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Latest EPA
Toxic Emissions Data Added to Socrates profiles
KLD has updated its SOCRATES
research tool with the Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) 2003
Toxic Release Inventory data, the most recent data available. As
a result of the project, 105 of the companies covered in SOCRATES
now have received a "concern" rating for Substantial Emissions.
The EPA’s Toxics Release Inventory
is an outgrowth of the federal Emergency Planning and Community
Right-to-Know Act (EPCRA), which was enacted in 1986 amidst growing
concern about toxic chemicals following the deadly 1984 Bhopal,
India chemical disaster. The TRI annually reports data on approximately
650 toxic pollutants that companies are permitted to release to
the air, water, and land. In 1998 several new industries were required
to report their emissions data under TRI. Important players among
these included electric energy generators, mining operations and
waste management companies. Some of these industries have among
the highest TRI releases. TRI data help inform communities of chemical
hazards in their areas, but the data also provide an important metric
for social investors interested in evaluating a company’s impact
on the environment.
The top four KLD industries
with the largest number of substantial emissions concerns in order
were electrical utilities, chemicals, steel, and drugs and pharmaceuticals.
Seventy of the companies receiving concerns were members of the
S&P 500, and 13 were members of KLD's DS 400 Index.
According to the EPA, the
top five polluting companies in the United States accounted for
60% of the total TRI emissions. Four out of five of those companies
were mining companies. The EPA also reported on its website that
electric utilities accounted for 33 out of the top 35 emitters to
air. Food companies accounted for 18 of the top 35 emitters to water.
Plastics and Resins companies accounted for the top 28 out of 35
top emitters to underground injection wells. Mining companies accounted
for 19 of the top 35 emitters to land. For more information visit
www.epa.gov.
Companies with the most numerous
top ranking emissions sources:
- Nucor Corporation (11)
- DuPont Company (10)
- Southern Company (8)
- American Electric Power
Company, Inc. (8)
- Renco Group Inc (7)
- Johnson Controls, Inc.
(6)
- Phelps Dodge Corporation
(6)
- Pfizer, Inc. (5)
- Waste Management, Inc.
(5)
- Exxon Mobil Corporation
(5)
- Hawaiian Electric Industries,
Inc. (5)
Companies with the highest
volume emissions sources (numbers represent a single plant or mine
or other facility):
- Teck Cominco Limited (487.4
million pounds)
- Rio Tinto plc (224.8 million
pounds)
- Newmont Mining Corporation
(200.9 million pounds)
- Barrick Gold Corporation
(102.8 million pounds)
- Pfizer, Inc. (43.2 million
pounds)
- Nucor Corporation (89.1
million pounds)
The update to the Substantial
Emissions rating was implemented by KLD’s senior environmental research
analyst Andrew
Brengle, with assistance from Andrew Moschetti, a graduate student
at Babson College. Andrew Brengle is KLD's expert on the mining,
oil, chemical, and utilities industries.
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