ECI Business Sector
ECI Business Sector
ECI Business Sector
Business Sector
How a Consensus on Global Values
Can Add Value
12 September 2006
Contact:
Alan AtKisson
International Transition Director (CEO)
Earth Charter International
Holländargatan 11 - 1 TR
SE-111 36 Stockholm, Sweden
Tel +46 8 789 0451; Fax +46 8 789 0401
Earth Charter International would like to express its deep appreciation to NCDO, a Dutch
government-financed foundation, for supporting this important work. It would also like to
acknowledge the contribution of the international consultancy GlobeScan, and its Senior
Associate, Paul Hohnen, for their invaluable advice and assistance in drafting this paper.
Executive Summary
In the early Twenty-First Century, the ”business of business" includes taking
responsibility for a wide range of issues not traditionally associated with core business
concerns. Lack of attention to social, ethical, and environmental aspects -- locally or
globally -- has proven costly. Investment in best-practice performance in these areas is
increasingly seen as essential to maintaining and building sustainable brand value.
Over the past decade, a plethora of guidelines, standards, compacts and initiatives has
arisen to support the business sector's engagement with issues formerly seen as
"externalities". However the multiplicity of tools and related expectations sometimes
causes management fatigue or confusion, and often fails to satisfy either advocacy
groups or shareholders. Frequently, too, these can seem bureaucratic and lacking the
inspirational element necessary to engage and sustain all stakeholders in a longer-term
process of cultural and operational transformation.
In this context, the Earth Charter occupies a special place. By providing an agreed
statement of fundamental principles and values, it offers companies a clear global
framework within which to test their corporate social responsibility (CSR)1 policies and
develop long-term business plans. It has been widely embraced and endorsed as a
common global vision and agenda for a more sustainable, just and peaceful global
society.
Earth Charter International (ECI) is the secretariat charged with promoting the Earth
Charter worldwide and with supporting the broad-based Earth Charter Initiative (the
“Initiative”). This comprises thousands of endorsing organisations, institutions,
government agencies, and individuals. 2 With the support of the NCDO (a Dutch
government-sponsored foundation) 3 and GlobeScan, an international consultancy, ECI
is currently assessing how the Earth Charter can be of optimal value to the business
sector.
This paper summarises the findings of research to date, and invites further
discussion and ideas. Specifically, it requests feedback, and attaches a
questionnaire which readers are encouraged to complete and return.
Consultations with the business, government and civil society sectors in The
Netherlands have highlighted a variety of roles -- current and potential -- for the Earth
Charter in a business context. These include use of the Earth Charter as:
1
'CSR' is a standard abbreviation for Corporate Social Responsibility and refers both to the
formal programs of large businesses to manage social and environmental concerns, and to the
international movement to promote such engagement on the part of business. While some
actors are switching to the phrase "Corporate Responsibility" and the initials 'CR,' we will use
the more widely recognized abbreviation 'CSR' in this paper.
2
For more details, see www.earthcharter.org
3
The National Committee for International Cooperation and Sustainable Development,
www.ncdo.nl
2. An inspirational and educational tool for informing and engaging employees and
communicating a company's aspirations to its shareholders and stakeholders.
To help frame our longer term strategy in the business sector, we invite your comments
on the Earth Charter and the views outlined in this paper. Using the attached form,
please send feedback to ECI Director Alan AtKisson at the address shown on the cover
page.
Introduction
In some respects, the concepts of ‘business as usual’ or ‘sustainable business’ are
comforting ones. The notion of a business environment that is stable and relatively
predictable has a high level of appeal to investors, business leaders and employees
alike.
The problem is -- as history has repeatedly shown -- that the only thing certain about the
business environment is that change takes place constantly. Sometimes the change is
gradual. Increasingly, it comes quickly, unpredictably and disruptively.
History also underlines how business, at its best, is pro-active or able to adapt to
emerging changes. It sees a human need for a particular service and responds. By
contrast, however, business can also resist change, although never permanently.
In many respects, good business has always been about understanding change, and
turning its inherent risks into markets and opportunities.
For the purposes of this paper, we adopt the original Brundtland Commission 1987
definition of sustainable development -- "[development that meets] the needs of the
present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs"
This definition is further elaborated by the text of Earth Charter itself, with its sixteen
major Principles and 61 Supporting Principles. The Principles rest in turn on four
cornerstone values: "respect for nature, universal human rights, economic justice, and a
culture of peace." (Earth Charter Preamble)
The recognition that humankind might be running out of raw materials, or places to put
its waste, is no longer new. Over the last decade, public opinion appears to have
generally aligned with scientific opinion on the conclusion that the dramatic changes in
our patterns of production and consumption lie ahead. This challenge has been
highlighted in a series of high-level international meetings and conferences, most
recently the 2002 Johannesburg UN World Summit on Sustainable Development.
The sustainable development challenge ‘’raises the bar’’ in terms of the rates and
magnitudes of required change, to levels unparalleled in history. Its unique
characteristics include its global scope, and the need to address social, ethical, and
environmental issues at the same time as economic issues, and in an integrated way.
Sustainable development poses special problems for the business sector. These
include its dependence on an economic model that does not encourage internalization of
‘externalities’, and society’s reliance on the jobs and economic growth that business
creates. Other problems include: the absence of clear and consistent government
policies to encourage change; low levels of public trust in the business sector; and a
tendency to blame ‘big business’ rather than to acknowledge the shared responsibility of
voters, consumers, investors, small and medium size enterprises (SMEs), and other
actors.
In many respects, the business sector has shown great leadership in responding to the
challenge. Creative new products and services have been developed. A number of
global corporate social responsibility initiatives have successfully promoted greater
awareness, responsibility and transparency.
It remains a fact, however, that too many critical global trends continue to go in the
wrong direction. While many leading companies have made significant progress, the
majority of companies have not yet put in place policies that reduce their adverse
impacts. A significant increase in business's level of commitment, engagement,
ambition, and action in the area of sustainable development is urgently required.
In short, capitalism is at a crossroads. The challenge is how to break out of the current
‘business-as-usual’ model, while maintaining the best of the private sector’s
entrepreneurial, technological and financial skills and innovative capacity.
What are the main obstacles to change? No analysis can hope to be exhaustive. From
Earth Charter International's perspective, however, there are several prerequisites to
securing broader, deeper, and more rapid change.
e) A framework that sets clear goals, but offers flexibility as how to achieve
them. Human rights, security and environmental goals are scattered across a
maze of national and international laws. A common framework that can provide a
meaningful sense of unity and understanding is needed.
The Earth Charter was designed to fill many of these gaps. The table below shows how
it might be seen as relating to government normative instruments and to CSR
instruments.
Consultations held in The Netherlands during the first half of 2006 were helpful in
shaping the Initiative’s understanding of current usage practices and attitudes towards
the Charter. These consultations, facilitated by the Dutch NCDO organisation with the
assistance of the GlobeScan consultancy, sought the inputs of organisations and
individuals who have endorsed the Earth Charter, as well as those that haven’t.
Although all major stakeholder communities were involved -- government, business, and
civil society (including representatives from faith and youth groups) -- a central focus was
on how the business community might derive more benefit from the Charter.
On the whole, participants in the consultation process saw three distinctive and valuable
roles for the Earth Charter. These were as:
2. An inspirational and educational tool for informing and engaging employees and
communicating a company's aspirations to its shareholders and stakeholders. In a
crowded CSR field, the Earth Charter stands virtually alone in providing a
comprehensive but flexible tool for informing the training, brain-storming, risk evaluation
and strategic planning processes.
The CSR landscape is rich in initiatives aspiring to provide guidance on one other aspect
of business responsibility. Many CSR instruments have a level of brand appeal that
comes from their governmental status (e.g. the UN Global Compact), widespread
industry use (e.g. ISO), or specific functionality (e.g. the GRI Guidelines) in the business
sector. While the Earth Charter enjoys a high level of recognition and use, its brand
value has yet to be optimally established.
• governmental recognition? 4
• use by civil society?
• uptake in the market place (i.e. by companies)?
The Charter positions itself as a map of the wider sustainability and peace landscape,
covering the central issues and shared values. Inevitably, there is pressure for it to be at
once a comprehensive and general framework, as well as providing an active ‘navigation
system’ — in short, to be a sort of CSR 'all-in-one'. The main risk of any generic
framework such as the Charter, however, is that implementation systems should remain
flexible and non-prescriptive.
One way the Charter could balance these often conflicting demands would be as an
internal policy check-list. Organisations could regularly check their mission statements,
policies and performance reports against the Charter, to signal issues, risks and
opportunities. The Charter would help the organisation understand what the key issues
were, and why they are important, but not how to address them. Other CSR tools, such
as the GRI, could be used for that function.
If a mission statement or specific practices are in conflict with the Charter, would this not
be important information for Boards and CEOs? There may be no business case to
address certain issues. On the other hand, however, there may be a good business case
for being part of the solution to pressing development, environmental and human rights
issues
The Charter was designed to operate as an overarching set of principles, values and
guidelines that could be used independently, or in association with other instruments.
For example, in considering its use of renewable energy, an organisation might simply
reference the Charter’s paragraph 7.b and develop its own policies to ‘rely increasingly
on renewable energy sources’, and mechanisms to measure them.
4
The Earth Charter has already been formally recognised by UNESCO, by The World
Conservation Union (IUCN – which includes national governments), by a number of ministries
at the national level, and by over 400 city and town governments.
• to ensure that the list of issues and values they address is comprehensive and
inclusive (i.e. are they material to both the organisation, and to the wider
stakeholder community); and
• as an overarching inspirational framework for long term planning and staff
engagement.
In this respect, the Earth Charter does not compete directly with such initiatives, even
though many of its users might chose not to use other instruments.
The Earth Charter is intended to "guide and assess"5 decision making generally, but it
was not developed with the specific needs of managers in mind. It is not designed as a
business tool, nor can it make any claims to increase an organisation’s profits or
competitive position. And yet it can be used to achieve these and other business goals.
It can do this by providing:
5
The closing sentence of the Preamble to the Earth Charter summarises a principal use
envisioned for the document: "Therefore, together in hope we affirm the following
interdependent principles for a sustainable way of life as a common standard by which the
conduct of all individuals, organizations, businesses, governments, and transnational
institutions is to be guided and assessed." [Emphasis added.]
• The last decade has seen a proliferation of general and sectoral CSR
instruments and initiatives. Often the general instruments are often too general
to be of use, while the sectorally or regionally specific ones can raise issues for
businesses that operate globally. The Earth Charter envisages a future where
general instruments, such as the Charter, can be used to provide broad guidance
on general directions (where to go, and why), while business-specific instruments
are used to define how to get there, in a way that is unique to the specific
business.
The Earth Charter is not a membership organisation, in the sense of having fee-paying
members or subscribers. Rather, its approach is to encourage ’’engaged endorsement”.
In practice, this means that individuals and organisations that see the value of the
Charter are encouraged to do three things:
a) strive to implement the principles of the Charter in their everyday operations and
activities, and to regularly review progress;
b) promote the Charter, through their contacts with third parties; and
c) contribute to the Charter’s mission, whether with their time, money or in-kind.
At the same time, the ECI requires regular financial support to promote its mission more
widely. This raises the issue of how best to shape the Charter’s business model to
ensure its own long-term sustainability.
In our assessment, the appetite for ‘another CSR code’ is limited at best. Businesses
already find the lengthy menu of existing instruments sometimes confusing. There are
also cost issues, both in terms of implementation processes and often membership/
participation costs. Many businesses have expressed a desire to see greater alignment
between existing instruments and initiatives. At the same time, there is no framework for
discussing how such alignment might work, and the competition between some
approaches can be seen as healthy.
Conclusion
We believe the Earth Charter has an important niche to fill in the complex, emerging
"ecosystem" of business practice for sustainable development. We are particularly
interested in "adding global value with global values" -- that is, helping businesses do
well by doing even more good, guided by this broadly-embraced consensus of what
sustainable development requires.
Please see the "Feedback Form" that begins on the following page.
1. Which of the Earth Charter’s roles described in this paper do you consider would
be most attractive to the business sector? As:
Please note your thoughts about the added value the Earth Charter offers in this regard.
2. Are there other roles not covered in the paper that you consider the Earth Charter
could play? If so, what are these and what specific values could they offer?
3. In your view, what steps should the Earth Charter Initiative take to increase
awareness and uptake of the Earth Charter by the business sector? Specifically, what
comments do you have on the issues raised in the section above entitled ‘From
Inspiration to Integration’?
4. Do you currently use the Earth Charter? If not, what more information would you
need to have before making a decision to use it?