首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Can Business Be Cool? Why a growing number of firms are taking global warming seriously. Companies supporting environmen
Can Business Be Cool? Why a growing number of firms are taking global warming seriously. Companies supporting environmen
admin
2010-01-10
30
问题
Can Business Be Cool?
Why a growing number of firms are taking global warming seriously.
Companies supporting environment protection
Rupert Murdoch is no green activist. But in Pebble Beach later this summer, the annual gathering of executives of Mr Murdoch’s News Corporation--which last year led to a dramatic shift in the media conglomerate’s attitude to the Internet--will be addressed by several leading environmentalists, including a vice-president turned climate-change movie star. Last month BSkyB, a British satellitetelevision company chaired by Mr. Murdoch and run by his son, James, declared itself "carbon-neutral", having taken various steps to cut or offset its discharges of carbon into the atmosphere.
The army of corporate greens is growing fast. Late last year HSBC became the first big bank to announce that it was carbon-neutral, joining other financial institutions, including Swiss Re, a reinsurer, and Goldman Sachs, an investment bank, in waging war on climate-warming gases (of which carbon dioxide is the main culprit). Last year General Electric (GE), an industrial powerhouse, launched its "Ecomagination" strategy, aiming to cut its output of greenhouse gases and to invest heavily in clean (i.e., carbon-free) technologies. In October Wal-Mart announced a series of environmental schemes, including doubling the fuel-efficiency of its fleet of vehicles within a decade. Tesco and Sainsbury, two Of Britain’s biggest retailers, are competing fiercely to be the greenest. And on June 7th some leading British bosses lobbied Tony Blair for a more ambitious policy on climate change, even if that involves harsher regulation.
The other side
The greening of business is by no means universal, however. Money from Exxon Mobil, Ford and General Motors helped pay for television advertisements aired recently in America by the Competitive Enterprise Institute, with the daft slogan "Carbon dioxide: they call it pollution; we call it life". Besides, environmentalist critics say, some firms are engaged in superficial "greenwash to boost the image of essentially climate-hurting businesses. Take BP, the most prominent corporate advocate of action on climate change, with its "Beyond Petroleum" ad campaign, high-profile investments in green energy, and even a "carbon calculator" on its websites helps consumers measure their personal "carbon footprint", or overall emissions of carbon. Yet, critics complain, BP’s recent record profits are largely thanks to sales of huge amounts of carbon-packed oil and gas.
On the other hand, some free-market thinkers see the support of firms for regulation of carbon as the latest attempt at "regulatory capture", by those who stand to profit from new rules. Max Schulz of the Manhattan Institute, a conservative think tank, notes darkly that "Enron was into pushing the idea of climate change, because it was good for its business".
Others argue that climate change has no more place in corporate boardrooms than do discussions of other partisan political issues, such as Darfur or gay marriage. That criticism, at least, is surely wrong. Most of the corporate converts say they are acting not out of some vague sense of social responsibility, or even personal angst, but because climate change creates real business risks and opportunities—from regulatory compliance to insuring clients on flood plains. And although these concerns vary hugely from one company to the next, few firms can be sure of remaining unaffected.
The climate of opinion
The most obvious risk is of rising energy costs. Indeed, the recent high price of oil and natural gas, allied to fears over the security of energy supplies from the Middle East and Russia—neither of which have anything to de with climate change—may be the main reason why many firms have recently become interested in alternative energy sources. But at the same time, a growing number of bosses—whatever their personal views about the scientific evidence of climate change—now think that the public has become convinced that global warming is for real. Hurricane Katrina was particularly important in changing opinion in America. Many businessmen have concluded that this new public mood will result, sooner or later, in government action to control carbon emissions—most likely, using some sort of carbon tax or Kyoto-like system of tradable caps on firms’ carbon emissions.
A carbon-trading system is already in place in the European Union. But even in America, some influential businesses are exerting pressure on the government to control carbon emissions. One motive is to help firms facing decisions that will depend for their long-term profitability on what carbon regime, if any, is in place. "Some asset-intensive industries are making investments now that have a 30-to-50-year horizon," says Travis Engen, who recently stepped down as boss of Alcan, a big aluminium firm. "As CEO, I wanted to make damn sure my investments were good for the future, not just today"—which, for him, meant evaluating investments assuming that his firm would soon have to pay to emit carbon.
Indeed, some expect President Bush to start thinking more about climate change after November’s mid-term elections, especially now that he has appointed a keen environmentalist as treasury secretary— Hank Paulson, who as boss of Goldman Sachs was the force behind the investment bank’s greener stance. "American businesses are starting to realise that something is going to happen on carbon," says Jim Rogers, chief executive of Duke Energy, one of the country’s biggest power producers, who reckons legislation is quite likely to pass in Congress by 2009.
Companies’ move
As firms try to do something about climate change, the typical first step is to improve their energy efficiency, by both reducing consumption and also shifting the mix of sources from hydrocarbons towards cleaner alternatives. Given high oil prices, those that have already done so have found energy efficiency to be surprisingly good for profits.
"Carbon Down, Profits Up", a report by the Climate Group, an organisation founded in 2004 by various firms and governments, listed 74 companies from 18 industries in 11 countries that are committed to cutting greenhouse-gas emissions. So far, this has brought them combined savings of $11.6 billion, claims the report. Four firms- Bayer, British Telecom, DuPont and Norske Canada—account for $4 billion of this between them.
Many companies, including BP, also see the chance to make money from providing things that help reduce global warming—from clean coal-fired power-stations, to wind farms, to mortgages with better rates for homes that are carbon-neutral. GE plans to double its revenues from 17 clean-technology businesses to $20 billion by 2010. HSBC’s decision to become carbon-neutral is part of a plan to develop a carbon-finance business, both for retail consumers and corporate clients. "We believe it is a major business opportunity for us, not a hobby or corporate social responsibility," says Francis Sullivan of HSBC. And even as car firms lobby against regulating carbon, they are investing heavily in cleaner hybrid cars.
Going carbon-neutral—in which a firm cuts its carbon output as much as possible and then offsets any left over by paying to reduce emissions elsewhere—is particularly attractive to firms that sell directly to the public and reckon that their customers want them to take climate change seriously. Since these sorts of firms are often not great carbon-emitters in the first place, "carbon neutrality" can be fairly painless.
A recent study by the Carbon Trust, a British quango, reckoned that, for industries such as airlines, up to 50% of brand value may be at risk if firms fail to take action on climate change.
More and more companies are joining in the support of limiting carbon dioxide emission because they are increasingly concerned about the harmful effect on environment and climate change.
选项
A、Y
B、N
C、NG
答案
B
解析
根据题目,将相关信息定位在第一部分,公司采取这样的态度,并不是因为关心环境,也不是因为觉得有社会责任,而是认为这是一个很好的业务发展机会,因此该题的叙述错误
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/cHt7777K
0
大学英语四级
相关试题推荐
WehavereasontobelievethatZhangQuanwillrefusetolivewithoutAmericangoods.Mei,theresearcherholdsthatitisfocu
Forthispart,youareallowed30minutestowritealettertothepresidentofyouruniversity.Youshouldwriteatleast120w
WemustbelievethatinChina,aseverywhereelseintheworld,________________(大多数人)aregood.
TherehavebeenalotofchangesinAmericaneatinghabitsinthelasttenyears.Oneisthegrowing【B1】______ofthenutrition
A、Becauseshehasmadeanappointment.B、Becauseshedoesn’twantto.C、Becauseshehastowork.D、Becauseshewantstoeatina
Arsenal’sgoalkeeperJensLehmannwascouldn’tcontinuetoplaybecausehewasinjuredbySamuelEto’o.Campbellwasbeatenby
A、Exhaustion.B、Coldweather.C、Thejobopportunity.D、Theenvironment.BWhatmakesthemanthinkaboutmovingsomewhereelsene
A、Taketheclassoveragain.B、Taketheclassthissemester.C、Getpermissiontotaketheclass.D、Registerfortheclassnexts
Hardlyanyonepaysmuchattentiontotheair.Itis【B1】______,andweneverfeelitunlessastrongwind【B2】______along,blowi
随机试题
下列各项中,()不是银行等金融机构流动性风险预警的内部预警指标或信号。
根据《素问·五脏生成》篇的理论,多食甘出现的病变是()
患者,男性,40岁。1小时前午餐后打篮球时出现腹部持续性剧烈疼痛,有腹胀、呕吐,呕吐物含少量血性液体,口渴,烦躁不安,中腹部可扪及压痛包块,全腹有肌紧张,移动性浊音阳性,肠鸣音减弱。血常规:WBC13.4×109/L,发病以来未排便排气。根据病情,应
下列提法不正确的有:
A公司委托运输公司将10吨液体化学制品由甲地运往乙地。运输公司按合同约定的方式将化学制品运到乙地后,A公司发现化学制品已不足10吨,经查短少是由于化学制品蒸发所致。A公司要求运输公司赔偿损失,运输公司( )。
销售物流据点的集中,必须以不影响进货时间或进货单位等交易条件,不影响对于顾客的服务水平为前提。
阅读下面的文章,回答问题。宋代青白瓷作为一种器物符号,是以景德镇窑为代表烧制的一种单色釉瓷器。它兼具了物质文化和精神文化的双重功能,包含着丰富的文化符号意义,不但是历史长河中器物文明的里程碑,也体现了中华民族的审美观和人文精神。青白瓷取
窝沟龋首先发生在()。
垄断资本主义阶段,自由竞争()。
某项目包含的活动如下表所示,完成整个项目的最短时间为(17)周。不能通过缩短活动(18)的工期,来缩短整个项目的完成时间。(18)
最新回复
(
0
)