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

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

 

 

Survey Reveals Business Optimistic on Low-Carbon Transition

3948_image002Paris and New York, December 3, 2009 – The vast majority of business experts polled in a worldwide survey believe the transition to a low-carbon economy will bring about new opportunities for many businesses in their country, and think clear and transparent guidelines would help companies innovate and invest in technologies designed to meet the challenges of climate change.

The poll, conducted among more than a thousand economists and other experts in 86 countries in October, was part of the quarterly World Economic Survey conducted by the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) and Germany’s Ifo Institute for Economic Research.

The Paris-based ICC is the largest, most representative private sector association in the world, with hundreds of thousands of member companies in over 130 countries.  The United States Council for International Business (USCIB), based in New York, serves as ICC’s American national committee.

Asked whether the transition to a low carbon economy will bring new opportunities to businesses in addition to cost reductions, 78 percent of respondents in Western Europe either agreed strongly or agreed with the statement. The figures for the other regions were as follows: Asia (71%), South Africa (69%), Near East (68%), Central and Eastern Europe (66%), Commonwealth of Independent States (64%), North America, which comprises Canada and the United States (63%), and Central and Latin America (62%). Sixty percent agreed or strongly agreed in Oceania.

“Although the spread of non-polluting products and services will bring new economic opportunities all over the world, there are still significant obstacles to innovation because of lack of legislative and regulatory guidelines,” the report said.

A second question asked the economic experts whether they believe that transparent guidelines would help businesses in their country innovate and invest in environmentally-friendly technologies to meet the challenges of climate change. The response was overwhelmingly positive in all regions of the world.

Oceania led the way with 100 percent of respondents saying they agreed or strongly agreed that transparent guidelines would lead to innovation and investment. Asia was second with 91 percent, followed by 89 percent in both Western Europe and North America, 87 percent in Central and Latin America and in South Africa, 86 percent in Central and Eastern Europe, 82 percent in the CIS countries and 80 percent in the Near East.

“The response to this ICC special question explicitly demonstrated that economists worldwide agree that it is highly important to coordinate economic measures and policies to meet the challenges of climate change,” the report concluded.

ICC will lead business input at the UN climate change conference in Copenhagen later this month as the official business and industry focal point, and will present a wide range of business solutions through other activities in the Copenhagen city centre. ICC is co-organizing the Copenhagen Business Day on December 11 with the World Business Council for Sustainable Development and the Confederation of Danish Industry to demonstrate firsthand how global business is leading action on 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.  More information is available at www.uscib.org

Contacts:

Jonathan Huneke, VP of Communications, USCIB
+1 212 703 5043 or jhuneke@uscib.org

Catherine Foster, ICC Communications Dept.
+33 1 4953 2822 or catherine.foster@iccwbo.org

ICC special question graphs

Full copy of the report

Fortune 500 Companies Join Together to Support Better Work

A program to improve labor standards and competitiveness in factories overseas

L-R: Rajan Kamalanathan (Walmart), Ayesha Barenblat (Business for Social Responsibility), Adam Greene (USCIB), Amanda Tucker (Nike), Laura Rubbo (The Walt Disney Company), Michael Kobori (Levi Strauss & Co.), Cambodian Minister of Commerce Cham Prasidh, Dan Henkle (GAP Inc.), Ros Harvey (Better Work program).
L-R: Rajan Kamalanathan (Walmart), Ayesha Barenblat (Business for Social Responsibility), Adam Greene (USCIB), Amanda Tucker (Nike), Laura Chapman Rubbo (The Walt Disney Company), Michael Kobori (Levi Strauss & Co.), Cambodian Minister of Commerce Cham Prasidh, Dan Henkle (GAP Inc.), Ros Harvey (Better Work program).

Washington, D.C., November 19, 2009 – Five of the biggest U.S. companies are backing an international program to improve compliance with labor standards and competitiveness in the factories where some of their products are made.

The five companies – Gap Inc., Levi Strauss & Co., Nike, Walmart and The Walt Disney Company – will collectively contribute more than $1 million to Better Work, a unique joint program of the International Labor Organization and the International Finance Corporation, the private-sector lending arm of the World Bank.  These contributions will support the development of assessment and training tools that will have direct impacts in supplier factories.

Better Work brings together governments, employers’ and workers’ organizations, and global companies to address working conditions in supplier factories.  The program assesses compliance with international labor standards and national labor laws, posts reports online and provides targeted remedial training to improve compliance with labor standards as well as the competitiveness of the factory.

The program has been very successful in applying an evidence-based approach to monitoring and improving working conditions in developing countries.  The successful Better Factories Cambodia project has resulted in high levels of compliance and improvements that have been sustained despite reduced exports.

Jane Stewart, director of the International Labor Organization’s New York office.

Better Work has expanded services to several other developing countries, where it has already benefited 1.2 million workers and their families by improving working conditions and compliance with labor standards and wage and hour laws.  More country programs are planned over the next five years, expanding the scope of Better Work’s collaborative approach to even more factories.

“Better Work is a perfect example of a public-private collaboration with measurable benefits,” stated Peter M. Robinson, president and CEO of the United States Council for International Business (USCIB), in announcing the decision today.  “By bringing all stakeholders together in a collaborative approach, Better Work is helping to create sustainable change.

“But more support is needed if the program is to have maximum effect.” Mr. Robinson said. “We call on other companies to join with us in financially supporting this great initiative.”

USCIB represents American business interests internationally, including in the ILO where it is the U.S. employer constituent, serves on the ILO Governing Body, and leads the U.S. employer delegation to the ILO’s annual International Labor Conference.  Most of the company contributions to Better Work will be administered by the United States Council Foundation.

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 our economy, with operations in every region of the world.  With a unique global network encompassing leading international business organizations, 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:

Adam Greene, USCIB, +1 (212) 703-5056, agreene@uscib.org

Louise Callagy, Gap Inc., press@gap.com

Kelley Benander, Levi Strauss & Co., +1 (415) 501-7598, kbenander@levi.com

Kate Meyers, Nike, +1 (503) 724 9086, Kate.Meyers@nike.com

Jami Lamontagne, Walmart, +1 (479) 273-4314, jami.lamontagne@wal-mart.com

Jonathan Friedland, The Walt Disney Company, +1 (818) 560-8306

Asia-Pacific Business Seeks Greater Transparency to Move Goods

L-R: Laurie Goldman of Levi Strauss & Co; Arrow Augerot of USTR and Raymond Yee of DHL
L-R: Laurie Goldman of Levi Strauss & Co; Arrow Augerot of USTR and Raymond Yee of DHL

Initiative to make trade information more widely available in the region discussed during APEC leaders’ meeting in Singapore

New York and Singapore, November 13, 2009 – Leading companies are urging governments throughout Asia and the Pacific to make their tariffs and related rules more transparent, saying this could provide a big boost to the region as trade rebounds from the past year’s severe drop-off.

To help draw attention to the complexity of trade in the region, the United States Council for International Business (USCIB) and other members of the U.S. APEC Business Coalition, organized a November 12 business discussion on the APEC Transparency Initiative on Tariffs and Preferential Rules of Origin during the APEC CEO Summit and Leaders Meeting in Singapore.

Failure to take advantage of the current “spaghetti bowl” of regional trade agreements can be costly, attendees agreed. Raymond Yee, vice president for Asia-Pacific customs and regulatory affairs with DHL Express, provided his perspective on sourcing within the region and the possible impact of this initiative on business. Planning related to trade agreements is a crucial yet complex process.  Company representatives recognize the need for the transparency initiative and believe it would facilitate trade by businesses of all sizes across the APEC region.

Proposed by the U.S. and Japan and endorsed by APEC trade ministers in July 2009, the APEC Transparency Initiative aims to help companies take advantage of the significant trade liberalization in the region.  Arrow Augerot, deputy assistant U.S. trade representative for APEC affairs, was on hand to discuss the initiative at the November 12 event.

“This initiative is very timely because the lack of publicly available information on tariffs and preferential rules of origin has made it difficult for companies to take full advantage of the many free trade agreements negotiated in the APEC region,” said Laurie Goldman, senior manager of worldwide government affairs and public policy with Levi Strauss & Co.  “What we are proposing is a central database that would be searchable and up-to-date.  We would like to review the initiative with the broader APEC business community, exploring how to integrate information from all APEC economies.”

APEC trade ministers have pledged to provide the public with up-to-date and accurate tariff and rules of origin information by the time of their next meeting in June 2010, and to develop an APEC-specific website on tariffs and rules of origin by next year’s APEC leaders meeting in November.

The National Center for APEC (NCAPEC) and the U.S.-ASEAN Business Council are co-chairs of the U.S. APEC Business Coalition, which encompasses many leading U.S. industry groups.

NCAPEC is the only U.S. business association focused exclusively on facilitating American private sector input to the APEC process. The National Center functions as a conduit for U.S. businesses into APEC by serving as the Secretariat for the three U.S. executives who are appointed members of the APEC Business Advisory Council.

The US-ASEAN Business Council is the premier advocacy organization for U.S. Businesses operating in Southeast Asia. The Council serves a select membership of companies, including 7 of the Fortune 10 and 20 of the Dow Jones 30 companies, from its headquarters in D.C. and its five regional offices.

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 our economy, with operations in every region of the world.  With a unique global network encompassing leading international business organizations, 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

More on the APEC Transparency Initiative and USCIB Involvement:
https://uscib.org/apectitrprofile-ud-3933

APEC CEO Summit Website:
http://www.apec2009.sg/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=100&catid=38

Co-Chairs of the U.S. APEC Business Coalition:
NCAPEC: http://www.ncapec.org
US-ASEAN Business Council: http://www.us-asean.org

Commerce Secretary: U.S. Must Reform Visa Export Control Policies

Addressing USCIB annual dinner, Locke hails International Chamber of Commerce on 90th anniversary

Commerce Secretary Gary Locke

New York, N.Y., October 9, 2009 – The United States must improve its business visa process and export control policies, both of which are hampering America’s global competitiveness, according to U.S. Secretary of Commerce Gary Locke.  He spoke last night at the annual dinner of the United States Council for International Business (USCIB), which represents America’s top global companies, at the Waldorf-Astoria in New York.

“The United States often makes it too difficult for foreign company executives to enter here to do business, a shortcoming that has a tangible cost for American business by shutting out some of their best customers.” stated Mr. Locke.

The commerce secretary called for an overhaul of the nation’s export control system, proposing that the need for dual-use export licenses be eliminated for U.S. allies and partner nations, and calling for fast-track procedures to review such licenses to other countries that do not pose a significant risk of proliferation.

“As more advances in science and technology occur in places like Europe, Russia and Asia, we are running the risk of preventing U.S. companies from participating in promising avenues of growth,” said Mr. Locke.  “That means more high-tech, high-paying jobs going abroad.”

The dinner honored the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC), the world business organization for which USCIB serves as American national committee.  Throughout 2009, ICC is marking its 90th anniversary, and the continued importance of its credo of “peace and prosperity through world trade,” with a series of celebrations around the world.

ICC Chairman Victor Fung

Reflecting on the current precarious state of global economic recovery, ICC Chairman Victor Fung, chairman of the Hong Kong-based Li & Fung Group, reiterated ICC’s longstanding call for governments to complete the Doha Round of global trade talks.

“We are not out of the woods yet,” he stated.  “Unemployment continues to rise in many countries, while many millions of people have fallen into poverty.  This is why it is all the more crucial to do everything we can to get economic growth going again.  One way we can do so is through trade.”

Christiane Amanpour, senior international correspondent with CNN, also spoke at the dinner.  She reflected on a career reporting from zones of conflict around the world, noting that both global business and the journalistic community sought to illuminate the sources of conflict so that these may be overcome.

In addition to the ICC anniversary, the USCIB dinner celebrated four decades of U.S. membership in the worldwide ATA Carnet system for temporary exports.  First introduced in the United States in 1969, Carnets are internationally recognized customs documents that allow for temporary duty-free, tax-free import of commercial samples, professional equipment and goods displayed at trade shows.

In June, USCIB signed a multi-year agreement with the Commerce Department to expand awareness of Carnets among small and medium-sized exporters.  USCIB, which issues and guarantees Carnets in the U.S., will work with the U.S. Commercial Service to develop educational and training programs, with the goal of expanding use of the innovative “merchandise passports.”

Previous ICC anniversary events have been held in Geneva, Paris and Kuala Lumpur.  The anniversary year will culminate with a high-level gathering of business leaders in New Delhi in December.  The USCIB dinner followed a lunch at the United Nations yesterday presided over by UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon.  ICC will also convene a two-day symposium at Harvard Business School starting today to assess the future of market capitalism.  More information on ICC and its 90th anniversary is available at www.icc90anniversary.org.

Based in Paris, with a network of national committees in some 90 countries, ICC has over the past nine decades represented business views to national governments and international organizations, while also establishing the world’s leading court of commercial arbitration and developing crucial rules for cross-border business activity in a variety of areas.

USCIB Chairman William G. Parrett lauded the vision of ICC’s founders.  “They called themselves the ‘merchants of peace,’” he said.  “Their conviction that commerce is a powerful force for good is as true now as it was nine decades ago.  Indeed, the long period of peace and growth since 1945, which has lifted hundreds of millions of people out of poverty, can be traced directly back to the vision” of those who founded ICC in 1919.

Secretary Locke congratulated ICC on its anniversary, calling it “a long-time advocate for the power of open markets to unlock human potential across the globe.”

“Your work has never been more important than it is now,” he said.  “During previous periods of economic difficulty, many governments, including that of the United States, have succumbed to the false comfort of turning inward and closing off markets.  We all need to be vigilant against the forces of protectionism.

“You have seen how trade can create jobs and growth, speed the delivery of transformative ideas and technology, and hasten democracy and the spread of freedom.  And that is a message all of us have a duty to spread, even if it isn’t always popular.”

About USCIB

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 our economy, with operations in every region of the world.  With a unique global network encompassing leading international business organizations, 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 (office), +1 917.420.0039 (mobile), jhuneke@uscib.org

 

More on USCIB’s Annual Dinner

Secretary Locke’s remarks

Remarks by ICC Chairman Victor Fung

ICC website

USCIB Welcomes New Agreement Between the U.S. Department of Commerce and ICANN

ICANN coordinates the Internet’s worldwide domain name and addressing system.
ICANN coordinates the Internet’s worldwide domain name and addressing system.

New York, N.Y., October 1, 2009 – The United States Council for International Business (USCIB), which represents America’s top global companies across every sector of the economy, welcomed the announcement by the U.S. Department of Commerce and the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) to institutionalize and affirm ICANN’s responsibilities as a multi-stakeholder, private sector-led organization to coordinate the Internet’s global domain name and addressing system.

The agreement, called the “Affirmation of Commitments,” marks a new period in the technical management of the domain name system (DNS) following the expiration of a Joint Project Agreement between the two parties on September 30.

“The U.S. business community has supported the ICANN model since its inception 11years ago, and we still do,” said USCIB President and CEO Peter M. Robinson. “The Affirmation of Commitments allows ICANN to continue to evolve, and cements the private sector-led model as a key enabler in appropriately guiding the organization in its limited, technical, but critical role in managing the Internet’s DNS.  We believe this will benefit global Internet users everywhere, including the businesses we represent, for whom the Internet is such a crucial infrastructure and commercial platform.”

“USCIB commends ICANN and the U.S. Department of Commerce on the commitments laid forth,” stated Art Reilly, chair of USCIB’s Information, Communications and Technology Policy Committee.  “It is important to preserve the security and stability of the system, and ensure that decisions are made in the global public interest, transparently and with sufficient accountability.   So is facilitating worldwide participation through International Domain Names.  The commitment by ICANN to inclusive decision-making, providing published rationale for decisions taken, and evaluation of the consequences of decisions, provides a solid framework for industry and the global community to positively engage in the development of the Internet.  Putting these commitments into practice will be the next big challenge for ICANN.”

As part of the agreement, ICANN pledges to establish review teams to regularly evaluate the progress it makes on its commitments.  These teams will be constituted jointly by ICANN leadership and the chair of ICANN’s Government Advisory Committee, and will include representatives from ICANN, governments, various stakeholder groups and independent experts.  Team recommendations will be subject to public comment, and ICANN will have six months to act on them.

“Business has long worked with and within ICANN in its technical function to sculpt an inclusive, vibrant, and open Internet,” said Mr. Robinson.  “We view industry representation on these review teams, and within ICANN generally, as vital in bringing business expertise into deliberations that will impact the continued evolution and success of the DNS and the Internet.  The internalization of review processes within ICANN is a positive step that should promote accountability to stakeholders like business and others, and dampen concerns about ICANN’s link to any one entity.”

USCIB looks forward to continued engagement with ICANN and the global community to ensure ongoing progress and success towards accountable, transparent and stable coordination of the Internet’s DNS.

About USCIB

The United States Council for International Business 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 our economy, with operations in every region of the world.  With a unique global network encompassing leading international business organizations, 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.

 

More on USCIB’s Information, Communications and Technology Policy Committee

ICANN website

USCIB Statement on the UN Global Leadership Forum on Climate Change

New York, N.Y., September 23, 2009 – The United States Council for International Business, which represents America’s top global companies, released the following statement today:

Quotes from USCIB President and CEO Peter M. Robinson:

“American companies are up to the climate challenge, and indeed would benefit from lower barriers to imports of environmental technologies abroad. The U.S. and other major governments in developed and developing countries must support the private sector’s proven ability to commercialize and disseminate the fruits of innovation. Open trade is an essential part of that formula.”

“It is possible to secure global prosperity while protecting the world’s climate, but only with strong and sensible leadership from all major parties. We hope that leadership to advance economic recovery and encourage greener solutions in a mutually supportive fashion will emerge between now and December.”

We welcome the initiative of United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon to energize political and societal will towards a balanced, strengthened and effective global post-2012 climate agreement.

Moreover, we are encouraged by other climate change initiatives at the multilateral, regional and national levels as well as a variety of public-private partnerships and voluntary initiatives.  These can help reinforce the ultimate goal of an effective, inclusive, long-term global framework governing post-2012 activities under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC).

Working primarily through the International Chamber of Commerce, USCIB is actively seeking a global framework that will provide energy access and security, while spurring technological innovation and the deployment of climate-friendly technologies to enable us to meet the common challenge of curtailing greenhouse gas emissions.  We are pleased with the remarkable degree of consensus around these key points.  Clearly, business is on board and will push hard for an effective global agreement on climate.

In our view, an ambitious and effective post 2012 framework agreement should:

  • Promote economic recovery, investment and employment as essential steps to respond to climate challenges, and respond to growing energy demand and lack of access to energy for development;
  • Include agreements on realistic and achievable mitigation objectives by all major-emitting countries, and the means to achieve them, compatible with national priorities and circumstances, while promoting maximum international cooperation;
  • Recognize the important role of markets in any cost-effective response to climate change, and enhance market-based approaches in conjunction with other policy instruments for more environmentally-sound investment;
  • Work in harmony with global commercial markets, trade and investment rules, and other fundamental international frameworks, and provide appropriate institutional and enabling frameworks to enhance development and deployment of technologies to address climate change;
  • Keep all energy options open, stimulate the broader use of existing energy-efficient and low-emission technologies to enable cost-effective reductions of GHG emissions, and protect intellectual property to underpin technology innovation, commerce and trade;
  • Put in place concerted, global support for research and development to increase the pace of commercialization and deployment for certain technologies;
  • Include a strong compliance regime, including timely and transparent reporting, and practical and effective approaches to measure, report and verify actions undertaken through national commitments;
  • Address adaptation needs, particularly in vulnerable developing countries, and create frameworks and governance structures to efficiently attract the necessary resources;
  • Work in concert with other critical priorities, notably energy supply and access for development, job creation, economic growth and trade liberalization.

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 our economy, 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

More on USCIB’s Environment Committee

International Chamber of Commerce website

Commerce Secretary to Address USCIB Annual Dinner

Event to celebrate 90th anniversary of International Chamber of Commerce

Commerce Secretary Gary Locke
Commerce Secretary Gary Locke

New York, N.Y., September 15, 2009 – U.S. Secretary of Commerce Gary Locke will be the keynote speaker at the October 8 annual dinner of the United States Council for International Business (USCIB), which represents America’s top global companies.  The event will be held at the Waldorf-Astoria in New York.

The dinner will celebrate the 90th anniversary of the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC), the world business organization that USCIB has represented since 1945, as part of a worldwide series of events commemorating the milestone.

“We are delighted that Secretary Locke will join us to provide his views on the challenges facing global business,” said USCIB Chairman William G. Parrett, retired global CEO of Deloitte.  “It is especially timely in view of the increasingly strong relationship between USCIB and the Department of Commerce.”

Other high-level speakers at the USCIB dinner will include ICC Chairman Victor Fung, chairman of the Hong Kong-based Li & Fung Group, and Bill Schneider, senior political analyst with CNN.  Members of ICC’s executive board, representing numerous countries, will join an audience of business leaders, government officials and representatives of the diplomatic community.  More information, including ticket and sponsorship pricing, is available at www.uscibgala.com.

World business organization marks an auspicious milestone

Based in Paris, with a network of national committees in some 90 countries, ICC was founded by far-sighted business executives after the First World War.  Over nine decades, it has represented business views to national governments and international organizations, while also establishing the world’s leading court of commercial arbitration and developing crucial rules for cross-border business activity in a variety of areas.

“ICC’s role has never been more vital or important than it is today,” according to USCIB President and CEO Peter M. Robinson.  “Now more than ever, at a time when concerted global action is needed to address the worldwide economic downturn as well as longer-term challenges like climate change, we need a vibrant and representative global business body that can act forcefully to speak on behalf of the private sector at the highest levels.”

ICC is celebrating its 90th anniversary throughout 2009 with a series of special events around the world, underscoring the continued importance of its core objective of securing peace and prosperity through trade.  This has included the launch of the ICC Research Foundation, which was established to provide intellectual leadership on public policy issues, with a focus on global trade and investment.  More information is available at www.icc90anniversary.com.

Innovative system for temporary exports also recognized

The USCIB dinner will also commemorate the 40th anniversary of U.S. membership in the worldwide ATA Carnet system for temporary exports, a key service of the pro-trade group.  First introduced in the United States in 1969, Carnets are internationally recognized customs documents that allow for temporary duty-free, tax-free import of commercial samples, professional equipment and goods displayed at trade shows.

In June, USCIB signed a multi-year agreement with the Commerce Department’s Commercial Service to expand awareness of ATA Carnets among the nation’s up-and-coming exporters.  USCIB, which issues and guarantees Carnets in the U.S., will work with the U.S. Commercial Service to develop educational and training programs for smaller companies, with the goal of expanding use of the innovative “merchandise passports.”

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 our economy, 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

More on USCIB’s 2009 Annual Dinner

International Chamber of Commerce website

Department of Commerce website

More on the ATA Carnet Export Service

ATA Carnet Service Reaching Out to the Export Community

Carnet representatives, Small Business Administration officials and Customs officers-ud-736-UD-736 at a USCIB briefing during World Trade Week
Carnet representatives, Small Business Administration officials and Customs officers-ud-736-UD-736 at a USCIB briefing during World Trade Week

With use of the ATA Carnet service for temporary exports declining along with overall U.S. trade, USCIB is taking a number of steps to strengthen the worldwide Carnet system, and we are reaching out to new partners to ensure it can rebound once the recession is over.

ATA Carnets are export documents that permit duty-free, tax-free entry of various types of goods into 65 countries and their territories for up to one year.  Overall, Carnet usage is down between 10 and 20 percent worldwide.  USCIB is doing its part to maintain the health of the global system despite the economic downturn.

On April 6 and 7, we hosted the meeting of the Executive Committee of the World ATA Carnet Countries  at our offices in Midtown Manhattan.  Topics for discussion included potential new member countries, including Brazil, promoting Carnet use worldwide, and the possible impact of the U.S. “10+2” rules. The meetings concluded with celebrating the 40th Anniversary of Carnets in the United States by enjoying a few of New York’s classic landmarks.

Carnets are especially useful for taking goods to overseas trade shows, for product demonstration and for transporting professional equipment.  The system is overseen by the World Customs Organization and the International Chamber of Commerce.  USCIB is the national guaranteeing association in the United States, and we issue Carnets for U.S. exporters directly from our New York headquarters and via a network of service providers nationwide.

USCIB’s Amanda Barlow at the National Customs Brokers conference
USCIB’s Amanda Barlow at the National Customs Brokers conference

Also in April, USCIB’s Amanda Barlow visited U.S. export assistance centers in Los Angeles and San Francisco, explaining how Carnets help U.S. exporters get their goods into foreign markets, while Christopher Gillard organized training sessions for some 80 U.S. Customs officers-ud-736-UD-736 at Los Angeles International Airport.  Meanwhile, USCIB exhibited for the third consecutive year at the National Customs Brokers and Freight Forwarders Association of America’s annual conference, providing excellent visibility and forging strong relationships with this important segment of the trade community.

During World Trade Week In May, the 40th anniversary of the ATA Carnet system in the United States was marked as USCIB was awarded the Department of Commerce’s export appreciation award at a well attended breakfast in New York.  “Companies of all sizes use Carnets to operate smoothly across borders,” said USCIB President and CEO Peter M. Robinson in accepting the award.  “They can help pave the way for new overseas sales, which are more important than ever as we seek to get our economy out of recession.”

As part of World Trade Week, USCIB hosted a seminar on “Building International Sales, Doing it the Right Way,” where USCIB’s Ms. Barlow joined Toni Corsini of the Small Business Administration to provide an in-depth overview of services and assistance programs for smaller exporters.  Representatives from U.S. Customs and Border Protection concluded the session with a review of export and import regulations, including export licenses and the important concept of “reasonable care” in international trade.

These efforts, along with ongoing measures to streamline and promote the Carnet system worldwide, should position the service to rebound along with international trade in the months and years ahead.

More on the ATA Carnet Export Service