â[BYDâs] disclosures show a serious lack of transparency on human rights diligence in its battery supply chains,â said Amnestyâs Callamard. âOther low-scoring firms, such as Hyundai and Mitsubishi, lack the necessary depth and information about implementation across key human rights due diligence areas.â
âThe commitments these companies report on are often vague and provide little evidence of meaningful action, showing they have a long way to go to meet international standards,â Callamard said.
While companies such as Renault and GM have stated their commitment to human rights due diligence, and rank higher than some of the lowest-scoring companies, they still provide limited evidence of fully integrating these commitments into their supply chain operations, with scant information about their risk assessments, according to the Recharge for Rights report.
BMW, Mercedes-Benz, Tesla, and VW have âmore to doâ to âidentify actual and potential human rights risks across [their] supply chains,â said Amnesty, but the fact that they achieved a âmoderateâ score âshould stand as a model for the others to follow,â stated Recharge for Rights.
Auto Compliance
Six of the 13 companies featured in the Recharge for Rights report responded to WIRED, stressing that they take the issues raised by Amnesty seriously. BMW, GM, Nissan, Mitsubishi, and Hyundai all sent statements regarding their poor scoring.
Mitsubishi said Amnestyâs report was based on information dating from 2023, âbut we have initiated numerous efforts since then.â These measures, said the Japanese company, include using AI to âanalyze potential connections with suppliers related to conflict minerals and other issues.â
Nissan provided WIRED with its Sustainability Data Book, which included minerals-sourcing best practices, adding that the company respected the âhuman rights of all stakeholdersâ and complied with âapplicable laws, regulations, and standards.â
âOur supply chain compliance program sets out the highest standards,â stated Hyundai, adding it was âcommitted to a sustainable, ethical supply chain that upholds human rights, environmental protection, and safety.â
âWe have been committed to respecting human rights for years, even beyond legal requirements,â Mercedes-Benz stated, highlighting that it âranks the best among the evaluated automobile manufacturersâ in Amnestyâs report.
BMW pointed WIRED to the groupâs compliance management documents. General Motors said it was committed to âsustainable and responsible sourcing of goods and services.â A Ford spokesperson offered to be interviewed on a Zoom-style call but, at the agreed time, did not show up.
History of Criticism
Digging up minerals can be exceedingly lucrative for mining companies, but people who live in proximity to these resources rarely, if ever, benefit. For some Brazilian communities, this changed last month following a court case that will be keenly studied by the industries that rely on such minerals, including the automotive sector.
The largest class action in English history was filed in London on October 21, a claim involving 700,000 individuals seeking redress after a devastating tailings dam rupture in 2015 on the Doce River in southeastern Brazil. Nine years later, the Doce Riverâwhich the Krenak Indigenous people revere as a deityâis still poisoned with the iron ore mineâs deluge-related toxins.