Conference Looks at New Challenges of Cross-Border Investment

New York, N.Y., February 25, 2010 – Cross-border investment is expected to play a critical role as the global economy emerges from the worst downturn in living memory.  What policies are needed to marshal private capital for maximum benefit?  This will be the focus of a conference organized by the United States Council for International Business (USCIB), March 10 at the Grand Hyatt in Washington, D.C.

“Our goal is to initiate a dialogue among business, labor, NGOs and policy makers on responsible international investment policies, and how they impact the United States and countries around the world,” according to Peter M. Robinson, USCIB’s president and CEO.

USCIB, which represents America’s top global companies, has assembled a heavyweight lineup of public officials, business executives and other experts for the conference, “Cross-Border Investment in a Post-Recession World,” including:

  • Robert D. Hormats, under secretary of state for economic, energy and agricultural affairs
  • Angel Gurría, secretary general of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development
  • David M. Rubenstein, managing director of The Carlyle Group
  • James Quigley, CEO of Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu.

Panel discussions will examine challenges to foreign investors in global markets, investing in green technologies, foreign investment and jobs, and addressing societal problems.

“As policy makers work to secure a healthy recovery, it is important to recognize that international investment, both inbound and outbound, can provide a major boost to growth and competitiveness,” said Stephen J. Canner, USCIB’s vice president for investment and financial services.  “The bottom line is faster growth at home and abroad, which leads to better, higher-paying jobs.”

Conference sponsors include the Business and Industry Advisory Committee (BIAC) to the OECD, which officially represents industry views in the 30-nation body, and the Organization for International Investment, which represents the U.S. subsidiaries of companies headquartered abroad.

USCIB promotes open markets, competitiveness and innovation, sustainable development and corporate responsibility, supported by international engagement and prudent regulation.  Its members include top U.S.-based global companies and professional services firms from every sector of the economy, and with operations in every region of the world.  With a unique global network encompassing leading international business organizations, including BIAC, USCIB provides business views to policy makers and regulatory authorities worldwide, and works to facilitate international trade and investment.  More information is available at www.uscib.org.

Contact:

Jonathan Huneke, VP Communications, USCIB
+1 212.703.5043 or jhuneke@uscib.org

Conference program

More on USCIB’s Trade and Investment Committee

Internet Governance Forum Takes Stock and Looks Ahead

At the IGF open consultations (L-R): Zahid Jamil (Pakistan), Ayesha Hassan (ICC), Andrius Iskauskas (Lithuania) and Heather Shaw (USCIB).
At the IGF open consultations (L-R): Zahid Jamil (Pakistan), Ayesha Hassan (ICC), Andrius Iskauskas (Lithuania) and Heather Shaw (USCIB).

Geneva and New York, N.Y., February 9, 2010 – Preparations for one of the most important Internet-related policy events of the year kicked off today in Geneva. The International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) and its BASIS (Business Action to Support the Information Society) initiative voiced the business perspective at the first round of Internet Governance Forum (IGF) open consultations, aimed at laying the groundwork for the next forum due to take place in Vilnius, Lithuania later this year.

Consultations not only focused on the agenda and format of the upcoming forum, which will be held September 14-17, but also took stock of the previous gathering in Egypt last November. ICC BASIS recommendations for the 2010 IGF included improving remote access in the interests of increased and more diverse participation, as well as identifying emerging issues that merit inclusion for discussion.

ICC is the largest, most representative business organization in the world.  Its thousands of member companies in over 120 countries have interests spanning every sector of private enterprise.  The United States Council for International Business (USCIB), based in New York, serves as ICC’s American national committee.

At the consultations today, ICC BASIS called for continued efforts for the forum to highlight regional, IGF-related activities. “Internet governance requires the attention of all stakeholders,” said Ayesha Hassan, ICC’s senior policy manager for information and communication technologies policy. “Sessions on regional initiatives give insight into how initiatives are being organized. Not only do they highlight emerging regional priorities and experiences but they are also a way of enabling the views and experiences of stakeholders around the world to penetrate through to the global level.”

In 2010, as the world’s cyber-population reaches some 1.7 billion, getting internet governance right is more important than ever. Convened under the aegis of the UN secretary general, the IGF is a one-of-a-kind international platform that welcomes frank and open discussion on governance issues from all interest groups including governments, business leaders, the technical community and civil society. Last year the forum took place in Sharm-el- Sheikh, Egypt and attracted over 1,500 participants.

The IGF in Egypt underscored the importance of the Internet as a vast resource with enormous potential to raise living standards around the globe. Discussions focused on how tapping into this network of networks can help us find solutions to many of the challenges we face in today’s fast-paced global economy.

Shaping enabling policies, and establishing the right legal and regulatory environment are pivotal to Internet and infrastructure access. While these issues featured on the agenda of the IGF in 2009, ICC BASIS recommended that they be addressed in a main session on development at the next forum. Participating at the Geneva consultation today, Heather Shaw, USCIB’s vice president of ICT policy stated, “We would like to see the session focus on policy implications, informed policy choices, best practices and how challenges in these areas have been overcome.”

ICC, with input from USCIB members, formally submitted reflections on behalf of ICC BASIS members around the world. The contribution also called for cloud computing to be included in the emerging issues session of the next forum. It was suggested that discussions could help define what the cloud is and is not, outline the novel solutions it offers and raise other security solutions and policy issues.

For the first time the IGF in Egypt featured a formal consultation on the continuation of the forum, whose original five-year mandate terminates at the end of this year. At the open consultation today, ICC BASIS strongly reiterated business sentiment that the demise of the IGF could impede the ability of the Internet to drive economic growth and improve societal benefits.

“In less developed countries, connectivity has a direct correlation with positive social and economic changes,” said Subramanian Ramadorai, vice chairman, Tata Consultancy Services and chair of BASIS. “The haves and the have-nots of the world have differing needs, but the IGF has catalyzed communication between all stakeholders. It contributes to more informed policymaking that is a prerequisite for progress.”

Herbert Heitmann, SAP’s chief global communications officer and chair of the ICC Commission on E-Business, IT and Telecoms said, “Discontinuation of the IGF or changes to its founding principles could be seriously detrimental to the future of Internet development and expansion. We were encouraged that the overwhelming majority of 2009 IGF participants officially expressed support for its continuation. Those who suggested radical changes were clearly in the minority.”

USCIB promotes international engagement and prudent regulation in support of open markets, competitiveness and innovation, sustainable development and corporate responsibility.  Its members include top U.S.-based global companies and professional services firms from every sector of the economy, and with operations in every region of the world.  With a unique global network encompassing leading international business organizations, including ICC, USCIB provides business views to policy makers and regulatory authorities worldwide, and works to facilitate international trade and investment.  More information is available at www.uscib.org.

Contacts:

Jonathan Huneke, VP Communications, USCIB
+1 212.703.5043 or jhuneke@uscib.org

Dawn Chardonnal, Communications Mgr., ICC
+33 1 49.53.29.07 or dcl@iccwbo.org

Internet Governance Forum website

More on USCIB’s Information, Communications and Technology Committee

ICC website

Getting the Green Message Right: A New Framework for Environmental Marketing

3966_image002New York, N.Y., January 26, 2010 –  As more consumers consider environmental features important in their purchasing decisions, businesses have a keen interest in communicating the “green” attributes of their products.  Getting the message right is far from easy.  To help marketers and advertisers avoid the mistakes of vague, non-specific or misleading environmental claims, the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) has produced a new global Framework for Responsible Environmental Marketing Communications.

Launched today at a seminar for marketing professionals and self-regulation experts in New York, the framework responds to a call from industry stakeholders for guidance on how to better engage in, and evaluate, environmental marketing communications to ensure consumer confidence in these claims is safeguarded.

ICC is the largest, most representative business organization in the world.  Its thousands of member companies in over 120 countries have interests spanning every sector of private enterprise.  The United States Council for International Business (USCIB), based in New York, serves as ICC’s American national committee and hosted today’s seminar.

“The new framework helps marketers and their agencies ensure the messages they develop hold up to the basic principles of truthful, honest and socially responsible communications,” said John Manfredi, chair of the ICC Commission on Marketing and Advertising.  ”While the principles are simple, applying them amid the hype and fury of new claims and terms that are not universally understood, is more complicated.  This guide is an attempt to map that process for companies and provide a standard for self-regulators to evaluate when claims are questioned.”

ICC has been a major rule-setter for international advertising since the 1930s, when the first ICC code on advertising practice was issued.  Since then, it has extended the ICC self-regulatory framework on many occasions to assist companies in marketing their products responsibly.

Developed by the ICC Commission on Marketing and Advertising, the framework includes a practical checklist aimed at the creators of marketing communications campaigns around environmental claims, as well as a chart that provides an easy reference to relevant provisions of the global advertising code and interpretations on current issues related to environmental marketing.

The launch seminar featured a presentation of the new framework, along with an interactive discussion based on examples that demonstrate how the framework tools can be applied to improve advertising and avoid misleading claims.  Participants from the United States, Europe, Mexico and China discussed regional differences in approaches and the importance of consumer perception in the determination of whether a claim is useful or misleading, as well as the impact that symbols, images and colors can have on that determination.

“Even a widely recognized symbol like the mobius loop (left), the three arrows that follow each other in a triangle, does not necessarily communicate something universally understood by consumers,” noted seminar moderator and expert Sheila Millar of Keller and Heckman.  “When a consumer sees this loop, what do they infer about the product?  That it has been recycled?  Is recyclable?  Or both?”

ICC’s Framework for Responsible Environmental Marketing Communication is a companion to the Consolidated ICC Code of Advertising and Marketing Communications, which sets forth general principles governing all marketing communications.  The framework offers more detailed interpretation of the environmental claims chapter of the general code.  As many national and regional codes are built on ICC’s codes, this interpretation can also be applied to national and regional marketing codes used by self-regulatory organizations to set best practices for business.

USCIB promotes international engagement and prudent regulation in support of open markets, competitiveness and innovation, sustainable development and corporate responsibility.  Its members include top U.S.-based global companies and professional services firms from every sector of the economy, and with operations in every region of the world.  With a unique global network encompassing leading international business organizations, including ICC, USCIB provides business views to policy makers and regulatory authorities worldwide, and works to facilitate international trade and investment.  More information is available at www.uscib.org.

Contacts:

Jonathan Huneke, VP Communications, USCIB
+1 212.703.5043 or jhuneke@uscib.org

Dawn Chardonnal, ICC Communications Dept.
+33 1 49.53.29.07 or dcl@iccwbo.org

ICC Framework on Environmental Marketing Claims

More on USCIB’s Marketing and Advertising Committee

ICC website

USCIB Interview with the OECD Deputy Secretary General Richard Boucher

USCIB Interview:

OECD Deputy Secretary General Richard Boucher

The OECD’s Richard Boucher (center) with BIAC Chairman Charles Heeter (right) and USCIB’s Tim Deal.
The OECD’s Richard Boucher (center) with BIAC Chairman Charles Heeter (right) and USCIB’s Tim Deal.

Ambassador Richard Boucher, a career U.S. diplomat, was named deputy secretary general of the 30-nation Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development in November.  (Chile will become the OECD’s 31st member once its legislature ratifies accession.)  From 2006 to 2009, Ambassador Boucher served as assistant secretary of state for South and Central Asia, following upon a seven-year stint as assistant secretary for public affairs during which time he crafted the U.S. public approach on key world issues for three secretaries of state.

Ambassador Boucher, who has been tasked with spearheading the OECD’s enhanced engagement and accession processes, sat down for an interview with USCIB in Washington, D.C., earlier this month.  Participants included Charles P. Heeter, Jr. (Deloitte), chairman of the Business and Industry Advisory Committee (BIAC) to the OECD, Timothy E. Deal, USCIB’s senior vice president for Washington, Jonathan Huneke, USCIB’s vice president for communications and public affairs, and Jill Schuker, director of the OECD’s Washington office.

Q: What brought you to the OECD?

I’ve always had a tangential relationship with the OECD, from my early days in the State Department’s Economic Bureau.  I worked on Chinese economic reform throughout my career.  And the last couple years I spent working with India, including economic subjects such as an investment treaty.  I’ve had a career in international economics, even though I’ve often deviated from that to do public affairs or other things.  So one of the things that appealed to me at the OECD  was this is the organization that knows the most about how economies work, and that at a moment when we’re all scratching our heads again, and talking about how economies should work better, this was the place to be.

Q: What from your background have you brought with you to the OECD?

A sort of world-wide view.  Whether it was public affairs or some of the other jobs that I’ve done, I’ve worked in all major areas of the world.  I’ve tried to maintain a global outlook.  So what I’d like to get from the OECD is the perspective on how economies work around the world.  And what I’d like to bring to the OECD is to keep the global picture in mind, and to make sure that we stay relevant on a global scale.

Q: How do you explain the OECD’s relevance to Americans, especially business people?

It’s relevant on a bunch of different levels.  Whether it’s chemical standards or tax treaties, or international bribery standards, it has a direct effect on how business operates, and how economies operate around the world.  It’s the place where policy experts come together.  And it’s where people who are doing regulation – in taxes, financial services, corporate governance –come together and compare experiences.  They try to come up with best practices, standards and policies.   It’s founded on experience, on what works.  And if we want a world that’s based on real experience and not theory, I think the OECD is the best place to share that experience and come up with answers to the problems we all face in managing economies, managing companies.

Q: With the G8 giving way to the G20 as the primary high-level forum for global economic discussion, what is the role of the OECD?

We don’t know for sure.  As the G8 evolves, as the G20 evolves, the OECD is going to evolve as well.  What we’ve found so far is because we have the expertise, the shared policy experience of now 31 OECD members, and a substantial outreach effort to the bigger economies around the world, those organizations turn to the OECD and say, for example, “We need to look at fossil fuel subsidies, can you help us?”  And, the answer is yes, we can help do that.  Interested in innovation strategies?  Well, that’s something the OECD is working on already and bringing countries together.  Interested in labor?  We’re working with the International Labor Organization on putting together a G20 ministerial on labor.  We’ve got expertise in all these different areas, and we can develop new expertise as needed.  And I think we’ll see people turn to us.  That doesn’t mean we’re the only ones.  Obviously, the IMF has a role, the World Bank has a role, the Financial Stability Board has a role, because there are financial issues and regulatory issues or development issues.  But I think the core of economic management is at the OECD, as are the social impacts.  How do you deal with some of the jobs and the employment problems caused by the crisis?  How do you reestablish the structural potential of economies that might have been lost during the crisis?  Those are issues we can help people with, bring people together.  So what we’ll find is that these organizations turn to us in areas that we have the particular expertise or can develop it quickly, and they’ll turn to others where others have the expertise, and hopefully all this will work pretty well together.

Q: What can you tell us about the OECD’s accession and enhanced engagement efforts?

Chile is the first of probably four economies in the next six months that will come in.  And Chile has done a bang-up job getting ready for membership, not only adjusting its own economy to meet the highest possible standards of economic management, but also bringing something to the table.  We will learn a lot from Chile. We’ll look at Chile’s pension plans to enrich our understanding of aging societies.  Slovenia, Estonia and Israel also seem to be on track.  A couple more meetings and committees have to discuss the issues, but it looks like we’ll have them in by next June.  Russia’s on a slower timetable.  We all know there’s a lot for Russia to do.  The fact that they’re interested in accession is good.  I think it’s good for everybody in the business world.  The more Russia does to bring itself in line with global standards, the better off we all are.  They sent a very substantial delegation to the bribery meeting that was held in December, which is great.  Everybody knows they’ve got a long way to go.  But the fact that they’re serious and showing serious interest, that’s good for all of us.  And the more they do, the better we all are.

Beyond that, we’ve got five enhanced engagement countries that we’re actively working with: China, India, Indonesia, Brazil and South Africa.  And those are countries that have substantial weight in the world economy, that need to have substantial input into future world standards and best practices.  We need their understanding to enrich our discussion.  And we bring a lot to them as they face policy choices.  How do different countries do these things?  That’s what we can share with them.  So my job is to “enhance” the enhanced engagement as much as we can, make it meaningful to those countries and to us.  Beyond that, there is a broader outreach, to the Middle East, North Africa, Latin America, Southeast Asia, other places where OECD experience can contribute to countries that want to develop market economies, but where we can also learn from them as they face different development challenges.   How they’re going about it, what they’re trying to do, and how some of them are succeeding.

Q: In Latin America, Chile is in line to join the OECD, and of course OECD Secretary General Angel Gurría is from Mexico.  Has that increased the organization’s influence in the region?

The fact that we have Latin American members means we now have a different kind of experience coming in.  As I said, Chile brings some really unique experience to the table.  So does Mexico.  It means that there are things for others to aspire to in the region.  Others can look at those countries and say, “Hey, they got their act together and did it right, maybe we should too.”  We’ve got programs with Argentina, Brazil and others.  We need to show people in the region that the market route works.

Q: BIAC has observer members in nearly all of the enhanced engagement countries as well as in the accession countries.  Can this network be helpful to you?

What we look to BIAC for generally is even more important in the enhanced engagement countries: What are the challenges people are facing?  What are the problems, and how are they trying to solve them?  It’s business people from those countries who, on a very practical level, must contend with unemployment insurance, or pension schemes or economic regulations.  Also BIAC members who operate in these countries know the problems we need to solve in different places.  Countries say “We want to be more competitive, we want to have a better investment environment.”  Well, if we’re going to help countries achieve a better investment environment, you know the investors, as well as the host countries, the recipients.  So that’s where the rubber meets the road.

Q: What specifically is involved in OECD accession?  What do countries have to do to make the grade?

Each of the OECD’s 20-odd major committees goes through the practices of the country in its particular area of expertise.  The tax people go through tax practices, bribery people go through what steps they take on bribery.  And in areas where they think the country ought to do more to come up to standards – for example, passing intellectual property legislation, as has happened in one or two of the present accession candidates – they say, “Look, we’ll give you a positive recommendation if you do this.”  The speed of accession is governed by the speed with which they are able to come through on those things.  So just the process of accession has led to upgrading the quality of law and implementation.  OECD doesn’t just say “You’ve got to pass these laws,” but “You’ve got to show us you can implement them, too.”  A lot of really important social issues come through it as well.  Enhanced engagement is more with a view to possible membership.  We would love those countries to come in, but they’re going to come in when they’re ready.  And what we need to do in the meantime is, as I said, make it meaningful for us and make it meaningful for them, meaning that when we have policy discussions we benefit from their experience, and when they face policy choices they get the benefit of our experience and our expertise.  If you go back 30, 40 years, the OECD was at least 80 percent, if not more, of the word’s GDP.  If we’re going to be the world’s premiere economic management organization, we’ve got to have that relationship with the countries that now constitute a significant portion of the world’s GDP.

Q: One USCIB member referred to China’s enhanced engagement as a “regulatory shopping cart,” meaning the OECD provides a supermarket of sorts where countries can choose the polices that best fit their needs.  Is this how it works?

Well, if you’ll forgive the analogy, we don’t do enhanced engagement like a Chinese menu, where you’ve got to chose one from column A and one from column B.  It is indeed more like a supermarket, where you go in and say “What do I need today?”  It has a lot to do with the state of your economy.  But it also has a lot to do with what you’re trying to accomplish.  If you’re trying to attract investment, build long-term stability, go through structural reforms and changes, address currency issues, then you tend to go in the aisles where those products are.

Q: You have a unique perspective, having been in the government at high levels for a number of years, and then going into the OECD.  What’s your perspective on how the OECD figures in U.S. policy making?  Is it an important organization?

I think it’s always been important.  It’s always been a part of our international economic picture.  Where I think it’s becoming more important is on the domestic economy.  We’re facing some fairly big economic challenges, and the people who are making domestic economic policy want to know what are other countries doing right now.  I was really struck when we had a full-day review of Chinese economic policy.  They face a lot of problems that are unique to their situation.  But they also face the question of pulling back on the stimulus and going to more demand-led growth.  At what point do we all have to slow down the expansion of monetary policy and credit in order to avoid inflation?  How do they start unwinding state ownership?  They face a lot of the same questions as we do.  And I think we have policy makers here who understand we face a lot of the questions that others do.  That doesn’t mean we’re going to grab somebody else’s method and use it.  But you can learn from people’s experience without trying to mimic their ways.  And I think this administration has a commitment to looking at the global picture.  That means that the OECD is a very important organization to face those challenges.

Q: Has the fact that the economic downturn was so heavily centered in the United States and Western Europe led some countries to question the value of open markets or some of the other things the OECD stands for?

Not fundamentally.  It’s interesting to look at people’s reaction to the crisis around the world.  There are a few places that say, “We were protected because we were protectionists,” but not that many.   Everybody’s wary.  Everybody remembers the experience of the 1930s, or at least learned about it in school.   And so one of the things on the G20 agenda is to watch out for trade and investment protectionism.  We’re also learning to look for it in more subtle forms.  I think countries by and large are committed to the global market economy, but they’re all watching each other pretty carefully.  But the fundamental issue of markets, market incentives, tracking investment, developing jobs, productivity, technology, education, better labor policies, better competition – nobody’s really questioning those.  They still believe that getting better at the fundamentals of economic management is the way to satisfy your population.

Q: How is OECD managing the planned revision of its guidelines for multinational enterprises?

We just had a big forum with a lot of corporate, NGO and labor input on where we go on the guidelines.  I found it interesting; it was my first real introduction to the area, and there was enormous attendance and enthusiasm.  Many pointed out the similarity of interests of local and international businesses in a given economy, the fundamental importance of national treatment, and that you may need guidelines that can apply to everybody.  Companies want to be contributors to the long-term health of economies and societies.  And so having a standard set of rules, a standard set of guidelines for everyone really does benefit everybody.  We’d like to see everyone adopt more or less the same practices.  We did that with the anti-bribery convention, and I think that was a very successful all around.

Q: The OECD convention on bribery just marked its tenth anniversary, correct?

Yes, and the history of that is very illustrative.  When we passed the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, U.S. companies had restrictions on them that nobody else did.  Now we’ve come out a lot better because everybody is meeting certain standards.  As new countries join the convention, that makes it better for business and for the countries themselves.  I read that the Chinese government put out a report saying there was $35 billion in illicit payments in China last year.  We now are moving to another level not just of recommendations, but of implementation and review.  Countries will be reviewed for not just whether they passed a law but whether they’re carrying it out.  It makes the business environment, the economic environment, and frankly the political environment so much more healthy in countries to have the process underway.  It’s gone global, beyond the OECD, to a huge number of countries.

Q: Should the OECD be doing more treaty-making?

There are definitely a lot of areas where it doesn’t have to be treaty-making, but rather standard-setting.  And sometimes maybe it’s just experience-sharing.  But sometimes taking these things global really makes sense.  Corporate guidelines would be an example, where perhaps we should try to have an international standard there that everyone can adhere to.  Or on taxes, an area where the OECD has informed and helped create the international standard, but it’s also gotten bigger than us.  I think there are a number of areas where we ought to do that to some extent, looking for advice from BIAC and others – what are the areas that would be most meaningful?  And that’s where the work we do with big economies outside the OECD – with China, India, Brazil, South Africa, Indonesia, and Russia – can be really important, because this lets them get involved in the setting of future standards.  They complain sometimes, “Why should we be expected to meet standards we didn’t have a hand in making?”  It’s in our interest to have them involved in standard setting.

Q: What is the OECD’s involvement in the climate change debate?

I think energy and climate change is one of the most interesting areas we’re involved in.  We’ve already done a lot of work on green growth.  Everybody wants to know how to manage an economy so that it grows greener over time and is sustainable.  How do you measure economic success?  It’s more than GDP.  It’s the ability to sustain the viability of your economy and population over time.  We had a big meeting in Busan, Korea last fall on this.  So a lot of these pieces come together – green growth, innovation, structural reform, measuring progress, and a number of other things – into the idea that people want to manage their economies better for the long term.  I think the OECD has a lot to contribute, and is a good place for countries to get together to discuss, what kind of taxes work on energy, what kind of cap-and-trade systems work, what ways are there to give the right incentives to grow greener rather than just making rules about it.

Q: What’s the role of the International Energy Agency in all this?

There’s an incredible amount of expertise to draw on in a symbiotic relationship with the IEA.  They have the annual World Energy Outlook, they have real experts in the use and development of energy, and we have a lot of the expertise on how that filters into the rest of the economy, and how you build your economy in the future.  Having the IEA as part of this is a good way to look at the mandates that we’re getting from governments, which is: tell us how to grow greener without losing our growth potential.

Q: Last question: What can business do to make your life easier?

Give me ideas I can steal.  Really, I think we’re all looking for good ideas these days.  And tell us what we should be doing.  We’ve got to be an organization that responds to the needs of our constituents – member countries, non-member countries, business, labor.  Everybody who’s working on the world economy these days needs to come forward with ideas and on things we ought to look at together.

More on the Business and Industry Advisory Committee to the OECD

Brochure: The OECD Means Business

OECD website

Copenhagen Leaves Critical Business Unfinished USCIB Urges A Return to Priorities

USCIB urges a return to priorities

3960_image002New York, N.Y., December 22, 2009 – The United States Council for International Business (USCIB) acknowledges the recent Copenhagen climate conference as an important step towards a truly global, cooperative post-2012 framework, pending the clear expression of commitments and mitigation actions.  However, U.S. companies are disappointed that the UN process has not yet delivered a more ambitious agreement.

“For American business, reaching a clear, ambitious, inclusive and legally binding agreement is a critical economic and environmental priority,” said Norine Kennedy, USCIB’s vice president for environment and energy.  “While governments in Copenhagen provided a basis for further work, much remains to be done in 2010 to deliver the clarity, flexibility and enabling frameworks that business has long advocated.”

USCIB joins the International Chamber of Commerce, the world business body that coordinated industry representation in Copenhagen, in calling on governments to focus on economic and technological priorities when they return to the table in 2010.

“There is major work ahead in setting out detailed elements, in particular those aimed at making the monitoring, reporting and verification processes operational,” according to ICC Secretary General Jean Rozwadowski.

For USCIB, critical elements in a post-2012 global framework on climate change involve investment, technology, trade and intellectual property rights.

“International trade is a proven path to economic growth and technological advancement,” according to USCIB President and CEO Peter M. Robinson.  “As countries trade more, they grow richer and have additional resources to devote to environmental protection.  Both industrialized and developing countries have a clear stake in coordinated action to open markets, stimulate private investment and tackle global warming.”

Mr. Robinson and Ms. Kennedy joined USCIB members in attending the Copenhagen conference.  USCIB organized a side event, titled “Trade, Investment and Climate Change – Synergies for Economic Growth and Environmental Progress,” to underscore the American business community’s strong commitment to positive and mutually reinforcing outcomes in global climate and trade negotiations.

Technological innovation and deployment are indispensable to climate mitigation and adaptation.  Throughout the two-week conference, U.S. business contributed ideas and solutions to address the climate challenge, including at events like Copenhagen Business Day and the Bright Green Exhibition.

“U.S. companies have already taken substantial action to reduce greenhouse gas emissions,” stated Ms. Kennedy.  “With post-2012 clarity, predictability and flexibility through a global framework agreement, more can be accomplished.”

According to ICC’s Mr. Rozwadowski, there is a greater need than ever for business to work with governments to help rapidly advance decisions made in Copenhagen, in order to establish the terms and procedures that will give business the predictability it requires to plan, innovate and invest.

“We hope to see the creation of more innovative ways for the UNFCCC to benefit from business expertise and actions as governments resume their crucial work in 2010,” he said.

USCIB promotes international engagement and prudent regulation in support of open markets, competitiveness and innovation, sustainable development and corporate responsibility.  Its members include top U.S.-based global companies and professional services firms from every sector of the economy, and with operations in every region of the world.  With a unique global network encompassing leading international business organizations, including ICC, USCIB provides business views to policy makers and regulatory authorities worldwide, and works to facilitate international trade and investment.

Contact:

Jonathan Huneke, VP Communications, USCIB
+1 212.703.5043 or jhuneke@uscib.org

ICC website

More on USCIB’s Environment Committee

Open Trade Is Essential for Successful Action on Climate

Trade can help make a greener world.
Trade can help make a greener world.

Copenhagen and New York, December 16, 2009 – What do the UN climate talks and the stalled Doha Round of trade negotiations have in common, apart from seemingly mind-numbing complexity?  Answer: Success in both will be essential for global sustainable development.  So says the head of an industry group representing top U.S. multinationals.

“International trade is a proven path to economic growth and technological advancement,” according to Peter M. Robinson, president and CEO of the United States Council for International Business (USCIB).  “As countries trade more, they grow richer and have additional resources to devote to environmental protection.  Both industrialized and developing countries have a clear stake in coordinated action to open markets and tackle global warming.”

So do companies, which is one reason USCIB members and other business representatives gathered yesterday with UN negotiators for a key side event in Copenhagen. The invitation-only event, titled “Trade, Investment and Climate Change – Synergies for Economic Growth and Environmental Progress,” sought to underscore the American business community’s strong commitment to positive and mutually reinforcing outcomes in global climate and trade negotiations.

“We want to highlight the positive relationship of open trade and investment with technology and financing for climate solutions,” said Mr. Robinson.  “Reaching a comprehensive WTO agreement that lowers trade barriers would boost investment and innovation in climate-friendly technologies.  On the other hand, if trade and climate are set against each another, the result would be to fuel protectionism and complicate the already difficult task of forging a global consensus on climate.”

Even now, said Mr. Robinson, too many countries are leaning toward using trade as a “hammer” to force countries to follow a specific path on reducing emissions of greenhouse gases.  “This temptation must be resisted,” he stated.”  “We need more carrots, and fewer sticks.”

Freeing up trade in environmental goods and services would give a boost to curbing global warming.  A 2007 World Bank study found that removing tariffs and non-tariff barriers in 18 of the high-emitting developing countries for four basic clean energy technologies (wind, solar, clean coal and efficient lighting) could lower the costs of these technologies by 13 percent, which could help reduce emissions significantly.

“What’s more, it is clear that these reductions could be further augmented through better management practices and technical know-how, both of which tend to follow in trade’s wake,” according to Mr. Robinson, who is attending the climate conference under the banner of USCIB’s global affiliate, the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC), which is coordinating business and industry representation in Copenhagen.

USCIB promotes international engagement and prudent regulation in support of open markets, competitiveness and innovation, sustainable development and corporate responsibility.  Its members include top U.S.-based global companies and professional services firms from every sector of the economy, and with operations in every region of the world.  With a unique global network encompassing leading international business organizations, including ICC, USCIB provides business views to policy makers and regulatory authorities worldwide, and works to facilitate international trade and investment.  More information is available at www.uscib.org.

Contact:

Jonathan Huneke, VP Communications, USCIB
+1 212.703.5043 or jhuneke@uscib.org

ICC website (includes related news from Copenhagen summit)

More on USCIB’s Environment Committee

More on USCIB’s Trade and Investment Committee

How Technology Can Be Marshaled to Tackle Climate Change

The fruits of innovation must be fostered and safeguarded to unleash new climate technologies.
The fruits of innovation must be fostered and safeguarded to unleash new climate technologies.

Copenhagen and New York, N.Y., December 14, 2009 – Over the next 25 years, global population is expected to rise by 1.5 billion, to 8 billion, while economic output doubles.  In that same period, worldwide energy demand will increase by 50 percent.  How can technology keep pace and still meet ambitious goals for addressing climate change?

Unleashing innovation is key, according to the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC), which will today hold a side event at the UN climate conference focused on the need to implement sound policies to spur a technological revolution to tackle global warming.  ICC representatives say getting the policy mix right will be crucial, while making the wrong choices would set back warming efforts significantly, making future drastic action all the more likely.

“Business is the primary source of climate-related innovation, but in many cases it can’t act alone,” according to Peter M. Robinson, president and CEO of the United States Council for International Business (USCIB), ICC’s American national committee, who is attending the Copenhagen conference under ICC’s banner.  “Companies often form alliances with governments, universities and research institutions in any number of areas.  These public-private partnerships can be crucial in leveraging resources and benefits, and this is clearly the case with climate-related technologies.”

ICC is coordinating business representation at the Copenhagen conference.  With hundreds of thousands of member companies in over 130 countries, the Paris-based body works closely with the United Nations and other intergovernmental organizations on behalf of the business community.  A network of ICC national committees, including USCIB, represent the world business organization’s views to their governments.

According to Mr. Robinson, the most efficient way to commercialize government and academic research is to transfer or license patents to the private sector, thereby creating an incentive for companies to invest the necessary funds to bring technologies to market.

“Governments should increase funding for basic research into in environmental and energy technologies, and they must also maintain policies that encourage innovation and the dissemination of new solutions,” he said.

Protecting intellectual property rights is critical, according to Norine Kennedy, USCIB’s vice president for environment and energy, who urged UN negotiators to avoid the temptation to water down intellectual property rights under the misconception that this may speed developing countries’ access to key climate technology.

“When governments look at potential mechanisms to encourage technology transfer, they need to avoid measures that would create additional burdens and legal uncertainty for the owners of intellectual property,” Ms. Kennedy stated.  “When coupled with increased government incentives and development assistance, existing international rules covering intellectual property rights should be sufficient to ensure that advanced technologies are deployed swiftly to address climate change.”

USCIB promotes international engagement and prudent regulation in support of open markets, competitiveness and innovation, sustainable development and corporate responsibility.  Its members include top U.S.-based global companies and professional services firms from every sector of the economy, and with operations in every region of the world.  With a unique global network encompassing leading international business organizations, including ICC, USCIB provides business views to policy makers and regulatory authorities worldwide, and works to facilitate international trade and investment.

Contact:

Jonathan Huneke, VP Communications, USCIB
+1 212.703.5043 or jhuneke@uscib.org

ICC website (with links to recent statements)

More on USCIB’s Environment Committee

US Business Submits Detailed Recommendations on Climate Financing

3952_image002Copenhagen and New York, N.Y., December 9, 2009 – With some $10 trillion needed to fund improvements in global energy infrastructure by 2030, according to the International Energy Agency, financial measures to spur action on global warming are among the most contentious topics at the UN climate talks.  Against this backdrop, a leading U.S. industry group has put forward recommendations to leverage public and private funds for climate adaptation and mitigation.

The United States Council for International Business (USCIB), which represents top American multinationals, this week submitted a paper on public and private finance for climate change to U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner.  In a cover letter, USCIB President and CEO Peter M. Robinson said that available funding mechanisms for climate change “have been slow, narrow in scope and difficult to access.”

USCIB said the role of public finance should be to leverage private-sector investment in developing nations.  “In many cases, the most effective use of public finance will be to leverage and enable action by the private sector,” stated Ann Condon, director of environmental health and safety with General Electric and chair of USCIB’s Environment Committee.  “It should also seek to lower some of the risks associated with business activities and investments, particularly in developing countries or in connection with new technologies.”

USCIB’s global affiliate, the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC), is coordinating business and industry representation at the Copenhagen climate conference.  ICC is putting forward its own recommendations to UN negotiators on improving the global financial framework to more effectively tackle climate change.  These will be explored at a side event in Copenhagen today.  Mr. Robinson and a number of executives from USCIB member companies are attending the climate conference under the ICC umbrella.

“The private sector responds to specific signals,” noted Mr. Robinson.  “The goal should be to mobilize financial and technological resources in developed nations for deployment in the developing world, primarily through private investment.  This means that both home and host countries must implement the appropriate policies and incentives to spur innovation and investment.”

Mr. Robinson said the recent global economic crisis highlighted the need for cooperative international action to develop appropriate policy and financial incentives.  “We need to apply those lessons to the climate challenge,” he stated.

USCIB promotes international engagement and prudent regulation in support of open markets, competitiveness and innovation, sustainable development and corporate responsibility.  Its members include top U.S.-based global companies and professional services firms from every sector of the economy, and with operations in every region of the world.  With a unique global network encompassing leading international business organizations, including ICC, USCIB provides business views to policy makers and regulatory authorities worldwide, and works to facilitate international trade and investment.  More information is available at www.uscib.org.

Contact:

Jonathan Huneke, VP Communications, USCIB
+1 212.703.5043 or jhuneke@uscib.org

USCIB statement on effective public and private finance for international cooperative action on climate change

More on USCIB’s Environment Committee

USCIB’s Carnet Service Reaches Out to Smaller Exporters

3951_image002Building on four decades of U.S. growth, the Carnet service is broadening awareness and use among smaller companies of “merchandise passports,” which enable exporters and global companies to avoid paying duties and taxes on goods taken abroad temporarily for trade shows, product demonstrations and as professional equipment.

The Carnet system celebrated its 40th anniversary in the United States in 2009.  According to Cynthia Duncan, USCIB’s senior vice president for Carnet operations, the goal in the current small-business push is to help create jobs by getting exports growing again.  “Trade is essential for our economy to prosper, and ATA Carnets can make it easier for smaller companies to make inroads into overseas markets,” she observed.

Addressing USCIB’s October 8 Annual Dinner, U.S. Commerce Secretary Gary Locke extolled the virtues of the Carnet program, saying it fit closely with the Obama administration’s goal of creating a whole new generation of U.S. exporters.

“Right now, U.S. companies aren’t anywhere near maximizing their export potential,” Mr. Locke said.  “Ninety-seven percent of U.S. exporters are small- and medium-size businesses, but they only account for 30 percent of export value.  Meanwhile, of all the American businesses that export, 58 percent export to only one country.  We can do a lot better.  We’re looking forward to working with the Council to help educate U.S. companies about the ATA Carnet system.”

In September, building on an agreement signed earlier this year with the U.S. Department of Commerce, Amanda Barlow, USCIB’s Carnet development manager, provided training in the use of Carnets to the department’s Trade Information Center.  In early November, ATA Carnet exhibited at the 2009 National District Export Council conference in Washington, D.C., where information sessions and events addressed the importance of lifting trade sanctions for American businesses to thrive.

Ms. Barlow continued outreach and training for U.S. Export Assistance Centers around the country. At the Northern Kentucky International Trade Association’s Trade Education seminar, she spoke about how Carnets can save American businesses time and money when implementing exporting or growing their current export market share.

Staff contact: Amanda Barlow

More on USCIB’s ATA Carnet Export Service

Commerce Department export assistance center (www.export.gov)

Multinationals Applaud US Effort to Secure Global Participation on Climate

In letter to president, USCIB urges ambitious agreement, support for innovation

President Obama with Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh: Participation by countries like India is crucial for a global climate agreement to succeed. (White House Photo)
President Obama with Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh: Participation by countries like India is crucial for a global climate agreement to succeed. (White House Photo)

New York, N.Y., December 4, 2009 – As nations prepare to gather in Copenhagen for crucial global climate talks, a leading U.S. industry group said the Obama administration’s leadership has put an ambitious and workable agreement within reach.

In a letter to President Obama, the United States Council for International Business (USCIB), which represents America’s top global companies, said it believes the administration’s leadership over the past year “has made a difference.“

USCIB’s president and CEO, Peter M. Robinson, wrote: “The innovative and collaborative approaches of the United States have been instrumental in progress made” since the 2007 climate conference in Bali, which set the stage for the final push toward a post-2012 global framework on climate change.

Mr. Robinson wrote that U.S. leadership had moved the UN climate talks forward in areas that are central to U.S. business objectives.  These include obtaining an inclusive global agreement with action by all major emitting nations, support for intellectual property rights to speed the development of new technologies, and “robust and ambitious national strategies” to address global warming.

The statement came as business representatives from around the world prepare to converge on the Copenhagen talks.  USCIB’s global affiliate, the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC), is once again coordinating business and industry representation.  Mr. Robinson will lead a delegation of USCIB members attending the conference.

ICC yesterday released the results of a survey indicating upbeat business expectations for a future, greener global economy.  Depending on their region, between 60 and 78 percent of industry experts surveyed around the world agreed that the transition to a low carbon economy would bring new opportunities to businesses in addition to cost reductions.

In its letter to President Obama, USCIB identified financing as a critical element in the negotiations.  “From a business perspective, the available funding mechanisms relevant to climate change have been slow, narrow in scope and difficult to access,” the letter stated.  USCIB said it had offered concrete suggestions to Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner on how public funding options could be shaped to increase their effectiveness, and to create synergies with private finance.

“In many cases, the most effective use of public finance will be to leverage and enable action by the private sector,” stated Ann Condon, director of environmental health and safety with General Electric and chair of USCIB’s Environment Committee.  “It should also seek to lower some of the risks associated with business activities and investments, particularly in developing countries or in connection with new technologies.”

The pro-trade group also said that post-Copenhagen negotiations “should engage business as much as possible, and far more than in the past.”  USCIB said it hopes to see the creation of more effective ways for UN negotiators to benefit from American business expertise “through opportunities to collaboratively define mitigation and adaptation to climate change, and effective policies to promote them.”

USCIB promotes international engagement and prudent regulation in support of open markets, competitiveness and innovation, sustainable development and corporate responsibility.  Its members include top U.S.-based global companies and professional services firms from every sector of the economy, and with operations in every region of the world.  With a unique global network encompassing leading international business organizations, including ICC, USCIB provides business views to policy makers and regulatory authorities worldwide, and works to facilitate international trade and investment.  More information is available at www.uscib.org.

Contact:

Jonathan Huneke, VP Communications, USCIB
+1 212.703.5043 or jhuneke@uscib.org

 

USCIB letter to President Obama

More on the ICC survey

More on USCIB’s Environment Committee