The Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) has launched the fourth edition
of its sustainability reporting guidelines, which helps businesses
disclose information on the environmental, social and economic areas of
their operations.
The new guidance, called G4, will provide companies with a clear, strategic and practical roadmap on sustainability reporting.
Richard Ball, CRS Head of Environment and Co-author of IOSH’s publication Do the right thing
– the practical, jargon-free guide to corporate social responsibility
commented ‘ these standards will play an important role in environmental
reporting, and as the proposed changes to ISO14001 include more
emphasis on value chain monitoring so verifiable statements will become
more important. ‘
GRI announced G4 this week in Amsterdam at
the biggest global conference on sustainability and reporting, convening
1600 attendees from over 80 countries.
At the event, the GRI
also announced that it has renewed its Memorandum of Understanding (MoU)
with the UN Global Compact, a policy platform and a practical framework
for companies that are committed to sustainability and responsible
business practices.
The mutual support between GRI and the UN
Global Compact has led to the incorporation of the Global Compact's ten
principles in the areas of human rights, labor, the environment and
anti-corruption into GRI's sustainability reporting guidelines.
UN Global Compact executive director Georg Kell said: "The UN Global
Compact welcomes G4 and our renewed partnership with GRI, as we
recognize that strategic engagement triggered by universal principles
and reporting go hand in hand".
"As a valuable option for
Global Compact participants to report on their progress, G4 provides
clear linkages with our ten principles that will help any company
preparing a Global Compact Communication on Progress (COP) to align its
reporting with the GRI Guidelines," added Kell.
As the
target date for the internationally-agreed Millennium Development Goals
(MDGs) approaches, discussions on new global development priorities and
the pivotal role for business are gaining momentum.
UN
Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon has assigned the Global Compact to
contribute to the post-2015 development process by consulting with its
network of over 7000 businesses to help define the role of the business
community.
In September, the UN Global Compact will unveil an
implementation architecture for business to contribute to these global
priorities. According to the UN, this architecture will address the
importance of corporate transparency and accountability, and link to the
role of corporate sustainability reporting.
Chief executive
of GRI, Ernst Ligteringen, said: "Both the UN Global Compact principles
and the GRI Sustainability Reporting Guidelines help business establish
its role in sustainable development. Both frameworks are used by
thousands of companies in industrialized and developing countries alike.
"These companies have found that reporting changes mind
frames, that it supports dialogue, and that it helps build understanding
and trust between business and communities. The reporting practice
built by these thousands of companies is a hugely valuable resource, to
be leveraged to measuring sustainable development performance, to scale
up the contribution business makes globally to sustainable development,"
added Ligteringen.
The two organisations will work together
to provide the increasing number of companies using GRI's reporting
guidelines and the Global Compact's COP with clear guidance on how to
link their sustainability disclosure to potential sustainable
development goals.
CRS ENVIRONMENT: Make a difference
Source: edie newsroom
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