Largest Companies Fall Short In Managing, Disclosing Water Scarcity Risks
February 12, 2010
UK Beverage Firm, Swiss Mining Co., Arizona Utility Post Highest
Scores Among 100 Companies
Boston, MA /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ - Despite growing water-scarcity risks in many parts of the world, the vast majority of leading companies in water-intensive industries have weak management and disclosure of water-related risks and opportunities, according to a first-ever report issued today by the Ceres investor coalition, the financial services firm UBS and financial data provider Bloomberg. The report evaluates and ranks water disclosure practices of 100 publicly traded companies in eight key sectors exposed to water-related risks. The report shows that many companies are not including material water risks and performance data in their financial filings, nor are they providing local-level water data, particularly in the context of facilities in water-stressed regions. Moreover, none of the 100 companies are providing comprehensive water data on their supply chains, an especially glaring omission given that the vast majority of many corporations' water footprint is in the supply chain. The shortcomings are evident in the report's final scores. Using a scoring scale of 0 to 100, the three highest scoring companies were UK beverage company Diageo, Swiss mining company Xstrata and U.S. electric power company Pinnacle West (owner of Arizona Public Services) with 43 points, 42 points and 38 points, respectively. Eighty of the 100 companies scored fewer than 30 points. "Most companies provide basic disclosure on overall water use and water scarcity concerns, but their focus and attention so far is not nearly at the level needed given the enormity of this growing global challenge," said Mindy S. Lubber, president of Ceres, which published the report, Murky Waters: Corporate Reporting on Water Risk. "Our global economy runs on water and in many parts of the world this finite resource is under threat. Companies must do more to disclose their potential exposure from this issue and their strategies for responding." "Water is integral to the global economy. Whether you're in California or China, clean potable water is an absolute must for sustaining communities and sustaining economic growth," said Jack Ehnes, chief executive officer of the California State Teachers Retirement System (CalSTRS), the nation's second largest public pension fund with $134 billion in assets under management. "This report makes clear that companies are not providing investors with the kind of information they need to understand the risks and opportunities posed by water scarcity." With analytical support from UBS, the report evaluates the quality, depth and clarity of water risk disclosure in both voluntary and mandatory corporate reporting through June 30, 2009. The data for the report was provided by Bloomberg's Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) data and analytics service. The report assesses companies in eight key sectors: beverage, chemicals, electric power, food, homebuilding, mining, oil and gas and semiconductors. "We chose sectors where water security concerns are likely to have a material impact on business, whether through regulatory, legal or reputational constraints that in some cases can go so far as to threaten a firm's very 'license to operate,'" said Julie Hudson, global head of SRI and Sustainability Research at UBS Investment Bank. "It is clear that any threat to water security could have a significant impact on the bottom-line of such companies." The report scored the companies based on five key categories of disclosure: water accounting, risk assessment, direct operations, supply chain and stakeholder engagement. Within each category, sub-elements were divided to produce a final scored assessment based on the depth and clarity of corporate disclosures. An extra "opportunities" category was created for two of the eight industry groups – chemical firms and homebuilders – which resulted in those sectors being scored on a 0- to 112-point scale. Among the key overall findings:
Among the key company scores:
The report comes as rising populations, rapid economic growth in developing countries, climate change and growing regulation are triggering growing water availability concerns in the U.S. and abroad. The report cites numerous examples where impacts are already being felt by vulnerable industry sectors, including:
The report comes at a time of increasing pressure from investors for improved corporate disclosure of environmental, social and governance (ESG) risks that they face. On Jan. 27, in response to investor requests, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission issued formal "interpretive guidance" clarifying the type of information that companies should be disclosing regarding material climate change risks and opportunities, including those relating to water-availability risk. The report builds on the SEC's guidance with specific recommendations for companies to improve their water-related disclosure. It recommends that companies:
The report also recommends that investors:
Ceres is a leading coalition of investors, environmental groups and other public interest groups working with companies to address sustainability challenges such as global climate change. Ceres also directs the Investor Network on Climate Risk, a network of 80 institutional investors with $8 trillion of collective assets focused on the business impacts of climate change. For details, visit www.ceres.org or www.incr.com UBS is a global firm providing financial services to private, corporate, and institutional clients. The UBS Investment Research SRI & Sustainability research team was formally established as part of the Investment Bank at the end of 2004, in response to steady demand from UBS clients for such research. SRI & Sustainability Investment is an active asset management approach, that takes financial, fundamental, and also environmental, social, ethical, and governance issues into account in the implementation of investment decisions. The BLOOMBERG PROFESSIONAL service integrates multi-year as-reported ESG data on more than 3,500 companies with news, research and analytics. The ESGX function on Bloomberg is a premier suite of data, news, analytics, charting and assessment tools that enable transparency, liquidity and asset valuation for 300,000-plus banks, corporations, analysts, investors and other decision makers. SOURCE Ceres, Boston, MA
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