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Corporate Social Responsibility
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5.15.2002 ET
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State of Planet is Getting Worse, but for Many it's Still 'Business as Usual'
Global Launch of 22 Industry Reports Prepared for 2002 World Summit on Sustainable Development
(CSRwire) There is a growing gap between the efforts of business and industry to
reduce their impact on the environment and the worsening state of the
planet, a new report by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP)
reveals today.
This gap, says UNEP, is due to the fact that in most industry
sectors, only a small number of companies are actively striving for
sustainability, i.e. actively integrating social and environmental factors
into business decisions. And, secondly, because improvements are being
overtaken by economic growth and increasing demand for goods and services:
a phenomenon known as the "rebound effect".
The new findings appear in the UNEP overview report "10 years after Rio:
the UNEP assessment". This overview report assesses progress to date by
industry on sustainability issues. It draws on 22 global sustainability
reports written by different industry sectors ranging from accounting and
advertising to waste and water management. This collection of reports is
known as the Industry as a Partner for Sustainable Development series.
"Today, we are still confronted with worsening global trends related to
environmental problems like global warming, loss of biodiversity, land
degradation, air and water pollution", said Klaus Toepfer, UNEP's
Executive Director. "Some companies have risen to the challenge. Such
efforts need to be acknowledged and applauded."
"However", Mr. Toepfer continued, "the new reports clearly show that
progress since Rio has been uneven within and amongst industry sectors and
countries. Despite many good examples of how industries are reducing waste
and emissions, becoming more energy efficient, and helping poor
communities to meet their basic needs, we have found that the majority of
companies are still doing business as usual."
Congratulating those that have worked with UNEP to produce the industry
sector reports, Mr. Toepfer said: "The industry associations, and others
that embarked on this reporting process with UNEP, are to be congratulated
for their first attempt at compiling a global sustainability progress
report for their sector."
Each report, written by industry representatives in an unprecedented
cooperation with the UN, labour and non-governmental organizations, looks
at achievements, unfinished business and future challenges with respect to
implementing Agenda 21 - the global action plan to save the planet that was
agreed to at the Rio Earth Summit in 1992.
In response to the findings, UNEP has identified priority areas for
business and industry and suggests a number of recommendations. These
include: spreading the use of "best practices" that bring "triple
dividends" - economic, environmental and social -- greater integration of
environmental and social criteria into mainstream business
decision-making; and improving the implementation and monitoring of
voluntary initiatives and industry self-regulation.
All the sector reports highlight the crucial role of Governments,
combining regulatory, economic and voluntary instruments, in spurring
social and technological innovation, and in ensuring that laggard or
negligent companies do not benefit at the expense of those investing in
best practices.
"Significant efforts have been made by participating industries in
reducing their ecological footprint", said Jacqueline Aloisi de Larderel,
UNEP's Assistant Executive Director and director of the team that helped
produced the reports. "But, it is in industry's own self-interest to do
more to spread best practice and raise the performance levels of all its
members everywhere. Not enough companies, particularly small and
medium-sized ones, are leading the way and there is insufficient
monitoring."
Other recommendations from UNEP include the development of "sustainable
entrepreneurship" in less developed countries as part of the wider goal to
combat poverty, and the need to expand and support environmental and
sustainability reporting.
"Since Rio", Mrs. Aloisi de Larderel continued, "more than 2,000 companies
have issued reports on their environmental performance, but corporate
sustainability reporting is still a minority practice in many industries
and countries, particularly where legal frameworks or public pressure is
weak."
Stressing the growing disparity among world regions and the need to make
corporate environmental and social responsibility a reality, she said,
"there is a growing awareness among business and industry that the social
side of global sustainable development needs to be taken into account
alongside environmental and economic aspects. The industry reports need to
be seen as part of a long-term process of dialogue and what matters is not
so much the past, but the direction in which we are heading".
Progress
On the positive side, the reports reveal an increased awareness by
industry of environmental and social issues. In many cases this is
reflected by more environmental reporting and the development and use of
tools like ISO 14000, life-cycle management and voluntary commitments to
integrate sustainability into business strategies and activities.
In some cases, this awareness can be seen in improved environmental
performance. This is especially true in areas like cleaner production and
waste minimization where there have been significant advances over the
last 10 years, driven largely by business self-interest in reducing
treatment costs and increasing competitiveness.
For example, the aluminium industry reports that recycled metal now
satisfies about a third of world demand for aluminium. It says that total
recycling of aluminium in the form of beverage cans show rates that range
from 79% in Japan and 78% in Brazil to 62% in the US and 41% in Europe.
In another example, the iron and steel industry reports that by recycling
nearly 300 million tonnes of scrap each year, they do not have to extract
475 million tonnes of natural iron bearing ore. They estimate that this
saves the energy equivalent of 160 million tonnes of hard coal.
On the down side, increased economic activity and the associated rise in
consumption means waste generation rates per capita continue to increase
around the world. New "throw-away" products continue to be introduced by
industry to meet changing consumer needs and expectations, with little or
no consideration of sustainable development beyond short-term economic
gain.
The waste industry example is repeated in other reports and the clear
message emerges: growing consumption levels are overtaking environmental
gains.
Future challenges
In their reports, some industry sectors have outlined specific targets to
reduce their impact on the environment and support sustainable
development. For example, the refrigeration industry wants "to develop
more environmentally friendly, energy efficient vapor compression systems
with ambitious objectives: reduction of energy consumption by 30% to 50%
and reduction of refrigerant leakage by 50%".
While the chemicals industry says it will "develop and implement a core
set of quantitative indicators of performance towards achievement of
sustainable development". And the advertising sector wants to "find brand
champions for sustainability".
Some reports put emphasis on "best practice". The electricity report says
"electric power companies should implement 'Guidelines for Best Practices'
to improve their operations and reduce environmental impacts". And the food
and drink sector calls for "better global coordination ... in order to
share best practices and to facilitate progress on sustainability, and
that sustainable agricultural practices need to be fully supported so that
they become increasingly systematic and globally widespread".
Others sectors keep their future challenges and commitments more general.
The automotive sector says it will "further enhance the ecological
efficiency of vehicles throughout the entire life-cycle". The aluminium
report is "committed to increasing global recycling rates". While the coal
industry highlights "furthering the development and deployment of cleaner
coal and carbon sequestration technologies worldwide" and the construction
report calls for "further reducing CO2 emissions in the built environment
through the development and integration of renewable energy technologies".
"Industry is a key partner for sustainable development", says Klaus
Toepfer. "We rely on industry, not only for reducing the environmental
impacts of the products and services it provides us with, we also
increasingly depend upon industry for the innovative and entrepreneurial
skills that are needed to help meet sustainability challenges."
"In a world increasingly interconnected economically, environmentally and
socially, this will require not only partnerships with Governments and
civil society, but also for industry to be fully transparent about its
level of progress. This UNEP-facilitated reporting initiative is an
important step toward reaching this goal", he said.
The 22 reports cover the following industry sectors: accounting,
advertising, aluminium, automotive, aviation, chemicals, coal,
construction, consulting engineering, electricity, fertilizer, finance and
insurance, food and drink, information & communications technology, iron
and steel, oil and gas, railways, refrigeration, road transport, tourism,
waste management and water management.
They have been prepared as a specific input to the World Summit on
Sustainable Development, scheduled to take place in Johannesburg, South
Africa, from 26 August to 4 September 2002.
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