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Corporate Social Responsibility
News
7.15.2005 ET
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UN Global Compact Participants Disclose Actions In Support Of Universal Principles
Vast Majority Of Largest Companies Actively Communicating Progress
(CSRwire) NEW YORK, 15 July 2005 (Global Compact Office) - The United Nations
Global Compact Office announced today the results of the first phase of a
policy requiring corporate participants to disclose to their stakeholders
progress in implementing the Global Compact's ten principles.
"This is an important milestone in the evolution of the Global Compact and
voluntary initiatives generally", said Georg Kell, Executive Head of the
Global Compact. "We now have in place a tool that will promote
transparency and make companies more accountable to their stakeholders
with respect to their commitment".
The so-called Communication on Progress policy requires that participants
- in order to avoid being identified as inactive on the Global Compact
website - develop an annual disclosure to their stakeholders on
implementation actions within two years of joining the Global Compact
initiative. In joining the Global Compact, companies commit to embrace
and act upon 10 principles in the areas of human rights, labour standards,
environmental stewardship and anti-corruption.
The policy went into effect on 30 June 2005 for the 977 participants that
have been in the Global Compact for at least two years. (The Global
Compact today includes nearly 2,200 companies from more than 80
countries.)
Among the key results for the 977 companies:
98 percent of the 73 "Financial Times Global 500" companies produced
Communications on Progress for their stakeholders, via annual
"sustainability" or financial reports, or other key communications. These
companies have a combined market capitalization of more than $4.5
trillion.
38 percent overall - or 367 companies - developed Communications on
Progress for their stakeholders.
609 companies either did not develop a Communication on Progress by
the deadline or did not inform the Global Compact Office that such a
communication had been developed. This represents 62 percent of the 977
companies affected by the deadline, or 28 percent of the total number of
Global Compact participants.
Among the total number of Global Compact participants - including the more
recent participants not yet affected by the 30 June 2005 deadline - 550
companies developed more than 700 Communications on Progress.
"Communicating to stakeholders about performance in sustainability issues
is critical for transparency and public accountability, and the Global
Compact principles provide a very good framework for this", said Laurel
Colless, Director of Financial Communications and Corporate Reporting at
Nokia. "In addition to adding a new dimension to stakeholder engagement,
Communications on Progress offer companies an opportunity to showcase
actions and practices that can inspire others. In this sense, they
represent a learning tool that can help raise the bar on performance".
Mr. Kell, Executive Head of the Global Compact, said that the initial
results are "encouraging as they represent the beginning of a long-range
process". He emphasized that many companies around the world are actively
implementing the Global Compact principles but may have not yet developed
Communications on Progress.
"Overcoming language and cultural issues, resources constraints and other
factors will be critical in the next phase in terms of broadening adoption
of this important transparency policy", said Kell. "This process will be
helped by the active involvement of Global Compact country networks, of
which there are nearly 50 worldwide".
In a separate announcement yesterday, GlobeScan, an international opinion
research company, released the results of a survey showing that three in
four people around the world - and majorities in each of the 18 countries
surveyed - say that their respect for a company would go up if it
partnered with the United Nations to address social problems.
Immediately following the 30 June deadline, the Global Compact Office
convened an "expert group" composed of corporate participants, country
networks, and UN core agencies to assess the first phase and agree on next
steps. The status report and recommendations from the expert group are
available on the Global Compact website.
"Investors, financial analysts, and money managers are increasingly
demanding that companies disclose how they are turning their corporate
responsibility commitments into policies and actions", said Matthew
Kiernan, CEO of Innovest Strategic Value Advisors, a global investment
research company. "The Global Compact is today the largest corporate
responsibility initiative in the world so these Communications on Progress
will be increasingly important as financial markets evaluate corporate
performance on the range of environmental, social and governance
issues".
Editor's Note: Communications on Progress by companies can be accessed at
the Global Compact website at www.unglobalcompact.org.
Statistical breakdowns by region, industry and company size are available
from the Global Compact Office. For more information, please contact
Gavin Power, senior advisor, at powerg@un.org; +1-212-963-4681.
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