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Corporate Social Responsibility
News
6.05.2000 ET
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New Shell Foundation launches with $30 million
(CSRwire) A major new charity set up by the Royal Dutch/Shell Group of companies was
launched today with initial funds of $30 million for sustainable energy
and other social investment projects worldwide.
The Shell Foundation will, in its principal programme, contribute
funds and expertise to projects that particularly tackle social and
environmental challenges related to energy access and use. Its work will
complement the local social investments of Shell companies around the
world. This initiative is a further step in Shell’s work to
integrate sustainable development in all its activities.
The Shell Foundation’s Sustainable Energy Programme will support
projects that either encourage environmentally cleaner energy use or help
tackle poverty by providing sustainable energy to poor communities in
developing countries. The Foundation will devote $20m to a range of such
projects over the first three years.
Twenty projects, representing an initial commitment of over $7 million,
have already been selected for the launch portfolio of the Sustainable
Energy Programme. These include a project to help farmers in a nature
reserve in one of the poorest provinces of China to reduce their use of
firewood, increase their income and grow cash crops in greenhouses by
converting animal waste to heat; an initiative to tackle the problem of
poor air quality in the mega-cities of Latin America; and a UK project to
educate primary school children, governors, teachers and parents about the
financial and environmental benefits of energy saving. The Shell Foundation
will announce funding for further projects in due course.
The largest project to be supported by the Shell Foundation is the
Biodiversity Assessment Programme of the Smithsonian Institution. It will
receive $2.8m of funding for a five-year project to develop techniques for
mapping and monitoring biodiversity, particularly in ecosystems that could
be affected by exploration and development. The Smithsonian will also
receive logistical support from Shell in countries hosting the projects.
This project goes well beyond existing norms for biodiversity assessment
and should create new understanding and new approaches.
Mark Moody-Stuart, Chairman of the Committee of Managing Directors of the
Royal Dutch/Shell Group, said: “Shell companies worldwide have
always aimed to be good citizens in their local communities, with social
investments totalling some $93 million last year. Through the Shell
Foundation we will now bring our resources and expertise as an
international energy group to help address global issues where we have a
particular role to play. This will enable us to support projects, not for
commercial return, but to help find long term solutions to global problems
about which society cares a great deal. The Shell Foundation will further
strengthen our contribution and commitment to sustainable
development.”
Commenting on the launch, Nelson Mandela, who has recently visited
Shell’s social investment projects in South Africa and takes a close
interest in rural poverty, including the role of energy, said: “One
of the major issues in South Africa and the developing world generally is
access to energy and, in particular, clean, affordable sources of power. I
am delighted to see that Shell is setting an example by launching a charity
to fund projects which will encourage the use of sustainable energy sources
in South Africa and worldwide. I look forward to seeing the results.”
Dr Francisco Dallmeier, Director of the Smithsonian Institution’s
Monitoring and Assessment of Biodiversity Programme, said: “The
Shell Foundation is an innovative development for a global energy
business. The funding we are receiving will enable us to increase
biodiversity knowledge, build local capacity in biological assessments and
monitoring programmes, and provide scientific information for
decision-making on conservation and sustainable development issues. The
Smithsonian will also forge strategic partnerships with local scientists,
communities and institutions to achieve these goals.”
The Shell Foundation will have two other global programmes. The
Sustainable Communities programme will focus on initiatives that build the
social and economic capacity of marginalised communities around the world.
The third programme will look at the importance of youth enterprise to
economic development and will build on Shell’s existing LiveWIRE
programme to advise young people setting up in business.
The Foundation has a Board of Trustees that includes Sir John Houghton,
who co-chairs the UN intergovernmental group looking at the science of
climate change, and Professor José Goldemberg, a former environment
minister of Brazil and an expert on energy, the environment and
development.
Further information on the Shell Foundation, including projects that are
being supported, is available on www.shellfoundation.org.
Notes
The Shell Foundation is a charity registered in the UK and operating under
UK charity law, with an international focus, such that most of its work
will be outside the UK. The trustees are:
Professor José Goldemberg, Instituto de Eletrotecnica e Energia,
University of Sao Paulo, Brazil; former Secretary of State for Environment
and Secretary of State for Science and Technology, Brazil
Sir John Houghton, co-Chair of the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change. Former Chairman of the Royal Commission on Environmental Pollution
Mark Moody-Stuart, Chairman of the Committee of Managing Directors, Royal
Dutch/Shell Group of Companies
Jyoti Munsiff, Secretary, The “Shell” Transport and Trading
Company p.l.c.
Harry Roels, Group Managing Director, Royal Dutch/Shell Group of Companies
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