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SIRAN's Global Reporting Inititative
Efforts to
expand corporate social responsibility reporting among the United
States’ largest companies took a significant step forward as the
result of a coordinated effort by the Social Investment Research
Analyst Network (SIRAN), a coalition of corporate social research
analysts formed in 2004.
In January
2005, SIRAN launched an initiative to evaluate the Corporate Social
Responsibility (CSR) reporting of America's largest companies, as
part of an effort to urge companies to report publicly on social
and environmental issues according to standards established by the
Global Reporting Initiative (GRI). CERES, the Boston based environmental
non-profit organization, created the GRI reporting format in 1997,
as a way to standardize corporate social responsible reporting.
Since January,
SIRAN analysts participating in this study have contacted CEO's
of companies on the S&P 100 to uncover the nature of the companies’
CSR reporting. As of June 2005, the analysts' efforts have proved
fruitful: SIRAN reported that 40% of companies on the S&P 100 index
report annually on their social and environmental performance; 58%
devote an autonomous section of their corporate website to social
and environmental issues; and 24% base the format of their annual
CSR report on the GRI guidelines. By year-end, SIRAN expects that
this project will bring the percentage of S&P 100 companies who
publish a CSR report referencing the GRI to 25%.
Steve Lippman,
who serves as SIRAN's co-chair, reported in a press release from
SIRAN that he is encouraged by the study's findings. Mr. Lippman
sees the increased prevalence of CSR reporting among large US corporations
as evidence that companies are responding to a variety of stakeholders'
calls for increased disclosure of corporations’ social and environmental
profile.
For more information
on SIRAN please visit their website at www.siran.org. For more information
on the Global Reporting Initiative, please visit www.globalreporting.org.
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