. This gas is formed during the combustion of fossil fuels.

VOC

Volatile organic compounds. The term covers a wide range of chemical compounds, such as organic solvents, some of which can be harmful.

Water use and water consumption

Water use includes water used for ‘once-through cooling’ that is returned to the original water source after use. Water consumption is the portion of water used that is not returned to the original water source after being withdrawn.

Profit

General

In calculating financial profitability ratios, use is made of the average of the opening and closing values of balance sheet items in the year under review.

The financial indicators per ordinary share are calculated on the basis of the average number of ordinary shares outstanding (average daily number). In calculating Shareholders’ equity per ordinary share, however, the number of shares outstanding at year-end is used.

In calculating the figures per ordinary share and the ‘net profit as a percentage of average Shareholders’ equity available to holders of ordinary shares’, the amounts available to the holders of Cumulative Preference Shares are deducted from the profits and from Shareholders’ equity.

Adjusted net operating free cash flow

The cash flow from operating activities, corrected for the cash flow of the APM adjustments (see Note 2 to the Consolidated financial statements on Alternative performance measures), minus the cash flow of capital expenditures and drawing rights.

Capital employed

The total of the carrying amount of intangible assets and property, plant and equipment, inventories, trade receivables and other receivables, less trade payables, other current liabilities, investment grants and customer funding.

Capital expenditure

This includes all investments in intangible assets and property, plant and equipment.

Disposals

This includes the disposal of intangible assets and property, plant and equipment as well as the disposal of participating interests and other securities.

Earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA)

EBITDA is the sum of operating profit plus depreciation and amortization. Adjusted EBITDA is the EBITDA adjusted for material items of profit or loss coming from acquisitions/divestments, restructuring and other circumstances that management deem it necessary to adjust in order to provide clear reporting on the development of the business.

Earnings per ordinary share

Net profit attributable to equity holders of Koninklijke DSM N.V. minus dividend on Cumulative Preference Shares, divided by the average number of ordinary shares outstanding.

Net debt

Net debt is the total of current and non-current borrowings less cash and cash equivalents, current investments and the net position of derivatives.

Operating working capital

The total of inventories and trade receivables, less trade payables. See also Working capital.

Organic sales growth

Organic sales growth is the total impact of volume and price/mix. Impact of acquisitions and divestments as well as currency impact are excluded.

R&D expenditure

R&D expenditure relates to all efforts done across the company to develop new products or improve existing products and processes. As such, R&D expenditure includes all costs and capitalized expenditures that relate to Research & Development, as well as costs incurred by other departments to support R&D activities.

Return on capital employed (ROCE)

Adjusted operating profit from continuing operations as a percentage of average capital employed.

Total shareholder return (TSR)

Total shareholder return is capital gain plus dividend paid.

Working capital

The total of inventories and current receivables, less current payables. See also Operating working capital.

List of abbreviations

A4S

ABC

AC

ACE

ADR

AFM

AGM

AI

AI4b.io

AIF

ANH

API

APM

ASF

BCTI

BFY

BLS

BLS+

CBD

CDC

CDP

Cefic
 

CFO

CGU

CO2eq

COA

CoC

COD

CODM

COs

COSO

CPLC

CRA

CRP

CSIRO

CSR

Cumprefs A

DCC

DE&I

DEM

DES

DHA

DNP

DPM

DRCP

DRF

DSGC

DSP

EAC

EBIT

EBITDA

ECL

EEI

EES

EFRAG

EPA

EPS

ERG

ESEF

ESG

ESMA

ESRS

EVP

F&B

FAO

FCLT

FCR

FDA

FI

FIFO

FReSH

FRK

FTE

FVOCI

FVTPL

GAIN

GCA

GDPR

GdS

GHG

GHGE

GMO

GO

GRI

GRM

GWP

HMO

HNC

HRIA

I&D

I4N

IAS

IBC

ICF

ICP

IEC

IFAC

IFC

IFRIC

IFRS

IMMFA

IP

IPCC

IR

ISAE

ISDA

ISO

ISSB

KPI

LCA

LGBTQ+

LOPC

LoR

Lototo

LTI

LWC

M&A

MANDI

MEEM

MMS

MNP

MRS

MSC

NAHS

NBA
 

NCI

NGO

NICE

NLP

Noclar

NomCo

NOx

NPS

OCI

OON

OP2B

OTC

OWC

OYW

P&O

p.p.

PDN

PEA

PFS

PPA

PPE

PPP

PRI

PRRS

PSA

PSI

PSU

R&D

RCP

REACH

REC

RemCo

REN

RFM

ROCE

RSPO

RSU

rTG

RTS

RWE

SAL

SASB

SB

SBCC

SBN

SBT

SBTi

SBTN

SCoC

SDG

SFDR

SHE

SHIBOR

SME

SO2

SoD

SPPI

STI

SUN

SustCo

TCFD

TfS

TG

TNFD

TSR

TVP

UN

UNGPs

VGBA

ViO
 

VOC

WBCSD

WEF

WFP

WRA

WWTP

Accounting for Sustainability

Anti-Bribery & Corruption

Audit Committee

Assets, CSR and Employees engagement

American Depositary Receipts

The Dutch Authority for the Financial Markets

Annual General Meeting of Shareholders

Artificial Intelligence

AI for Biosciences

Africa Improved Foods

Animal Nutrition & Health

Active pharmaceutical ingredient

Alternative performance measures

African swine fever

Business Commission to Tackle Inequality

Better-for-you

Brighter Living Solutions

Brighter Living Solutions Plus

Cannabidiol

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Carbon Disclosure Project

Conseil Européen des Fédérations de l’Industrie Chimique (European Chemical Industry Council)

Chief Financial Officer

Cash Generating Unit

Carbon dioxide equivalent

Corporate Operational Audit department

Chain of Custody

Chemical Oxygen Demand

Chief Operating Decision Maker

World Food Programme Country Offices

The Committee of Sponsoring Organizations of the Treadway Commission

Carbon Pricing Leadership Coalition

Corporate Risk Assessment

Corporate Research Program

The Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation

Corporate Social Responsibility

Cumulative Preference Shares A

Dutch Civil Code

Diversity, Equity & Inclusion

DSM Engineering Materials

Drug-eluting stent

Docosahexaenoic Acid

DSM Nutritional Products

DSM Protective Materials

DSM Responsible Care Plan

DSM Resins & Functional Materials

Dutch Sustainable Growth Coalition

DSM Sinochem Pharmaceuticals

East African Community

Earnings Before Interest and Taxes (Operating Profit)

Earnings Before Interest, Taxes, Depreciation and Amortization

Expected credit loss

Energy Efficiency Improvement

Employee Engagement Survey

European Financial Reporting Advisory Group

Eicosapentaenoic Acid

Earnings per share

Employee Resource Group

European Single Electronic Format

Environmental, Social, Governance

European Securities and Markets Authority

European Sustainability Reporting Standards

Executive Vice President

Food & Beverage

UN Food and Agriculture Organization

Focusing Capital on the Long Term

Feed conversion ratio

United States Food and Drug Administration

Frequency index

First in, first out

Food Reform for Sustainability and Health

Fortified rice kernels

Full-time equivalent

Fair value other comprehensive income

Fair value through profit and loss

Global Alliance for Improved Nutrition

Global Center and Commission on Adaptation

General Data Protection Regulation

Group digital Services

Greenhouse gas

Greenhouse gas emissions

Genetically modified organism

Guarantee of origin

Global Reporting Initiative

Group Risk Management

Global warming potential

Human milk oligosaccharides

Health, Nutrition & Care

Human Rights Impact Assessment

Inclusion & Diversity

ImpAct4Nutrition

International Accounting Standards

International Business Council

Internal Control Framework

Internal carbon price

International Egg Commission

International Federation of Accountants

International Finance Corporation

International Financial Reporting Interpretation Committee

International Financial Reporting Standards

Institutional Money Market Funds Association

Intellectual property

Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change

Integrated Reporting

International Standard on Assurance Engagements

International Swaps and Derivatives Association

International Organization for Standardization

International Sustainability Standards Board

Key performance indicator

Life Cycle Assessment

Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Intersex and Queer

Loss of Primary Containment

Letter of Representation

Lock-Out, Try-Out, Tag-Out

Long-Term Incentive

Lost Workday Case

Mergers & Acquisitions

Making a Nutritional Difference to India

Multi-period excess earnings method

Multiple micronutrient supplement

Micronutrient powder

Market-ready solutions; also Mainstream Reference Solution

Marine Stewardship Council

The National Animal Husbandry Service

Koninklijke Nederlandse Beroepsorganisatie van Accountants (Netherlands Institute of Chartered Accountants)

Non-controlling interests

Non-Governmental Organization

Nutrition in City Ecosystems

Natural language processing

Non-compliance with laws and regulations

Nomination Committee

Nitrous oxide

Net Promoter Score

Other Comprehensive Income

Optimum Omega Nutrition

One Planet Business for Biodiversity

Once-through cooling

Operating working capital

One Young World

People & Organization

Percentage points

Stichting Pensioenfonds DSM Nederland (DSM Nederland Pension Fund)

Polyesteramide

Partners in Food Solutions

Purchase Price Allocation; also Power Purchase Agreement

Personal Protective Equipment; also Property, Plant and Equipment

Public-private partnership

Principles for Responsible Investment

Porcine reproductive and respiratory syndrome

Portfolio Sustainability Assessment

Process Safety Incident

Performance Share Unit

Research & Development

Representative Concentration Pathway

Registration, Evaluation, Authorisation and Restriction of Chemicals

Renewable energy certificate

Remuneration Committee

Race, Ethnicity & National Identity

Resins & Functional Materials and associated businesses

Return on Capital Employed

Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil

Restricted Share Unit

Re-esterified triglyceride

Regulatory technical standards

Real-world evidence

Sight and Life

Sustainability Accounting Standards Board

Supervisory Board

Social Behavior Change and Communication

SUN Business Network

Science Based Targets

Science Based Targets initiative

Science Based Targets Network

Supplier Code of Conduct

Sustainable Development Goal

Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation

Safety, Health and Environment

Shanghai Interbank Offered Rate

Small and medium-sized enterprise

Sulfur dioxide

Segregation of Duties

Solely Payments of Principal & Interest

Short-Term Incentive

Scaling Up Nutrition Movement

Sustainability Committee

Taskforce on Climate-related Financial Disclosures

Together for Sustainability

Triglyceride

Taskforce for Nature-Related Financial Disclosures

Total Shareholder Return

Textured vegetable proteins

United Nations

United Nations Guiding Principles

Verordening gedrags- en beroepsregels accountants (Dutch Code of Ethics)

Verordening inzake de onafhankelijkheid van accountants bij assurance-opdrachten (Code of Ethics for Professional Accountants)

Volatile Organic Compound

World Business Council for Sustainable Development

World Economic Forum

United Nations World Food Programme

Water risk assessment

Wastewater treatment plant