Non-financial targets and sustainability
Every day Peab contributes to sustainable social development and works to improve everyday life for people in their local communities. We do this by building everything from homes, schools and hospitals to bridges, roads and other infrastructure. Working sustainably is a strategic matter for Peab that primarily takes place locally, connected to everyday life based on our core values, business concept, mission, strategic targets and Code of Conduct.
We monitor our business based on nine external targets – both financial and non-financial – that also identify our material sustainable aspects. These are found in the strategic targets Best workplace and Leader in social responsibility. We report the targets quarterly, semi-annually or annually. In this report we present our two financial targets for the operating margin and net debt ratio as well as the target for the outcome of serious accidents and attractive employer (eNPS).
Most satisfied customers
It is imperative for a long-term, sustainable relationship that Peab deliver on its obligations to customers. A satisfied customer is a customer that comes back and is vital to marketing our company. This is why our annual customer survey is an important measure of how well we are meeting our customers’ expectations while also indicating where there is room for improvement. Our latest Customer Satisfaction Index (CSI) score for 2023 remained at 80 (80), which is a continued good result and higher than our target of 75. Customers’ perception of Peab’s price worthiness and planning ability were the areas where scores increased the most. Regarding our business areas, Construction and Civil Engineering increased their CSI scores.
The next target update will take place after the fourth quarter in connection with the presentation of the year-end report 2024.
Best workplace
Peab’s business is founded on a strong corporate culture. We are located in large and small towns all over the Nordic region. Employees can make a difference by building the local community in the places where they live and work. Every employee has a great deal of personal responsibility, and should be met by both good working conditions and development opportunities as well as safe and inclusive workplaces.
Serious accidents
A safe work environment is the foundation of our business. Everyone at our workplaces should be able to be there under safe and secure conditions, despite the fact that there are risks involved in the work we do. Peab therefore has a vision of zero workplace accidents. To prevent accidents and incidents at our workplaces, we develop quality-assured work methods and train our employees. The focus is on preventive work and remediation of reported incidents and risk observations. This involves planning and risk assessment in the projects, learning from reported risk observations and from investigations of incidents and accidents.
In order to approach our vision of zero workplace accidents, we have a target of a decreasing trend in serious accidents* that includes everyone at our workplaces. During the second quarter of the year there were 8 serious accidents, of which 6 involved our own employees and 2 involved subcontractors. Calculated on a rolling 12 month basis, the number was 44 per June 30, 2024 (48 per December, 2023), of which 26 pertained to own personnel and 18 to subcontractors. We note a slight increase in the number of serious accidents among our own employees compared to the previous quarter. We continue with unabated intensity to focus on preventive work environment to reduce the number of accidents.
We also monitor the number of workplace accidents with more than four days absence, excluding the day of injury (LTI4), and workplace accidents according to the same definition per one million hours worked (LTIF4) for our own employees. During the second quarter of the year the number of LTI4 was 33 (32 first quarter 2024) and the LTIF4 frequency rate on a rolling 12 month basis was 5.7 (5.4 after the first quarter 2024).
Attractive employers (eNPS)
We should be the best workplace in the industry and thereby the obvious choice of employer. Twice a year we hold our personnel survey The Handshake so that we can continuously develop and improve as co-workers and teams. The questions in The Handshake mainly concern productivity, the team’s sustainability and if employees are willing to recommend Peab as an employer to friends and acquaintances (eNPS). The latter is also one of our nine external targets that we report twice a year and should be above the benchmark for the industry (industry and manufacturing).
In the spring survey the eNPS score increased by a point to 27 from the autumn survey which was 26. This is well over the Nordic benchmark in the segment industry and manufacturing, which is 20 (19 in the autumn survey). The most significant positive change was among skilled workers in our Finnish operations. Participation in the spring survey was the highest ever at 89.9 percent (87.3 percent in the autumn survey). This shows how very engaged our employees are.
The next target update will take place after the fourth quarter in connection with the presentation of the year-end report 2024.
The total number of employees per June 30, 2024 was 14,068 (15,490). The average number of employees* on a rolling 12 month basis amounted to 13,318 compared to 13,808 for the full year 2023.
* For a definition see section Alternative performance measures and definitions.
Leader in social responsibility
Climate target for carbon dioxide intensity
As the Nordic Community Builder we have a big responsibility for reducing the considerable climate impact of the construction and civil engineering industry at the rate required by the Paris Agreement. Peab impacts the environment and the climate through our own operations and the impact our suppliers and customers have. Operations primarily cause emissions of greenhouse gases by using various materials in production like concrete, steel and asphalt. Two other major sources of carbon emissions in production are energy consumption and transportation. Therefore our prioritized, emission reduction activities can be found within the framework of these areas. As community builders we also have a comprehensive perspective on our climate work and strive to contribute to a sustainable society on the whole by building, for example, solar power plants and railroads or by building in such a way that people can live more sustainably. We have a life cycle perspective in our operations and take responsibility for both making and meeting demands in our value chain. We have an advantage in that we can supply our construction contract operations and the projects we develop ourselves with input goods and raw material through business area Industry, which augments our ability to actively steer towards lower carbon emissions.
In 2045 Peab will be climate neutral. Our targets by 2030 are to reduce carbon dioxide intensity by at least 60 percent in our own operations (Scope 1 and 2) and for input goods and purchased services (Scope 3) by at least 50 percent compared to base year 2015. The outcome after 2023 revealed that developments are going in the right direction although to different degrees. Carbon dioxide intensity in our own production has gone down by 49 percent compared to base year 2015 and by 9 percent for input goods and purchased services. This means that we are well on the road to converting the production we ourselves have control over but the greater challenge is when we are dependent on other parties for a reduction in our carbon footprint. It is therefore vital that we continue to make explicit and stringent demands as well as point out choices that are better for the climate in order to reduce emissions. We work actively to increase the completeness of our measurements of carbon dioxide intensity, which is particularly demanding in Scope 3 reporting.
The next target update will take place after the fourth quarter in connection with the presentation of the year-end report 2024.
Equal opportunity
Only about five percent of those that graduate with, for Peab, degrees in relevant, practical education are women. This means that the construction and civil engineering industry has a major role to play in taking advantage of all the competence society has to offer. As one of the largest Nordic community builders we have a responsibility to nudge the entire industry forward. Our target initially is therefore to strive for the percentage of women recruited to Peab for our core skills to always be higher than the percentage of women who have graduated with, for us, relevant degrees on the education markets. We are focused on core skills in production (skilled workers) as well as in production management and production support (white-collar workers).
At the end of 2023 the percentage of women in new recruitments was 14.2 percent in production and processing compared to our target of more than 5.0 percent. For 2024 we have raised our target to 6.0 percent. New recruitment in production management and production support dropped to 18.8 percent whereas our target is at least 30.0 percent. The reason behind the reduction was the few recruitments during the year because of the current market situation.
The next target update will take place after the fourth quarter in connection with the presentation of the year-end report 2024.
Activities during the second quarter
- Peab became the first civil engineering company to use piles produced with SSAB Zero, a material based on recycled scrap steel and produced with fossil free electricity and biogas. This choice of material reduces carbon emissions by around 80 percent compared to the same piles manufactured with traditional steel. The piles are part of the construction of a new dock Peab is building at the Port of Skellefteå that will contribute to developing the port by enabling it to handle more and larger transportation.
- Byggelement’s new prefab factory in Hallstahammar was inaugurated. Here cost-efficient and large scale, climate improved production of slabs and walls with at least 50 percent less cement takes place. Products in ECO 50, i,e. ECO-Prefab with at least 50 percent alternative binder, are standard in this factory.
- Byggelement continued development of more climate improved elements by launching solid walls in ECO 60. Solid walls are one of the products Byggelement sells the most of, and now their carbon emission have been significantly reduced.
- Residents in Borås moved into Peab’s 50th Swan ecolabelled own developed apartment building. Peab began Swan ecolabelling its own developed apartment buildings in 2017 to provide customers with a third party certification that their home and the building they move into meets stringent environmental demands on everything from the building material to lower energy consumption in the building.
- Swerock took another step in electrification of its fleet of vehicles by adding two new electric trucks to its operations in Gothenburg and Skåne. This reduces noise levels and greenhouse gas emissions. The trucks will transport rental lifts and be charged at night but can also be fast charged as needed during the day.
- Lambertsson Kran invested in a 50 ton mobile crane where the crane is run on electricity. It is the first of its kind in Sweden and yet another step in electrifying the company’s fleet of vehicles. The motor used to move the crane runs on HVO and the hydraulic system uses bio oil.
- Peab completed the comprehensive mapping of its impact on biodiversity and presented the basis for a road map to identify and prioritize systematic measures to protect and strengthen biodiversity.
- The Peab Group carried out its annual Safety Day with the theme “Team Above All”. This is a shared work environment activity aimed at getting all employees to think about how they can contribute to health and safety in the workplace.
Asphalt pump truck
Markaryd