Companies should report on five key environmental indicators, a report sponsored by the Prince of Wales has said.
They should reveal their polluting emissions, energy use, water use, their waste and their 'significant use of other finite resources'.
The Prince's report, Accounting for Sustainability, was hailed by BT chairman and former KPMG chief Sir Mike Rake as providing the simplest and most comprehensible environmental reporting framework there was.
Between six and a dozen major companies – including Sainsbury's, BT, Aviva, EDF Energy and HSBC – are now set to implement the rules as part of their reporting.
The five key indicators are the most practical consequence of the Prince's report, which includes other recommendations about sustainable reporting, benchmarking and the up-stream and down-stream impact of companies.
Sir Mike Rake, who has been involved with the project, said the report was much better than other attempts to hone environmental reporting. 'Some of them are very, very complicated. Sometimes less is more,' he told Accountancy Age.
The Global Reporting Initiative, he said, was by contrast 'extremely expensive and detailed, and loses the ability to be comprehensible.'
The five key areas outlined would not be the end of the issue, he added – where material companies would have to report other key environmental factors.
Though the take-up of the recommendations is likely to be voluntary, Lord Sharman, also a former KPMG chairman, indicated that the companies act already imposed a general burden on companies to report such information.
Sir Mike suggested 'peer pressure' would be as important as any formal requirements too.
At a high-profile launch at St James' Palace attended by a who's who of the senior members of the profession – including Paul Boyle, the chief executive of the Financial Reporting Council, comptroller and auditor general Sir John Bourn and other senior figures – Prince Charles said that accountants must fulfil a central role 'in providing the tools and information needed to tackle climate change and the "sustainability revolution" that is hurtling down the tracks towards us.'
The project has also set up a website to provide tools for companies in their environmental reporting and in implementing its ideas. Available at www.sustainabilityatwork.org.uk, readers can also download the latest report from there.
Further reading:
Report claims major overhaul of global climate policy required to keep temperature changes below three degrees 09 Jun 2008
The entire US financial system may be on the ropes, but according to Richard Seireeni, the recently formed "Salmon Nation" financial network is doing just fine 09 Oct 2008
BusinessGreen.com casts its eye over the simplest means of harnessing some geothermal power 08 Oct 2008








