Ceres (pronounced series) is a national network of investors, environmental organizations and other public interest groups working with companies and investors to address sustainability challenges such as global climate change.
Mission: Integrating sustainability into capital markets for the health of the planet and its people.
Accomplishments: At its founding 17 years ago, Ceres introduced a bold new vision to the business world. That vision is of a world in which business and capital markets promote the well being of human society and the protection of the earth's biological systems and resources. Ceres advances its vision by bringing investors, environmental groups and other stakeholders together to encourage companies and capital markets to incorporate environmental and social challenges into their day-to-day decision-making. By leveraging the collective power of investors and other key stakeholders,
Ceres has achieved dramatic results, among those:
- Launched the Global Reporting Initiative (GRI), now the de-facto international standard (used by over 1000 companies) for corporate reporting on environmental, social and economic performance.
- Spearheaded dozens of breakthrough achievements with companies, such as Nike becoming the first global apparel company to disclose the names and locations of its 700-plus contract factories worldwide in 2005, Dell Computer agreeing in June 2006 to support national legislation to require electronic product recycling and takeback programs, and Bank of America announcing a $20 billion initiative in March 2007 to support the growth of environmentally sustainable business activity to address global climate change.
- Organized 65 companies and investors managing $4 trillion in assets to call on Congress to enact strong climate change legislation with 60 to 90 percent greenhouse gas emissions reductions by 2050. The group, announced in March 2007, includes such institutional investors and asset managers as Merrill Lynch, the California Public Employees Retirement System (CalPERS) and the Florida State Treasurer, as well as leading companies such as BP America, PG&E, DuPont, National Grid and Allianz SE.
- Brought together 500 investors, Wall Street and corporate leaders at the United Nations in 2005 to address the growing financial risks and opportunities posed by climate change. The ground-breaking meeting included 28 U.S. and European investors approving a 10-point action plan seeking stronger analysis, disclosure and action from companies, Wall Street and regulators on climate change.
- Published cutting-edge research reports to help investors better understand the implications of global warming. Among those: a January 2007 report, Climate Risk Disclosure by the S&P 500, an August 2006 report, From Risk to Opportunity: How Insurers Can Proactively and Profitably Manage Climate Change, and a March 2006 report, Corporate Governance and Climate Change: Making the Connection, which analyzed how 100 of the world's largest companies are addressing the business challenges from climate change.
Watch the Ceres video on advancing corporate sustainability.
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