new york, 4th april 2002
governments must
control corporations
At the launch of Global Reporting
Initiative (GRI), Friends of the Earth
International slams governments for failing
to agree to global rules for corporations
.
At the launch of the Global Reporting
Initiative [Thursday April 4] - timed to
coincide with the New York preparatory
meeting for this year’s Johannesburg Earth
Summit - Friends of the Earth International
said "big business must be forced to deliver
on social and environmental issues - not just
report".
The world's largest grassroots
environmental network has called on
governments to hold big business to account
for its poor social and environmental
performance. FoEI is calling on governments
at the Earth Summit to start negotiating
global rules to control corporations. The
rules should secure rights for citizens and
communities, and enable them to hold big
business to account.
But the US government has responded by
seeking to excise all mentions of binding
corporate accountability from the draft Earth
Summit texts, and the EU is only prepared to
support voluntary efforts, made at the whim
of business leaders. The EU is specifically
pushing for the Global Reporting Initiative
to be 'promoted' through the Earth
Summit.
FoEI and other leading groups, as well as
some governments, particularly in the G77,
are unconvinced that voluntary initiatives
are sufficient to turn the tide of corporate
social and environmental conflicts. Enron,
Shell in Nigeria, Bhopal, Exxon Valdez have
all become bywords for corporate
irresponsibility.
Matt Phillips of Friends of the Earth
International said:
"Big business must be made to deliver on
social and environmental issues - not just
report. But there is a real danger that
governments will cite the Global Reporting
Initiative as an excuse not to tackle the
growing power of corporations and their
impact on the world. That would represent a
huge failure by governments to adequately
respond to global concerns about
corporate-led globalization."
Daniel Mittler, of Friends of the Earth
International said:
"When it is shareholders and financial
institutions that are hurt by corporate
misbehavior - as in the case of Enron -
governments rush to intervene, demanding
prosecutions and tougher laws. But when it is
ordinary people or the environment that
suffer, governments go for the 'voluntary
approach', allowing corporations to continue
with business as usual.
Social and environmental reporting must be
made mandatory as the first step that
governments can take towards binding
corporate accountability. Governments at
Johannesburg must ensure corporate duties
that match the many rights they currently
hold."
Contacts:
Daniel Mittler (FoEI WSSD coordinator) +49
173 923 4747 (in New York)
Matt Phillips (FoEI Corporates coordinator)
+44 20 7566 1660 (in London)
Craig Bennett (FoEI corporates campaigneri)
+1 347 682 0967 (in New York)
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