|
Global
Reporting Initiative 3rd Iteration Launches
This Fall
Sudan
Divestment Update
Pushback
on Corporations
Global Reporting Initiative
3rd Iteration
Launches This Fall
By: Andrew
Brengle, Senior Research Analyst
The
task of encoding standardized guidelines for corporate sustainability
reporting takes another step forward this year as the Global Reporting
Initiative (GRI) prepares to release its third guidance document
in six years. Following versions published in 2000 and 2002, the
G3 Guidance will become official this October with updated indicators
for corporate reporting on: human rights, labor practices, environment,
corporate governance, and product responsibility.
KLD
joined 140 organizations, including eight other social investment
firms, in commenting on the latest draft. In conference call discussions
and email correspondence, the SRI community noted that, while the
guidance attempted genuine improvements on human rights and labor
practices disclosure, the draft G3 left too many opportunities for
underreporting on vital issues. For instance, human rights indicators
for reporting on supplier and contractor practices do not capture
the fact that the supplier screening systems often have become check-box
exercises that tell little about actual labor conditions in the
factories.
Shareholder
activists with the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility
listed a number of issue areas they considered omitted from the
new guidance, including: the right to social and economic development,
freedom of expression, product impacts on human rights (Internet
and surveillance technology; weapons; water), and minority rights.
The environment sections were more complete, although indicators
treating toxics in industrial processes remained noticeably absent.
Stakeholders consider information on industry use of toxic or hazardous
materials a key to identifying opportunities for pollution prevention.
Human
rights and certain aspects of labor practices such as HIV/AIDS prevention
have proven the most challenging areas for improvement as they are
the most underdeveloped and have experienced the most change over
the history of the GRI. The SRI community offered these further
observations on the latest GRI guidance.
- Reporting levels: the draft
G3 guidelines do not differentiate between levels of reporting
on scales of thoroughness and sophistication, as previous ones
did. The GRI will offer three to five tiered reporting levels
standards in G4. SRI commenters urged GRI to retain the existing
two tiers: “with reference to” being the lower and “in accordance”
being the higher level.
- Policy and management
systems: a new “disclosure of management approach” section treating
policies, procedures, implementation and monitoring has been separated
out from performance indicators. SRI commenters voiced concern
that the new framework allows reporting organizations to leave
out relevant data.
- Quantitative versus qualitative
data: stakeholders commented that the G3 moves too far towards
quantifying data, which while helpful, may not be effective in
some areas such as child labor or corporate governance. Commenters
asked whether the G3 strikes an appropriate balance here.
- The G3 has improved discussion
of “boundary issues,” or what is within reporting organizations’
sphere of influence and thus material for disclosure.
Perhaps
the only challenge equal to producing a sustainability report is
crafting guidance on a reporting gold standard agreeable to multiple
stakeholders. On March 31, 2006, the Netherlands-based GRI secretariat
closed the public comment period on a draft G3 that was four years
in the making. The purpose is to better serve the more than 750
reporting organizations (mostly corporate) now using the GRI guidelines
and the thousands of stakeholders with an interest in sustainability.
Sudan
Divestment Update
Response
from States, Universities, Pension Funds and Asset Managers
to the growing Sudan divestment movement
Students
at the University of California and Brandeis University recently
published a report on where the Sudan divestment campaign stands
nationally. The April 2006 report provides details on the progress
of numerous states, universities, and private pension plans that
have active divestment campaigns, as well as the status of ex-Sudan
investment offerings by asset managers and private pension plans.
The
report is a good indicator of the growth of the divestment movement
and how it's making an impact. In June 2005, the state of Illinois
was the first state to pass Sudan divestment legislation. In less
than 12 months, the states of New Jersey and Oregon have followed
suit. Additionally, non-binding divestment resolutions have passed
in Ohio and Vermont, and there is pending legislation in several
other states including Massachusetts, New York, California and Texas.
Universities
have also joined the divestment efforts. Harvard, Stanford, Yale,
Brown, Amherst, Dartmouth, Stanford, and the University of California
system have all enacted restrictions on Sudan investments. Emerging
or active Sudan divestment campaigns are in place at several universities
including Brandeis, MIT, Columbia, University of Pennsylvania, California
State University system and the University of Virginia.
At
the private pension plan level, there is an active Sudan divestment
campaign for TIAA-CREF, the nation’s largest private pension fund.
Finally, asset managers such as Northern Trust, Barclays Global
International, and State Street Global Advisors have responded to
the divestment movement by developing ex-Sudan investment tools.
For
more details on the divestment campaigns listed above, contact Randy
O’Neil to request a copy of the report.
Pushback
On Corporations
By: Liz
Umlas, Senior Research Analyst, Human Rights
March
was a month that should have left corporations on their toes - the
observant ones, anyhow. There were several instances of pushback
against companies, some through legal or diplomatic channels, others
through violent protest. Here are a few that stood out:
| - |
A
representative for jailed Chinese journalist Shi Tao filed a
complaint against Yahoo! for handing over personal information
that the Chinese government then used to imprison the man for
“revealing state secrets”. One report said Shi's family was
considering suing Yahoo. |
| |
|
| - |
A
U.S. judge allowed a lawsuit by Indonesian villagers against
Exxon Mobil to go forward. The suit alleges Exxon's Indonesian
subsidiary let soldiers use its facilities in Aceh province
to torture villagers. |
| |
|
| - |
Protests
broke out in Papua province, Indonesia, where locals demanded
the closure of Freeport McMoran's Grasberg mine. Four people
were killed. |
| |
|
| - |
At
the World Water Forum in Mexico City, the big news was the backlash
against water privatization because it has done so little to
extend access to the poor. |
| |
|
| - |
Twenty
U.S. Congressional representatives wrote to Indian Prime Minister
Manmohan Singh asking that Dow Chemical, the successor to Union
Carbide, be brought to justice for the Bhopal disaster of 1984. |
To
put these events in perspective, nothing immediate may come of them.
For example, regarding the complaint against Yahoo, an editor in
China whose newspaper had reported on police corruption died in
February as a result of being beaten by dozens of policemen several
months earlier. Clearly, defenders of freedom of expression have
a long way to go in that country. Regarding Exxon, so far no oil
companies have been found guilty in court of abetting or being silent
accomplices to brutal militaries (though a number of similar cases
are pending in US courts). Finally, talk of reversing water privatization
may be premature, given the power of private water companies and
the growing market for bottled water.
One
might say, however, that the sum of these developments is greater
than its parts. Together, they are a reminder that companies' so-called
"license to operate" — whether that means extracting resources in
developing countries, or moving into areas where the public sector
has traditionally supplied services, or selling Internet services
in a society lacking in freedom of expression — shouldn’t be taken
for granted.
The
incidents in March do not seem to be isolated events. Smart companies
will sit up and take notice of the bigger picture.
|