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Corporate Social Responsibility
News
4.18.2002 ET
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Investor Coalition Finds U.S. Corporations Face Multi-Billion Dollar Risk from Climate Change
Risk Not Adequately Assessed by Corporate Boards and Investors
(CSRwire) WASHINGTON, DC - There is mounting evidence that failure to respond to the
risks posed by climate change could result in multi-billion dollar losses
for U.S. businesses and investment portfolios, and this failure could
represent a breach of fiduciary duty on the part of corporate directors
and investment decision-makers, according to a report released today.
The report, Value at Risk: Climate Change and the Future of
Governance, was released today by CERES, a coalition of investor and
environmental groups that works with over 70 companies on corporate
environmental responsibility. Investor members represent more than $300
billion in assets. The report was written for CERES by Innovest Strategic
Value Advisors, an investment research and advisory firm. The report is
one of the first to make a direct link among climate change, fiduciary
responsibility, and shareholder value.
"Because climate change will have an impact on all economic sectors,
climate risk is now embedded, to some degree, in every business and
investment portfolio in the United States," said Robert Massie, Executive
Director of CERES. "The risks are two-fold: first, the economic/financial
risk from the damages due to climate change itself, and second, exposure to
the cost of greenhouse gas emissions from climate change regulation and
potential litigation. This is another case of an 'off balance sheet' risk
that is not being reported to shareholders."
At the same time, Massie explained, "proactive action on climate change
presents opportunities for new and expanded business activity, reduced
costs, and increased shareholder value that will produce a net economic
benefit."
Key Recommendations:
Corporate directors should require company executives to assess current
and probable risk exposure, disclose company emissions and climate risk
exposure to shareholders, benchmark the company against industry peers,
announce and implement a strategy to reduce greenhouse gas emissions on a
clear timetable, and link executive compensation to the company's
performance on that strategy.
Institutional investors should conduct a portfolio-wide assessment of
climate risk exposure, incorporate climate change considerations into
investment strategies, require disclosure of climate change-related
information from portfolio companies, increase investment into energy
efficiency and clean energy opportunities, and promote the adoption of the
Greenhouse Gas Protocol and the Global Reporting Initiative.
James Martin, Chairman of Innovest and former Chief Investment Officer for
TIAA-CREF, one of the largest pension funds in the United States, explained
why climate change is a serious concern for companies and their
investors.
"The evidence is increasingly compelling that companies' performance on
environmental issues does indeed affect their competitiveness,
profitability, and share price performance," Martin said. "Since climate
change is arguably the world's most pressing environmental issue, it
follows logically that companies' response to the threats and
opportunities of climate change-or their lack of response-could have a
material bearing on their financial performance and therefore on
shareholder value."
The report documents the risks of climate change for a wide array of
industrial sectors. "One of our main conclusions is that climate risk is
not limited to any one sector," Robert Massie said. "As this report
demonstrates, it is now difficult to identify a sector of the economy that
would not be affected in some way by climate change. The question is not
longer whether any given portfolio contains climate risk, but how
much."
Sectors covered in the report include: electric utilities, petroleum, gas,
agriculture, manufacturing, tourism, water, forestry, electronics, building
construction and real estate, insurance, among others.
Massie continued: "We intend for this report to challenge the leaders of
our corporations, institutional investors, and governments to stop
ignoring the potentially disastrous financial consequences of climate
change and to take clear, measurable actions that will insure that we are
not putting the long-term prosperity of our economy and our planet at
risk."
The report heralds the launch of the Sustainable Governance Project, a new
initiative of CERES designed to improve corporate and investment
decision-making on climate change and other social and environmental
issues.
The report is available at www.ceres.org
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