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Corporate Social Responsibility
News
4.05.2006 ET
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Nike & Hewlett Packard Win Ceres' Sustainability Reporting Awards; Nike is First in its Industry to Disclose Worldwide Factory List
(CSRwire) OAKLAND - Nike Inc. and Hewlett Packard received the top
sustainability reporting awards today in an international competition
sponsored by the Boston-based Ceres coalition and the Association of
Chartered Certified Accountants (ACCA). The winners, selected from a
record 87 nominations, also included Seventh Generation in Burlington, VT,
Dofasco in Hamilton, Ontario and Gap Inc. in San Francisco, CA. The five
winners were announced at the Ceres annual conference today at the Oakland
Marriott.
The Ceres-ACCA North American awards program, now in its fifth year, is
designed to highlight best practices in reporting on sustainability issues
by North American companies and other organizations, and to provide
guidance to other groups and companies that are publishing or intend to
publish sustainability or corporate social responsibility reports.
"Sustainability reporting is the driver, the lynchpin, to improving
corporate performance on sustainability challenges such as workplace
conditions or global climate change," said Mindy S. Lubber, president at
Ceres, a national coalition of investors and environmental groups. "These
winning reports are the best of the best in articulating sustainability
strategies setting clear targets, and identifying actions and areas that
need improvement. Ceres is proud to recognize the innovation and
leadership these companies have all demonstrated and we encourage more
businesses to follow their lead."
Selected by a panel of 11 judges who focused on the reports' completeness,
credibility and effectiveness of communication, the award winners are:
Best Sustainability Report (two co-winners)
Nike Inc., Beaverton, OR: Nike's winning 2004 Corporate Responsibility
Report included unprecedented disclosure about the names and locations of
the more than 700 active contract factories that currently make
Nike-branded products worldwide. The report also discusses the impact of
environmental performance on the company's product design and manufacture,
and candidly discusses the challenges and unresolved complexities of
monitoring as a mechanism for measuring company and contractor
performance.
For advice in preparing its report, Nike invited experts from trade union,
NGO, academic, investor and business communities acting in their capacities
as individuals to participate in a Report Review Committee. Convened by
Ceres, the committee provided feedback that helped establish the scope,
coverage and focus for the company's report.
Hewlett-Packard, Palo Alto, CA: For a second consecutive year, HP has won
the award for best sustainability report. Its 2005 Global Citizenship
Report identifies the company's three primary sustainability challenges:
electronic waste reduction, improving environmental and social performance
in its extensive supply chain, and increasing global access to information
technology. The report also presents the company's global reach and
overall performance, in contrast to many other reports that focus
exclusively on North American issues and impacts.
Best Small and Medium Enterprise Report
Seventh Generation, Burlington,VT: Seventh Generation's Corporate
Responsibility Report, Widening the Lens, is a pioneering effort in
transparency for a privately-owned company. In addition to describing the
company's extensive stakeholder engagement efforts, the report includes
candid employee testimonials revealing how the company responded to
various challenges to its commitment to social and environmental
responsibility. The report also details how life-cycle analysis impacts
its product design, and describes the company's efforts to motivate its
suppliers to meet sustainability goals. Seventh Generation is the nation's
leading marketer of non-toxic, environmentally safe household and personal
care products.
Commendation for Continued Excellence in Integrated Reporting
Dofasco Inc., Hamilton, Ontario: For the third straight year, Dofasco has
taken the unusual step of integrating sustainability reporting into its
Annual Report. Employing this approach reinforces Dofasco's message to its
shareholders that sustainability is a core part of its business strategy
and that the company's social and environmental performance are just as
important as the company's fiscal performance. The report details the
company's performance in energy use, air and water quality, waste use and
management of secondary materials, and includes an open letter from
community stakeholders. Dofasco is Canada's largest steel producer,
serving customers throughout North America.
Commendation for Continued Excellence in Social Reporting
Gap Inc., San Francisco, CA: Gap was once again awarded for excellence in
social reporting. As in its 2003 Social Responsibility Report, Gap reports
on its progress and challenges in implementing a social responsibility
program throughout its retail apparel and garment manufacturing supply
chain. The report also describes the company's diverse range of
stakeholder partnerships that influence its program implementation, and
includes an external stakeholder statement.
Julie Gorte, Vice President and Chief Social Investment Strategist at the
Calvert Group, presented the top award to Nike and Hewlett-Packard at a
ceremony today at the Ceres Annual Conference in Oakland. "While I commend
all of the winners of this year's awards for their outstanding efforts at
disclosure and transparency, Nike and Hewlett Packard deserve special
recognition for their efforts," said Gorte, a Ceres board member. "By
revealing its factory list, Nike has shown its commitment to shaping labor
standards around the world, and to creating a norm where responsibility and
competitiveness go hand-in-hand. And Hewlett-Packard, once again, has
produced a report that serves as an excellent benchmark for companies
seeking to enhance the quality and credibility of their non-financial
reporting."
"Each year we see more companies striving to increase accountability to
their stakeholders by investing time and energy into sustainability
reports that disclose their social and environmental impacts and
performance," said Nigel Hall of ACCA. "This year the number of reports
submitted to the judges increased by nearly 30 percent. We are pleased to
see an upward trend toward improved disclosure and transparency in North
America."
About ACCA: The Association of Chartered Certified Accountants (ACCA) has
promoted transparency in reporting the impact of business activities on
sustainable development for over a decade and is involved in reporting
awards in more than 20 countries around the world. ACCA is the largest
international accountancy body with over 345,000 members and students in
160 countries.
About Ceres: Ceres is a national coalition of investors, environmental
groups and other public interest organizations working with companies to
address sustainability challenges such as global climate change.
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