For many months, we have strongly encouraged everyone to get vaccinated at the earliest opportunity. And we make it easy – we provide vaccinations to employees and their dependants in South Africa. Now we are starting to engage our workforce as we intend to introduce a requirement of full vaccination for anyone wanting to enter one of our sites or offices in South Africa and around the world.
Anglo American has a long history of supporting major public health interventions and we will not shy away from taking difficult decisions. We must lead from the front, as we have done before in the shape of our pioneering workplace HIV/AIDS and TB prevention, care, and treatment programmes.
Our approach to people’s health is underpinned by science, of course, and our unshakeable values as a company. Safety and health must be our priority, always.
Anglo American is committed to supporting vaccination because of the vital role it plays in mitigating the impacts of Covid-19. A vaccinated person is far less likely to transmit the virus than an unvaccinated person. In fact, the World Health Organisation (WHO) stated very recently that a fully vaccinated person is 40% less likely to transmit Covid-19.
Variants of a virus occur when that virus has the opportunity to mutate multiple times. But science tells us that in a highly vaccinated population, fewer mutations will occur. It is one reason why Anglo American has invested so much in supporting government vaccination programmes and, in South Africa, developing vaccine infrastructure so that each employee who wants a vaccine can access it in a way that is safe, localised and dependable.
Yes, it is possible to become infected with Covid-19 even if you are fully vaccinated, but you’re much more likely to be shielded from hospitalisation and death, and you are far less likely to transmit it to others. The effect here is not just personal - it is inherently communal: my individual health choice either reduces or increases the burden on the country’s health system; it either drives transmission or reduces it; it either takes us forward into a post-Covid world or keeps us locked into a cycle of uncertainty and fear.