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NEWS RELEASE

Ref: 126/07
Date: 8 May 2007

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Business risks of climate change need to be faced, not ignored - Pearson

US and UK companies need to face up to the realities of climate change and the risks that it poses to their long term interests, Environment and Climate Change Minister Ian Pearson will say later today.

Mr Pearson, addressing a meeting of US businesses in New York, will say that a business’s vulnerability to the threats of climate change is of increasing concern to investors and shareholders. Companies need to respond to this to stay ahead of the game.

Mr Pearson said:

“In the future I expect a company’s carbon statement to be as prominent as its financial statement. That’s because investors are increasingly demanding reliable information about a company’s global carbon footprint, as well what it’s doing to reduce its CO2 emissions.  Proper financial reporting is a no-brainer. Carbon reporting must be the same.
 
“Climate change already poses risks to businesses – and these will only increase in the future. Climate change can affect a corporation’s profitability and investors are right to be asking searching questions about how businesses are facing up to the realities, as well as the business opportunities of climate change. This is not a box-ticking exercise.  ‘Green wash’ is of no use to institutional investors when making financial decisions.”

Mr Pearson will this evening announce Defra’s support for the Carbon Disclosure Project (CDP), who will work  as Secretariat to the Climate Disclosure Standards Board to agree and advocate a generally accepted international framework for carbon reporting by corporations. CDP already acts on behalf of institutional investors to request information from corporations about their greenhouse gas emissions and plans to manage those emissions.

Mr Pearson added:

“Investors want hard facts and data on a company’s global carbon emissions which includes their operations overseas. That’s why we’re supporting the CDP to work towards a single international carbon reporting standard – one that helps, and doesn’t hinder businesses and investors.

“We are already seeing many hundreds of leading businesses, some of these in the US, take action to measure, manage and disclose their emissions and this is very positive. However, given the scale of the climate change challenge we need more action and those businesses who have not yet engaged need to do so urgently. A logical way to begin is by responding to the Carbon Disclosure Project.

“Companies that adopt a head in the sand strategy are neither going to win over institutional investors, nor reduce carbon emissions. Despite the different approaches of the US and UK Governments to tackle climate change, businesses on both sides of the Atlantic need to engage with this issue and shape a future carbon footprint reporting requirement that will become the common carbon language for companies  and investors all over the globe. Climate change knows no borders, as a company’s emissions in Africa may soon reflect on a company’s profitability in the US.”
 
Carbon Disclosure Project Chief Executive Officer, Paul Dickinson said:

“The UK Environment Department’s leadership is helping to facilitate and advance the global debate about best practice on accounting for greenhouse gas emissions and climate risks and opportunities. Working with the support of Defra, we are confident that we can build on the strong foundations already laid for climate reporting to accelerate the provision of information which will in turn be used to elicit a rational response to climate change. We believe that this important work in defining a globally agreed reporting standard for greenhouse gas emissions will assist in the efficient development of a global cap and trade scheme.

"For five years CDP has been pleased to be able to serve the world’s largest coalition of investors by collecting data and information for them on the risks and opportunities resulting from climate change. Our website is the world’s largest registry of corporation’s greenhouse gas emissions and corporations’ strategies on climate change. We are working hard to expand the quality and quantity on this information."

Notes to editors

1. The Carbon Disclosure Project (CDP) is an independent not-for-profit organization that acts as a global secretariat for institutional investor collaboration on climate change, providing a mechanism through which corporations measure, report and manage their greenhouse gas emissions and securing for the investment community vital information about climate change for incorporation into investment decisions. In February 2007 CDP issued its fifth information request on behalf of 284 institutional investors with assets of $41 trillion under management to 2,400 of the largest quoted companies in the world by market capitalisation.  Further information about CDP may be found at www.cdproject.net

2. The Carbon Disclosure Project (CDP) annual information request issued to leading companies globally is supported by the largest institutional investor collaboration seeking climate related information from companies.  The results from 2006 CDP information request to FTSE 350 showed that –

  • 83% of FTSE100 companies responded
  • 55% of the FTSE100 provided quantified emissions data, and;
  • 24% provided emissions data that met the reporting requirement on ‘direct’ GHG emissions according to Scope 1 of the GHG protocol.
  • 36% of FTSE 250 companies responded,
  • 16% of FTSE 250 provided quantified GHG emissions data

3. The launch of the Climate Disclosure Standards Board (CDSB) was announced at the Annual Meeting of the World Economic Forum at Davos, Switzerland on 26 January 2007. The CDSB aims to agree and advocate with relevant stakeholders a generally-accepted international framework for reporting by corporations with respect to climate risks and opportunities, carbon footprints and carbon reduction strategies together with the implications for shareholder value. CDSB’s objective is to ensure consistent reporting standards by companies and to do this by building on and incorporating the significant work already carried out by the Carbon Disclosure Project, CERES, the California Climate Registry, WEF, WRI and other members of the CDSB Board. The press release announcing the launch of CDSB may be found at www.weforum.org

4. The UK Government is providing £50,000 to support the work of the CDP as secretariat to the CDSB as well as ongoing support to the CDP’s information requests to the FTSE 350.

5. Ian Pearson is in New York to attend the meeting of the Commission on Sustainable Development.

End

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Page published: 9 May 2007

Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs