Showing posts with label SRI. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SRI. Show all posts

Friday, June 29, 2012

Climate Action May Impact Dividend Growth

B. Scott Sadler, CFA -- President, Boardwalk Capital Management

Out-of-control firestorms in Colorado and 100-degree heat index in the nation's capital served as an apt backdrop for an important court ruling on climate risk... And an important marker for investors that their world is changing in ways they may not yet understand.

Earlier this week, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia found that the EPA's interpretation of the Clean Air Act to regulate carbon dioxide regulations is "unambiguously correct." The three-judge panel unanimously agreed with the Environmental Protection Agency's finding that carbon dioxide is a public danger.

According to David Doniger of the Natural Resources Defense Council, "These rulings clear the way for EPA to keep moving forward under the Clean Air Act to limit carbon pollution from motor vehicles, new power plants, and other big industrial sources."

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

Three Characteristics of Responsible Corporate Citizens

This post authored by Daniel Baylis, Director of Content for N/A (the actual name). It appears courtesy of FastCompany.com.

To be "good" in the past meant a variety of things. Perhaps a company's product made people's lives easier. Or maybe they provided jobs in economically challenging times. But chances are the environmental effects of manufacturing were never considered, and overseas production was a financially intelligent decision free from ethical implications. Big businesses and marketing agencies were focused on selling the American Dream. Problematic environmental and social consequences hadn't yet come on the radar.

In the 1970s, a new marketing movement was born. It was called "cause marketing" and it matched for-profit businesses with charitable endeavors. Over the next few decades, the measure of doing good was how much your foundation gave to cancer, AIDS, dolphins, or any other topical issue. Cause marketing had its tangible benefits, but would prove to be trendy and lacking actual commitment.

Today there is an increased consumer value in supporting businesses that don't simply do well, but that do good. Cultural values are shifting, and this sea change is catalyzing corporations to revisit the choices they are making. And this will continue. But we are far from a world where corporations are making choices based upon the triple-bottom line: profits, people, and planet.