ICC Launches New Tool to Promote Business Sustainability

Charter_sustainability_sourceThe International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) launched a radical update of its respected Business Charter for Sustainable Development. The third edition of the ICC Charter has been designed to reflect a more holistic approach to sustainability, drawing on the expertise, experience and good practices of a broad range of international companies and business associations across all sectors and industries. Based around eight guidelines, the charter sets out a framework to enable companies to place sustainability at the heart of their operations – from staff recruitment to the development of new products and services.

Speaking at the charter’s launch on the margins of the United Nations Global Compact’s annual meeting, ICC Secretary General John Danilovich said: “Sustainability needs to be understood as a key business driver, rather than a luxury investment or a public relations tool. A growing body of evidence shows that developing a corporate culture of sustainability is a major source of competitive advantage in today’s economy.”

Danilovich added: “Our message with the launch of the charter is that becoming a sustainability leader requires changes in all relevant business practices, but that the effort to do so is most certainly worth it – in environmental, social and economic terms alike.”

The new charter has been carefully designed to provide a common and accessible starting point for companies to develop or enhance their business sustainability strategy. In doing so, ICC aims to better enable small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), particularly in emerging market economies, to integrate sustainability considerations in their operations.

This September will see the finalization of new global sustainable development goals (SDGs), under a process initiated by United Nations Secretary General Ban Ki-moon some two years ago. It is widely anticipated that the SDGs will place a significant focus on the private sector to deliver sustainable and inclusive global growth.

The launch of the charter represents ICC’s initial response to this process with the aim of more fully engaging the corporate sector in the implementation of the SDGs.

Danilovich said: “Delivering on the promise of the SDGs will require widespread engagement of companies large and small across the world. The launch of the charter is the start of a concerted push by ICC to ensure that the power and reach of the private sector is fully harnessed in the context of the post-2015 development agenda.”

ICC Business Charter for Sustainable Development

Read more: A Turning Point for International Climate Policy: ICC North American Regional Consultation

 

Letter in New York Times on Trade and Climate

USCIB President and CEO Peter Robinson at a press conference in Lima, Peru on December 8. “If a global agreement on climate change doesn’t work for and with businesses, it just won’t work,” he said.
USCIB President and CEO Peter Robinson at a press conference in Lima, Peru on December 8. “If a global agreement on climate change doesn’t work for and with businesses, it just won’t work,” he said.

USCIB President and CEO Peter Robinson has a letter in today’s issue of The New York Times on climate change and trade policy. The letter is reproduced below, and you can view it on The Times’ website by clicking here.

Robinson rebuts a recent piece by Times columnist Eduardo Porter that suggested border taxes on products from countries outside a so-called “climate club,” saying that countries should instead offer trade incentives, rather than punitive tariffs, to reduce carbon emissions and spur the deployment and use of greener energy technologies.

This letter is especially timely, as it comes after the most recent negotiating session of the UN climate change talks in Bonn, where USCIB played an important role in voicing private-sector views. Click here to read our report. It also comes as we gear up for next week’s climate-focused meeting of USCIB’s Environment Committee and the North American Business Climate Consultation, held in conjunction with the International Chamber of Commerce and the Canadian Chamber of Commerce.

Finally, USCIB continues to advance American business interests in the WTO’s Environmental Goods Agreement talks as well as other key trade negotiations, even as we grapple with the current trade deadlock on Capitol Hill.

The New York Times

June 15, 2015

The Opinion Pages/Letters

Climate Change and Trade Policy

To the Editor:

Eduardo Porter advocates launching a trade war as a way of ”solving” the climate challenge (”Climate Deal Badly Needs a Big Stick,” Economic Scene column, June 3), imposing tariffs on those countries that don’t join a ”climate club” committed to reducing carbon emissions.

But we should offer carrots instead of sticks to accelerate the transition to greener energy. Rather than threatening higher-emitting countries with punitive tariffs, we should roll back barriers to trade in environmental goods and services.

There is no contradiction between economic development and climate protection. Indeed, as countries grow richer, they can devote additional resources to cleaner energy.

To be viable, climate solutions must factor in real-world needs, including the need for economic growth, and deliver benefits today to people in both rich and poor countries.

And they need to be in line with political and market realities, including the global community’s common interest in keeping markets open and economic relations cordial.

The ”big stick” that Mr. Porter endorses fails to meet these criteria.

PETER M. ROBINSON
President and Chief Executive
United States Council for International Business
New York

At UN Climate Talks in Bonn, Negotiators Make Incremental Progress

Paris2015

Continuing the march to COP21 in Paris, governments wrapped up two weeks of negotiations in Bonn, Germany yesterday under the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change. While that march has been at a snail’s pace, it has made some limited progress, according to Norine Kennedy, USCIB’s vice president for environment and energy, who took part in the talks.

“Negotiators were able move the draft negotiating text forward with a bit of streamlining,” Kennedy said. “But the contentious issues of finance, reduction commitments and the role of carbon markets remain and there is still a long way to go, with only 10 official negotiating days before the Paris Climate Conference.”  Business is watching discussions of technology closely, as well as emerging issues of liability for loss and damage due to climate change, and the role that markets will be allowed to play for countries meeting their reductions commitments.

The Bonn meeting, attended by over 4000 representatives of countries, the U.N., business and NGOs, was opened by France’s Foreign Minister, Laurent Fabius.  Governments are seeking to avoid a repeat of the collapse of the Copenhagen climate talks in 2009, and build a longer term durable agreement based on national pledges of greenhouse gas reductions and other actions.

Kennedy reports that, given the complexity of issues and multiple proposals, countries have now asked co-chairs of the negotiating process to speed up the pace, and to produce a “non paper” that would be a tool to move the text closer to the legal form needed for a binding agreement.

“Negotiators were asked to limit their comments to edits and restructuring, rather than substance,” according to Kennedy. “There was limited time dedicated to so-called cross-cutting issues, such as the legal form of the agreement, differentiation of commitments across countries, etc.”  Countries are showing increased interest in the role that non-state actors, such as cities and the private sector, can play in advancing climate action complementary to government implementation.

Business representatives from U.S., European, Japanese and international business organizations, including the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC), were invited to make statements during the course of the Bonn talks.  USCIB statements underscored the need for a recognized interface for business with the UNFCCCC. In addition to Kennedy, USCIB was represented by Nick Campbell (Arkema).

Click here to access USCIB’s information and resources page on business engagement in the UN climate talks.

North American Private Public Dialogue on Climate Change

The International Chamber of Commerce (ICC), The Canadian Chamber of Commerce (CCC) and the United States Council for International Business (USCIB) in partnership with the International Emissions Trading Association (IETA), will convene a North American Private Public Dialogue on Climate Change on 23 June 2015 in Washington D.C.

In this defining year for international climate change cooperation, governments will reach a new long-term agreement on greenhouse gas reductions while pursuing adaptation and resilience to climate impacts. Delivering these far-reaching commitments will rely on business investment, innovation, new markets, and engagement. The resulting economic and energy transformation will impact the business community across every sector in myriad and profound ways, offering opportunities and posing challenges.

This Private-Public Dialogue will highlight North American business priorities for the Paris climate accords, and reflect experiences and circumstances both in North America and in the broader global marketplace.

Click here for more information.

Climate policy embraces a range of approaches

Financial Times

Letters

Sir, It is unfortunate that Pilita Clark and Ed Crooks present the call from leading oil and gas firms for the widespread introduction of carbon pricing mechanisms in the context of a supposed transatlantic schism (News, June 1). In reality, the prevailing international business view is somewhat more nuanced than it might at first seem.

The anticipated Paris climate agreement will combine a broad range of national and local approaches to combating climate change in what will be a novel form of “bottom-up” global architecture. Carbon pricing instruments (Letters, June 1) can certainly play an important role in spurring emissions reductions in those countries or regions that choose to use them; but it is important to recognise that they are just one part of the policy mix. While carbon pricing may be the most cost-effective climate solution in some countries, other approaches — such as incentive-based systems or efficiency standards — may be a more viable option elsewhere. What’s more, carbon pricing schemes also need to be carefully designed to promote a global level playing field for commerce and to enable future trade-driven growth.

This leads to an important secondary point: the intervention from leading European energy firms is illustrative of a broader effort on the part of the private sector to engage constructively in the development of climate policy. That’s why leading business networks called last month — at the conclusion of the first-ever Business and Climate Summit — for governments to establish a recognised consultative role for the private sector under a future climate accord. Better harnessing of business know-how would be a significant step forward in the way we go about addressing the shared challenge of climate change — irrespective of the specific policy instruments employed.

John Danilovich
Secretary-General
International Chamber of Commerce
Paris, France

Campaign 2015: Because These Talks Will Lead to Action

campaign2015_logoUSCIB has launched a demanding advocacy campaign on behalf of our members to ensure that U.S. business has a stake in the two major policy negotiations taking place later this year.

  • UN 2030 Development Agenda, New York
  • COP21 Climate talks in Paris.

If these far-reaching agreements don’t work for business, they won’t work.

CAMPAIGN OBJECTIVES: 

Represent Business Interest in Real Time – Ensuring business is at the table when these ambitious agreements lead to binding regulations.

Champion & Amplify USCIB Messages – Through dedicated meetings in order to effectively verbalize vital positions.

Promote the Opportunity for business investment, action, collaboration and innovation.

Communicate to Influential Audiences – Leverage media attention around UN deliberations.

PrintVisit “Business Engagement in the UN Climate Talks” for more information on USCIB’s Climate efforts. 

Visit “Business for 2030” for more information on USCIB’s activities on the UN Sustainable Development Goals.

Business Engagement in the UN Climate Talks

USCIB CEO and President Peter Robinson at a Press Conference during the COP-20 Conference in Lima, Peru.USCIB CEO and President Peter Robinson at a Press Conference during the COP-20 Conference in Lima, Peru.

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USCIB CEO and President Peter Robinson at a Press Conference during the COP-20 Conference in Lima, Peru.

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Jim Bacchus, ICC (center) and USCIB’s Norine Kennedy (left) participating in a panel organized by the Major Economies Business Forum (BizMEF) during the COP-20 Conference in Lima, Peru.

William E. Craft, Deputy Assistant Secretary for Trade Policy and Programs, Bureau of Economic and Business Affairs, U.S. State Department gives luncheon keynote remarks during the USCIB-ICC-IETA North America Climate Change Consultation in June 2015.William E. Craft, Deputy Assistant Secretary for Trade Policy and Programs, Bureau of Economic and Business Affairs, U.S. State Department gives luncheon keynote remarks during the USCIB-ICC-IETA North America Climate Change Consultation in June 2015.

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William E. Craft, Deputy Assistant Secretary for Trade Policy and Programs, U.S. State Department gives luncheon keynote remarks during the USCIB-ICC-IETA North America Climate Change Consultation in June 2015.

Government and Private Sector Participants at a Major Economies Business Forum (BizMEF) side-event during the COP-20 Lima Conference.Government and Private Sector Participants at a Major Economies Business Forum (BizMEF) side-event during the COP-20 Lima Conference.

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Government and Private Sector Participants at a Major Economies Business Forum (BizMEF) side-event during the COP-20 Lima Conference.

The United States Council for International Business (USCIB) strongly supports the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and a successful and effective outcome to the current negotiations leading to a new long term post 2015 climate agreement.

USCIB will represent American business interests in the remaining negotiations en route to and at the 2015 United Nations Climate Change Conference in Paris at the end of the year. The agreement that will come out of these UN climate talks will dramatically shape the future of international commerce and have a lasting impact on regulatory frameworks, affecting market access and investment. But if this agreement doesn’t work with and for business, then it just won’t work. Given the effects such an agreement will have on global markets, the private sector must be included as a partner in international efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and advance adaptation and resilience.

campaign2015_logoUSCIB will provide critical business recommendations and engagement to the UN through our global network to inform the agreement’s outcome, ensuring that its conclusions truly work for business.

As part of its advocacy, USCIB is encouraging governments to create a recognized interface, or “channel,” for business input into the UN’s deliberations so that the private sector is heard during negotiations that will lead to binding laws and new markets. USCIB also seeks to preclude legally binding outcomes that may have unintended negative consequences for business.

Business will be expected to support, finance and report on the UN climate agreement; business therefore needs to be part of the international climate policy conversation.

As the voice of American business at the international level, USCIB seeks a recognized consultative role for the private sector to inform the global climate change agenda – from setting priorities, to crafting policy options, to taking action.

Upcoming Events

December 1, Paris, venue: US Government Pavilion, “Deploying Innovative Technologies for Climate Change: Looking to Trade to Jumpstart Paris Action”, 5:45 pm – 6:45 pm

December 2, Paris, venue: French Government Climate Generations Area, “Business, the SDGs and Climate Change: Synergies and Engagement Opportunities”, 3:30 pm – 5:00 pm

December 5, Paris, venue: George Marshall Center, Embassy of the United States, “USCIB-American Chamber of Commerce, Executive Briefing and High Level Roundtable Meeting for US Business” 10:00 am – 2:30 pm

December 10, Paris, venue: UNFCCC official side-event in the Blue Zone: “BizMEF side-event on INDC’s (Nationally Determined Contributions)”, 3:00 pm – 4:30 pm

Engaging Business: USCIB’s International Climate Policy Update:

Volume 1, August Issue

Volume 2, October Issue

Volume 3, November Issue coming soon!

The Big Idea: UN Climate Talks: Why the Private Sector Needs to Be Involved Now

By Ann Condon and Norine Kennedy

un_headquarters_lo-resThomas Edison said, “Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and it looks like work.” For the United Nations climate change deliberations driving toward a global agreement in Paris this December, we would offer a variation on Edison’s observation. In this context, opportunity looks like a business person, ready to roll up their sleeves, invest in innovation, find new markets and become more competitive. USCIB wants to make sure the negotiators do not miss that opportunity.

And it goes beyond an opportunity. In our view, engagement with the private sector is imperative from both an economic and environmental standpoint. We need to manage and address the risks of climate change, and doing so requires engaging all countries and societal partners. And this must happen cost-effectively, with job creation and shared prosperity, stimulating economic growth and development.

Can emissions reductions and economic growth really go hand in hand? The answer is an emphatic “Yes!” Moreover, we now have clear evidence that this is underway. In March, the International Energy Agency announced that the world had successfully decoupled economic activity from greenhouse gas emissions, with global GDP increasing by 3.3 percent in 2014, while emissions decreased. This was the first time in over 40 years that observed emissions declined without an economic downturn.

USCIB member companies have made important contributions to inform the discussions, with the goal of influencing policy and market outcomes, meeting societal expectations and, in the process, finding new opportunities and new markets.

The business community has a clear stake in being engaged in the UN negotiation process, to help policy makers understand the economic and business opportunities and consequences of their policy choices.

USCIB, which has been engaged in the process since negotiation of the original UN Framework Convention on Climate Change in 1992, is seeking to expand private-sector engagement throughout the course of 2015 and beyond the Paris summit to the period when national implementation begins.

To do this we are working through multiple channels:

  • Advocating directly to the U.S. government, both on specific elements of a global agreement and on the critical issue of the U.S. pledge (or INDC, for “intended nationally determined contribution”).
  • Working closely with our partners in the International Chamber of Commerce; which serves as the business focal point for the UN negotiations and is playing an increasingly important role as a champion of sensible policies.
  • Engaging with multiple organizations on the interplay between the UN climate talks and other initiatives such as the Sustainable Development Goals.
  • Forging stronger links between the business communities of the major emitting countries through the Major Economies Business Forum.

So how do USCIB member companies see a feasible and durable approach to climate, one that sets the stage to address these joint economic and environmental imperatives?

First, we want governments to provide a clear framework for international action on the many dimensions of climate change – including energy access and modernization to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, and resilience and adaptation; with all large economies making national pledges to measure, monitor and report their activities.

Second, negotiators must find a way to mobilize and deploy $100 billion annually that governments pledged for climate mitigation and adaptation. You simply can’t get to a number that big without catalyzing private investment, which responds best to market incentives. For USCIB, open markets and trade are vehicles that spread investment and technology cost effectively and profitably; anything that hampers markets will slow the pace of climate action and make it needlessly expensive for companies and for society.

Third, and perhaps most importantly, the Paris summit must map out practical ways to include the private sector as a partner in the success of a global climate agreement. USCIB is seeking a recognized consultative role for business in all aspects of climate policy – setting priorities, informing policy options, taking action. As USCIB President and CEO Peter Robinson remarked at the most recent UN climate conference in Lima, Peru: “If a global agreement doesn’t work for and with business, it won’t work.”

It is apparent that this is an idea whose time has come: the French government has called upon the private sector to be part of a shared agenda for action in Paris, and has signaled the importance of ongoing dialogue with business as a priority.

The international community has laid out a broad vision of 2015 as a critical fulcrum, where we can reinvent and reinforce economic and environmental imperatives, using both in markets and policy. For USCIB and its members, expectations are high. We will do our utmost to make the case for what we know will work best – open markets and trade, innovation and the enabling conditions for private sector investment — to address climate change challenges and move the global economy forward.

Ann Condon is director for resource and environment strategies at GE and chair of USCIB’s Environment Committee. Norine Kennedy is USCIB’s vice president for energy, environment and strategic international engagement.

USCIB Talks Transatlantic Trade as TPA Moves Forward in Congress

  Norine Kennedy (USCIB)

Norine Kennedy (USCIB)

USCIB staff made a strong business case for the Trans-Atlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) this week at policy conferences in Washington, D.C. and New York. TTIP is a proposed trade agreement between the United States and the European Union, expected to spur economic growth and create jobs on both sides of the Atlantic. The U.S. made promising progress on its trade agenda last week with the introduction in Congress of Trade Promotion Authority, legislation that makes it easier for the U.S. to negotiate and implement trade agreements like TTIP.

In New York on April 23, Norine Kennedy, USCIB’s vice president for strategic international engagement, energy and the environment, gave a presentation at a TTIP stakeholders forum titled “Environment, the UN Post 2015 Development Agenda and SDGs: Synergies for TTIP, Trade and Business.” She noted that the U.S-EU trade agreement plays an integral role in the global economic infrastructure being built in 2015, which will be indispensible to international cooperation on sustainable development and shared prosperity embodied in the United Nations Post 2015 Development Agenda, currently under discussion at the UN this week.

“Successful implementation relies on ambitious and wide mobilization of resources, both financial and technical,” Kennedy said. “A significant share of this mobilization will come from the private sector, and trade and investment are among the main ways that this mobilization will occur.”

She explained that USCIB and its member companies strongly support a successful TTIP conclusion, as that trade agreement will facilitate business’s contributions to sustainable development.

L-R: Fabrice Vareille (Minister Counselor, EU Delegation to the U.S.) and Shaun Donnelly (USCIB)
L-R: Fabrice Vareille (Minister Counselor, EU Delegation to the U.S.) and Shaun Donnelly (USCIB)

And on April 22, USCIB’s Vice President for Investment and Financial Services Shaun Donnelly spoke at a panel on Transatlantic Energy Issues during a day-long seminar in Washington, D.C. organized by George Mason University and Johns Hopkins University’s School of Advanced International Studies. Donnelly talked about the relevance of energy issues in TTIP, noting that energy has not typically been a free-standing chapter or even an area of focus in U.S. or EU trade agreements.

“Negotiators would need to be creative and flexible if they want to use the TTIP to address fundamental energy policy issues,” Donnelly said.

USCIB made the case for TTIP this week as the Senate Finance Committee approved Trade Promotion Authority on April 22.