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Corporate Social Responsibility
News
3.31.2005 ET
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Investors Win Agreement from Ford Motor Co. to Prepare Climate Risk Report
(CSRwire) BOSTON - As a result of a shareholder resolution filed with the Ford
Motor Co., the country's second largest automaker today announced it will
issue a first-of-its-kind comprehensive report later this year that will
examine the business implications of reducing greenhouse gas emissions
from the motor vehicles made by Ford as well as the facilities that
produce them. The climate risk report will also examine impacts from
possible policy and regulatory changes.
Building on previous reporting of greenhouse emissions from its
manufacturing facilities, Ford agreed today to examine the strategic and
financial implications of various policy and regulatory greenhouse gas
reducing scenarios on the company's business over the next five to 10
years. The report will focus primarily on the company's products and
facilities in its core North American market that accounts for roughly
two-thirds of its annual sales. The Ford report also will assess the
evolving role of new technologies such as hybrid and hydrogen fuel-cell
vehicles in light of the climate change issue.
"We congratulate Ford for leading the U.S. auto industry in responding to
shareholder concerns by addressing a variety of climate change-related
policy and business scenarios," said Sister Patricia Daly, OP, executive
director of the Tri-State Coalition for Responsible Investment (CRI), a
coalition of investors with the Interfaith Center on Corporate
Responsibility (ICCR), which has been encouraging more climate risk
disclosure from Ford and other U.S. companies in recent years.
"With this agreement, we have turned the corner on a pivotal and pressing
issue, as more of our nation's leading companies are getting the message
that it is in the best interest of investors and the bottom line to
consider and prepare for the financial and business implications of
climate change," said Connecticut State Treasurer Denise L. Nappier. "I
congratulate Bill Ford for his recognition that planning for climate
change is not merely an environmental issue, but a key business issue. As
a long-term investor, I am hopeful that where Ford leads, others will
follow."
Because motor vehicles are the fastest growing source of greenhouse
emissions, a growing number of investors are concerned that increasing
consumer demand for cleaner vehicles, higher gasoline prices, and current
and future government policies limiting greenhouse gas emissions from
trucks and cars will put the value of their investments at risk if
companies get caught flat-footed.
Several shareholder representatives have been meeting regularly with Ford
officials in recent months to discuss the report requested in the
shareholder resolution, including ICCR, the Boston-based Ceres coalition
and the Connecticut Retirement Plans and Trust Funds (CRPTF). Ford said
today it will consult with all three groups in preparing the climate risk
report.
The primary filers of the shareholder resolution were the Sisters of St.
Dominic of Caldwell, N.J., a member of Tri-State CRI and ICCR, and the
Connecticut Retirement Plans and Trust Funds. The resolution was formally
withdrawn this week.
"Climate change is both a business challenge and an opportunity for the
auto sector, which faces a doubled-edge threat of rising gas prices and a
growing worldwide push for greenhouse-friendly vehicles," said Mindy S.
Lubber, president of Ceres, a coalition of investors and environmental
groups that helped launch the Investor Network on Climate Risk (INCR) just
over a year ago. "Ford's commitment to pursue this report shows an
important willingness to face this challenge, so that it can better
position itself competitively."
Science and environmental groups were also encouraged by Ford's
announcement, expecting that the report will include detailed projections
on future greenhouse gas emissions from its products, in addition to
information on emission from manufacturing facilities. According to the
Union of Concerned Scientists, Ford's cars and light trucks sold in 2003
emit about 350 million metric tons of carbon dioxide over their life in
addition to the tens of millions of metric tons emitted in manufacturing
the vehicles.
"If this report is well done and responsible, it will prepare Ford to
excel in competing with companies like Toyota and Honda, which have made
greater strides producing vehicles that cut heat-trapping gas emissions,"
said Kevin Knobloch, president of the Union of Concerned Scientists in
Boston. "An honest look will show that investments to aggressively reduce
emissions will cost far less than paralysis and inaction. We look forward
to being part of Ford's process."
"It's important that Ford analyze the competitive risks of a high emitting
fleet when the markets are demanding cleaner vehicles," added Ashok Gupta,
director of the Air and Energy Program at the Natural Resources Defense
Council. "We hope this exercise will help Ford decide both to reduce
greenhouse gas emissions from their vehicles as a key component of their
long-term product planning, and to seek government policies that will help
them make that transition."
The auto industry accounts for 20 percent of the country's and 12 percent
of the world's greenhouse gas emissions. The industry's emissions are
currently on track to rise by over one-third over the next 15 years and
double worldwide by 2050.
The shareholder resolution that was withdrawn this week requested that a
committee of independent directors of the Ford board assess: how the
company planned to ensure its competitive positioning in light of emerging
GHG regulatory scenarios at the state, regional, national and international
levels; how the company planned to comply with California's greenhouse gas
standards; and how the company could significantly reduce greenhouse gas
emissions from its national fleet of vehicles, using 2004 as a baseline,
by 2014 and 2024.
An identical shareholder resolution is still pending before General
Motors, the world's largest automaker.
Ford said today that the company agreed to prepare the report because:
climate change is a serious environmental issue and shareholders are
increasingly asking about the risks as well as the opportunities
associated with it; shareholder value and environmental responsibility go
hand-in-hand; and planning carefully and exercising leadership now on this
important issue will strengthen the company's business in the long-term.
The report will be issued by the end of the year and will be developed
under the direction of a cross-functional vice-presidential task force
that has been working on strategies for addressing climate change since
2003. The Environment and Public Policy Committee of Ford's Board of
Directors will review and approve the report before issuing it by the end
of the year. The report will also be reviewed by the full board.
In addition to getting input from shareholders, the company will solicit
input for the report from climate change experts at the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology and Princeton's Carbon Mitigation Initiative. The
company will also include input from science and environmental
organizations such as the Union of Concerned Scientists and the Natural
Resources Defense Council.
Ceres is a national coalition of investors and environmental groups
that helped launch the Investor Network on Climate Risk in November 2003.
INCR includes a dozen leading U.S. institutional investors with over $800
billion of assets, including the California, New York, New York City and
Connecticut public pension funds.
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