CARBON REPORTING ON THE RISE IN INDIA


Environmental Panorama
International
December of 2008


19 Dec 2008 - Delhi, India - Significantly more of India’s leading companies have signed up to voluntarily disclose carbon emissions and climate policies, a second round of reporting has shown.

The quality of reporting is up as well as the quantity, project sponsor WWF-India noted at the release of the India Carbon Disclosure Project Report 2008. (CDP-India 2008)

“The report demonstrates a positive and proactive attitude among the Indian companies towards addressing the challenges of climate change,” said Ravi Singh, Secretary General and CEO, WWF-India.

“It shows an encouraging trend that companies are not only aware of the various threats and risks presented by climate change, but are also becoming increasingly sensitive towards its commercial and financial opportunities.”

Among companies reporting for the first time are HPCL, the Fortune 500 oil refining & marketing business; the State Bank of India; Tata Power, India’s largest private sector electricity generating company; Tata Motors, one of the world’s largest manufacturers of commercial vehicles; Mahindra & Mahindra, India’s largest SUV maker; and major cement maker Ambuja Cements.

The disclosure process was carried out by WWF-India in partnership with The Carbon Disclosure Project (CDP) and the Confederation of Indian Industry’s Centre of Excellence for Sustainable Development. The Global CDP project represents 385 institutional investors with around $US 57 trillion in funds under management who view corporate responses to the climate challenge as a significant investment variable.

But while reporting by Indian companies is up from 37 in 2007 to 51 and includes some of the country’s leading and highest climate impact companies, overall reporting remains low. CDP invited some 200 companies to participate and of 61 respondents, 10 refused.

The sectors with the highest response rates were Household & Personal Products (43% of the companies contacted in the sector responded), Materials (41%) and Banks and Diversified Financials (39%), with the worst being telecommunications and consumer durables and clothing companies.

Some 80% of the companies saw existing regulatory mechanisms not as a risk but rather as an opportunity for triggering long term investment in energy efficient technologies. However, these companies do acknowledge that in future, the regulations may affect their businesses.

Three quarters of the organizations have either taken up or have planned to manage or mitigate risks due to climate change by formulating relevant policies, changing operations, design and consumption patterns as well as strengthening supply chains and shifting to cleaner fuels. However the report noted a “significantly low or almost negligible (3.4%) use of energy purchased or generated from renewable sources” and said Indian corporate use of renewable energy was “quite poor” compared to multinational companies

Around 40% of the companies acknowledge physical risks such as damage, disruption and displacement resulting due to climate change as major challenges that could result in financial losses.

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Ana’s journey opens mystery of ‘oceanic superhighway’

19 Dec 2008 - The remarkable journey of a green turtle from Indonesia into Australian waters is helping conservationists to track the migratory route of this species to the Kimberley-Pilbara coast - one of the few relatively pristine coastal areas left on Earth.

Ana, a female green turtle, was tagged in Indonesia in November as part of a turtle tracking project by WWF and Udayana University in Bali, Indonesia, and has slowly made her way from a nesting beach in East Java, across the Indian Ocean, and is on track for the beaches of the Kimberley in Western Australia.

Her journey, monitored online by WWF, demonstrates the strong biological ties between Indonesia and the reefs on the west Australian coast.

“Ana’s journey is unique. She has revealed an ‘oceanic superhighway’ that helps us better understand how marine turtles navigate around the world’s oceans as well as highlighting the strong ecological and evolutionary connections between Indonesia and Australia’s Kimberley-Pilbara coast,” said Gilly Llewellyn, WWF Ocean’s Program Leader.

“This new finding throws the spotlight on the true natural values of the magnificent Kimberley marine ecosystem and its link to the Coral Triangle to the north – the world’s epicentre of marine biodiversity and the cross-roads of migration routes and breeding grounds for whales, turtles, dolphins and other precious marine species.”

The Coral Triangle spans Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines, Solomon Islands and Timor Leste, and contains critical habitat for six of the world’s seven species of marine turtles, including green, hawksbill, olive ridley, leatherback, loggerhead and flatback turtles.

All of these species are threatened with extinction as a result of pollution, long-line and trawl fishing that results in the accidental catch of marine turtles, and an illegal trade in turtle eggs, meat, shells and skin.

“The tropical seas of the Coral Triangle have global significance. Decision makers need to keep this in mind when weighing up the need to protect it - and the millions of marine livelihoods that depend on coral reefs across the regions."

WWF’s Coral Triangle Program is currently working to ensure the health of the region's wildlife in the face of human threats in the Indian and Pacific oceans that include long-line and trawl fishing and pollution.

WWF’s marine conservation efforts in the region include the development of a network of Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) to protect and conserve marine wildlife, and to ensure that all fishing is carried out in a sustainable manner. This includes reducing marine animal bycatch, specifically that of turtles, by fishing operations in the Indo Pacific.

“Worldwide, hundreds of thousands of marine turtles are caught annually in the hooks, lines and nets of fishing operations, while on land their nesting beaches are increasingly under threat from industrial development, human disturbance and climate change.

"Ana’s journey has shown us areas where we need to focus our efforts. We need to tap into the secret lives of species such as turtles, so we can design networks of marine protected areas that conserve the full range of plant and animal life, and ensure their longevity for years to come.”
Paula Schibeci, WWF Australia Press Office,

 
 

Source: WWF – World Wildlife Foundation International
Press consultantship
All rights reserved

 
 
 
 

 

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