Sustainable HRM: Integrating CSR into Human Resource Practices in Sri Lanka's Tea Plantations
Introduction
Sri
Lanka's tea plantation sector is a cornerstone of the national economy, yet it
has long faced criticism for substandard working conditions, persistent wage
disparities, and environmental degradation. Sustainable Human Resource
Management (Sustainable HRM) offers a transformative framework that embeds
Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) directly into core HR functions such as
recruitment, training, performance management, and employee relations. For tea
estates across NuwaraEliya, Kandy, and Ratnapura, this integration is not
merely an ethical obligation; it is a strategic imperative in response to
growing global demand for ethically sourced Ceylon Tea. This article examines
how Sustainable HRM can reposition plantation HR from a cost center into a
driver of long-term organizational and societal value.
The CSR
Imperative in Tea Plantation HR
Historically,
HR management in Sri Lankan tea estates was confined to transactional functions
such as recruitment, payroll administration, and labor discipline. The
contemporary landscape, however, demands far more. Certification bodies such as
the Ethical Tea Partnership and the Rainforest Alliance, alongside emerging EU
deforestation regulations, now require that social and environmental objectives
be embedded across every people management process.
Kramar
(2024) defines sustainable HRM as "HR strategies that allow for good
economic, social, and human outcomes while causing the least amount of harm to
the environment." Applied to the plantation context, this means aligning
CSR commitments with worker well-being (encompassing housing, healthcare, and
education), sustainable land stewardship (including shade-tree cultivation and
water conservation), and active community engagement. The implication is clear,
CSR can no longer exist as a standalone corporate function, it must be
institutionalized within HR policy and practice.
Practical Integration Across HR Functions
Translating
Sustainable HRM principles into plantation operations requires deliberate
reform across four key HR domains.
Recruitment
and Selection. Prioritizing candidates from communities
neighboring the estate reduces commuter-related carbon emissions while
strengthening the social ties between estates and local populations. This
approach also supports long-term workforce stability.
Training
and Development. Skill-building programs must extend beyond
traditional plucking techniques to encompass biodiversity conservation, safe
agrochemical handling, and workers' rights literacy. Equipping employees with
this broader knowledge base builds both human capital and environmental
stewardship capacity.
Performance
Management. Appraisal frameworks for estate managers should
move beyond yield-centric metrics to incorporate CSR indicators, including
grievance resolution rates, child labor compliance, and the energy efficiency
of tea processing operations. This signals an organizational commitment to
accountability that goes beyond productivity alone.
Compensation
and Incentives. Linking reward structures to estate-level CSR
targets such as zero lost-time injuries or the achievement of reforestation
milestones, aligns individual motivation with broader sustainability goals.
The
practical impact of such reforms is evidenced by Bogawantalawa Tea Estates PLC
in Hatton, which implemented a sustainable balanced scorecard within its HR
framework. The result was a 30% reduction in seasonal workforce absenteeism
within just 18 months (Perera & Jayasinghe, 2020).
Challenges and
Contextual Realities
Despite
its promise, the implementation of Sustainable HRM in Sri Lanka's plantation
sector faces significant structural and contextual barriers. Fragmented land
ownership, entrenched unionized labor politics, and the enduring legacy of
colonial management traditions all generate institutional resistance to reform.
A further
complication lies in the sector's structural diversity. Smallholder farmers,
who produce over 60% of Sri Lanka's tea output — operate without formal HR
departments, making systematic CSR integration particularly difficult at that
level. For larger Regional Plantation Companies (RPCs), the upfront costs of
CSR-driven HR initiatives, such as establishing on-site child development
centers or funding clean water programs, place considerable pressure on already
constrained profit margins.
Nevertheless,
the economic case for reform is compelling. The Tea Research Institute of Sri
Lanka (TRISL, 2021) found that plantations with integrated CSR-HR practices
command a 15–20% price premium in European markets. This evidence reframes
Sustainable HRM not as an added cost, but as a source of competitive advantage.
The pertinent question, therefore, is not whether to adopt Sustainable HRM, but
how to implement it in a phased and financially viable manner.
Conclusion
Sri
Lanka's tea export industry has reached an inflection point where Sustainable
HRM is no longer optional, it is a prerequisite for long-term competitiveness
and ethical legitimacy. By embedding environmental responsibility and social
equity into recruitment, training, performance management, and reward systems,
plantation HR can serve as an active instrument of corporate integrity rather
than a passive administrative function.
Moving
forward, progress will depend on coordinated action: government investment in
CSR-aligned HR programs, multi-stakeholder collaboration across the value
chain, and a long-term commitment to capacity building. Ultimately, the
well-being of both the land and the workers who harvest Ceylon Tea must become
HR's most important key performance indicators for the industry's global
reputation depends on it.
References
Kramar, R. (2024) ‘Beyond strategic
human resource management: Is sustainable HRM the next approach?’, The
International Journal of Human Resource Management, 25(8), pp. 1069–1089.
Perera, L. and Jayasinghe, S. (2020)
‘Sustainable HRM practices in Sri Lankan regional plantation companies’, Sri
Lankan Journal of Management, 25(2), pp. 45–63.
Tea Research Institute of Sri Lanka
(TRISL) (2021) Annual Report on Social Compliance and Export Performance.
Talawakele: TRISL Publications.

Very insightful and well-connected, especially how you linked Sustainable HRM with real plantation challenges.
ReplyDeleteHowever, do you think smaller estates and smallholders can realistically adopt these practices given the high costs and limited resources?
Valid point, especially in the Sri Lankan plantation sector where scale and resources vary significantly. Smaller estates and smallholders may find full-scale Sustainable HRM adoption challenging due to cost constraints and limited access to expertise. However, a phased and practical approach can make it realistic, as an example focusing first on low-cost interventions such as worker welfare improvements, basic training programs, and better safety practices. External support from government schemes, cooperatives, and industry associations can also play a key role in bridging resource gaps.
DeleteThis is a very thought provoking blog that clearly highlights how integrating CSR into HRM creates a more ethical, socially responsible, and sustainable workplace, benefiting both employees and the wider community.
ReplyDeleteHowever, how can HR ensure that CSR initiatives are genuinely embedded into daily HR practices rather than being treated as symbolic or short-term activities?
That’s an important point, especially in ensuring CSR does not remain a “tick-box” exercise. HR can embed CSR into daily practice by aligning it directly with core HR systems such as recruitment, performance management, training, and rewards, rather than treating it as a separate initiative. When CSR-related behaviors are included in job roles, appraisal criteria, and leadership expectations, it becomes part of how work is done rather than an add-on. Consistent internal communication, leadership commitment, and employee participation in designing CSR activities also help sustain authenticity and long-term impact.
DeleteThis is a very thoughtful perspective, if Sustainable HRM can improve both worker welfare and profitability, shouldn’t more tea plantations prioritize it as a long-term strategy rather than just a compliance requirement?
ReplyDeleteYou have taken up a very valid point. In the current context Regional Plantation Companies are facing a critical situation with regard to the profitability due to the Internal and External factors, especially the worker productivity has been playing a key role on the companies efficiency. Therefore it will be a huge task for the RPCs to establish this long term HRM strategies on the volatile environment.
DeleteThis is a very good and organized discussion explaining the role of Sustainable HRM in improving CSR practices in the Sri Lankan tea plantation industry. This discussion clearly makes the link between employees’ wellbeing, environmental issues, and sustainable performance of the business. The use of relevant examples makes the presentation more credible. An area that may be improved slightly is simplification of some concepts so that they are better understood by a broader audience.
ReplyDeleteAppreciate your insightful thoughts given on this post.
DeleteYour blog provides a very insightful and well-structured explanation of how sustainable HRM can be strengthened by integrating CSR into organizational practices. I particularly liked how you connected employee-related strategies with broader social and environmental responsibilities. It’s true that combining CSR with HR not only improves employee engagement and motivation but also enhances the company’s reputation and long-term sustainability . Your content clearly highlights the strategic role HR can play in driving responsible and sustainable business practices.
ReplyDeleteIn your opinion, how can organizations effectively measure the impact of CSR-driven HR initiatives on both employee performance and overall business sustainability?
Good one. This clearly explains the value of integrating CSR into HRM, but it could further highlight the practical challenges organizations face when turning these ideas into everyday actions. While CSR focused HR strategies can improve employee engagement and company reputation, their real impact depends on strong leadership commitment and consistent execution.
ReplyDeleteThis is a very strong and well-researched discussion. What stands out most is how clearly you link Sustainable HRM with CSR as part of everyday HR functions, rather than treating it as a separate concept. The way you connect recruitment, training, performance management, and rewards to sustainability makes the argument practical and relevant, especially for Sri Lanka’s plantation sector.
ReplyDeleteThe inclusion of external pressures like EU regulations and certification bodies strengthens the argument well, because it shows that this shift is not just optional but increasingly required for market access. The example of Bogawantalawa Tea Estates is also effective, as it provides real evidence that CSR-driven HR practices can improve outcomes like absenteeism and workforce stability (Perera and Jayasinghe, 2020).
What I also find important is the way you highlight both opportunities and constraints. You clearly show the economic pressure on plantations, but also balance it with the export price premium linked to CSR compliance, which is supported by TRISL findings (2021). This makes the discussion more realistic rather than overly idealistic.
One additional point to consider is that Sustainable HRM is also closely linked with long-term workforce well-being and generational change in the sector. Kramar (2024) emphasizes that sustainability in HR should balance economic, social, and environmental outcomes together, which is especially important in plantation work where worker welfare directly impacts productivity and global reputation.
Do you think smallholder tea farmers in Sri Lanka can realistically adopt Sustainable HRM practices, or will this mainly stay limited to large plantation companies?
Appreciate your insightful thoughts given on this post. In my view despite of the scale of the plantation both the small holders and medium scale plantation companies also should implement sustainable HRM practices for the future betterment of the industry, especially on retaining the most important work force.
DeleteGood insight , strong connection between CSR and HR.
ReplyDeleteFrom an HR perspective, sustainable HRM is not just about policies, but about embedding responsibility into everyday people practices like hiring, training, and performance management. It helps align employee behaviour with long-term social and environmental goals, not just profit.
But the real challenge is this: is CSR truly integrated into HR decisions, or still treated as a separate “side project”?