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Carbon
Disclosure Project (CDP) to Release the Results of Third Carbon
Disclosure Report
On
September 14, 2005, the Carbon Disclosure Project will release the
results of their third carbon disclosure report at an event in New
York City. The event will feature keynote speakers including Margaret
Beckett, UK Secretary of State Environment, Food and Rural Affairs;
Jim Rogers, Chair of the Board, President and CEO of Cinergy Corp.
and CEO-Designate for Duke Energy; and Comptroller Alan Hevesi,
trustee of the $120 billion New York State Common Retirement Fund.
Following
the event, company responses to CDP's questions will be made available
on the organization’s website (www.cdproject.net)
for download free of charge.
The
Carbon Disclosure Project was formed in 2001 to serve as a secretariat
for collaboration among institutional investors worldwide who see
climate change as a key concern and challenge for business. CDP
launched the results of the first questionnaire submitted on behalf
of investors in 2003.
The
CDP questionnaire focuses on six areas:
- strategic awareness of
climate risks and opportunities
- management systems for
climate issues
- programs and policies
for reducing emissions
- existence of formal targets
for emissions reduction
- monitoring and reporting
of emissions
- use of emissions trading
Each
year, CDP sends a request for information to the FT500 on behalf
of institutional investors, currently numbering 155 (up significantly
from 95 in 2004), who collectively represent over $10 trillion in
assets. As of the launching of the third report, 300 of the 500
largest corporations worldwide reported their emissions to the Carbon
Disclosure Project. While CDP focuses on the FT500, the organization
encourages all large companies to respond.
Climate
change is arguably the most important environmental challenge investors
face because of its far-reaching implications. Yet it is amenable
to the technological and behavioral changes needed to mitigate its
effects. Investors can play an instrumental role in reaching that
solution.
Which
future will investors choose? They have the choice of rewarding
companies for externalizing pollution costs or forcing companies
to account for the risks associated with greenhouse gases (GHG)
emissions. They can support existing fossil fuel energy sources
and technologies or seek opportunities that will help solve climate
change by developing new technologies or adopting ones that reduce
company contributions to global warming. This much is clear: to
address climate change as an investment issue, business as usual
is not an option.
Investors
alone cannot "solve" challenges associated with climate
change but they can play a critical role by influencing the allocation
of capital. Investors must develop strategies to complement and
reinforce policymakers' goals of reducing GHG through technologies
that improve energy efficiency and developing alternative energy
sources. In evaluating and valuing stocks investors must consider
the long-term financial implication for companies that are unable
or unwilling to address the issue of climate change. The information
gathered through the efforts of the Carbon Disclosure Project is
a significant step towards achieving these goals.
For
more information, visit CDP's website at www.cdproject.net.
Contact Daniel Turner at Daniel@cdproject.net
to RSVP to the New York City launch of the third CDP report.
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