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Corporate Social Responsibility
News
3.21.2007 - 12:48pm ET
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CSR News from:
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Fortune
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FORTUNE Names the "Green Giants" of Big Business in Its First Ever Green Issue
Honda, Continental Airlines, Goldman Sachs and Hewlett-Packard among the leading companies featured in FORTUNE's Special Report On "Going Green"
(CSRwire) NEW YORK--(BUSINESS WIRE)--March 21, 2007--FORTUNE magazine today
unveiled its special report "Going Green" which includes a list of ten
companies that go beyond what the law requires to operate in an
environmentally responsible way. The companies cited by FORTUNE as being
ahead of the learning curve on the strategic value of environmentalism in
their industries include, in no particular order: Honda, Continental
Airlines, Suncor, Tesco, Alcan, PG&E, S.C. Johnson, Goldman Sachs, Swiss
RE and Hewlett-Packard. In separate stories, FORTUNE also notes the
environmental efforts of Patagonia and DuPont, along with California
Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger. The "10 Green Giants" and related stories
appear in the April 2 issue of FORTUNE, on newsstands March 26 with select
stories available online at www.fortune.com.
In his introduction to the package, FORTUNE senior writer Marc Gunther
notes that "big business and environmentalists used to be sworn
enemies--and for good reason. General Electric dumped toxins into the
Hudson River. Wal-Mart bulldozed its way across America. DuPont was named
the nation's worst polluter. The response from the environmental movement:
mandate, regulate, and litigate. Those days are mostly over. Today big
companies and activists are at least as apt to hammer out a partnership
over a cup of sustainably grown coffee as to confront one another in
court. No, they do not always see eye to eye, but the areas of common
ground are getting broader. Why? For one thing, because there is money to
be made."
To select the companies on the "Green Giants" list FORTUNE began by
soliciting nominations from environmentalists and consultants who have
worked in the trenches of corporate America. They nominated nearly 100
companies. FORTUNE decided to concentrate on bigger firms because their
environmental footprint is more important. FORTUNE also left out two very
big companies, GE and Wal-Mart, whose environmental initiatives have been
widely covered.
In a related story, "Eminence Green," Susan Casey takes a look at how
Patagonia founder Yvon Chouinard took his passion for the outdoors and
turned it into a truly radical business. Decades before recycling became
common practice, Patagonia was reusing materials. It was one of the first
companies in America to provide onsite day care, both maternity and
paternity leave, and flextime. It used its lushly designed mail-order
catalog to speak out about issues like genetically modified food and
overfishing, proving that a company can benefit from having a voice and a
moral compass. Along the way, Patagonia's conscience has rubbed off on
others, from smaller enterprises like Clif Bar to larger ones like Levi
Strauss and the Gap.
In "Chemical Reaction," Nicholas Varchaver examines how DuPont, the 205
year old chemical company is focused on improving the environment and is
making a fortune doing it. According to Varchaver, "since 1990 the company
has been working its way through the two stages of sustainability: first,
drastically reducing how much it pollutes (an effort that continues), and
second, embracing sustainability as a strategic goal. DuPont's journey
makes it a good test case to examine the opportunities--and
challenges--for big industrial companies that want to make
environmentalism both an operational imperative and a core principle."
Finally, in "California Dreamin'," FORTUNE Washington bureau chief Nina
Easton interviews California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger regarding his
mission to make his state, and the GOP, leaders on the environment. When
asked if the GOP get the issue of the environment Schwarzenegger says "No.
There are people in both parties who don't get it, but I would say I have a
tougher time selling those things to the Republicans." When asked if he
sees alarmism in the discussion of global warming, the Governor replies
"Let's assume for a second that global warming is 10% less of a problem.
No matter what percentage you take off, we are in big trouble. That's the
reality. We've seen the photographs of glaciers melting. We know that is a
phenomenon that is happening. We know that the water is rising. We know
that we are polluting the world. All of this is reality."
Copyright Business Wire 2007
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