Prince of Wales lauds industry action on climate change & sustainability

Prince Charles is well known in the UK as an advocate for corporate sustainability but his words are much less well-known in Canada. The Prince spoke at the launch of the Carbon Disclosure Project’s 2013 forests report in London yesterday. Among his key points:

  • I am particularly impressed to see such a high-powered list of people from the private, public and NGO sectors in this room today all working of course on vital matters to do with tropical forests and climate change, integrated reporting and the post-2015 sustainable development goals.
  • the devastating impact of Typhoon Haiyan in The Philippines should surely have been a poignant and telling reminder of the intimacy and interdependence of man’s relationship with the natural world.
  • when we were in India last week I visited the foothills of the Himalayas, a state called Uttarakhand, where they had the most devastating floods earlier in the year and the Chief Minister of that State bent my ear about the disaster and the problems they were having in trying to come to terms with what will probably likely to be even more extreme weather events.
  • the frequency and intensity of extreme weather events has increased, and is set further to increase, in many parts of the world, as a direct result of anthropogenic climate change.  The facts and the science are clear and inescapable,  and so before us we have a rapidly narrowing window of opportunity – as individuals, as governments, companies, nations, and as an international community – to act with the scale and urgency needed to undertake the transition towards a radically more sustainable and resilient long-term global economic model.
  • one vital aspect of a global response to climate change will, I hope, entail international agreement – coupled with decisive action – to reduce emissions from tropical deforestation and degradation.
  • I am delighted to see the progress made by developing countries in decoupling deforestation from agricultural production, and the significant commitments made by many companies to reduce deforestation in their supply chains.
  • I am convinced that a global climate agreement in 2015, with provisions for significant international payments for emission reductions from forests and land use change at its heart, would enable all the good work done to date to be consolidated and strengthened.
  • new and exciting partnerships to reduce tropical deforestation are continuing to be formed – for instance I understand that later today the U.K. Government, with the U.S., Germany, the World Bank and others will make new announcements.
  • the role of leadership and practical action from the private sector could not be more vital, and so I very much welcome today’s opportunity to hear from CDP, Unilever, Marks and Spencer and others about the efforts undertaken by many companies to understand and reduce their forest footprint as part of their broader effort to ‘measure what matters’ and to ensure integrated reporting is at the heart of their operations.
  • I have been heartened to hear of the work that Unilever and some of the world’s largest palm oil companies are undertaking to move the industry further in the direction of trade and production free from deforestation and exploitation.
  • I can only congratulate the companies involved for what they have done to date, and hope they don’t mind if I just exhort them – and all others not yet as committed – to do more to think about their impact in an integrated manner, and to sign up to further commitments.
  • In the same vein, I would hope Governments will go further in their efforts to develop integrated reporting models to pursue the ‘beyond G.D.P.’ agenda at the national level.
  • the international community has another enormous challenge before it between now and 2015: to negotiate a new set of highly ambitious post-2015 sustainable development goals, capable both of ‘finishing the unfinished business’ of the Millennium Development Goals, whilst at the same time, equally critically, enabling humanity to live within planetary boundaries and in harmony with the natural environment upon which we so wholly depend.
  • a vital role for the private sector is envisaged: one in which a wide range of private sector actors – from multinational corporations to small and medium enterprises; pension funds; banks; institutional investors; insurance companies; sovereign wealth funds – can each play a role, through taking a long-term, responsible view in delivering and investing in low carbon development.
  • things like genuinely sustainable cities – not just the “business as usual” model and a coat of “green wash”  – and resilient landscapes for people, forests and agriculture: in other words, the private sector’s role in creating ‘the world we wish to see’.  But we can only do that, I would suggest, in proper consultation with local communities so that things are done with people, rather than to them.

His full remarks are available at http://www.princeofwales.gov.uk/media/speeches/speech-hrh-the-prince-of-wales-meeting-global-sustainability-and-the-post-2015

In its next issue, Gallon Environment Letter will review the CDP’s Global Forests Report 2013 and, among other articles, will include some commentary on the outcomes of the Warsaw climate conference. For a complimentary subscription send an email with Add GL in the subject line to subscriptions@gallonletter.ca.

Leave a Reply

Fill in your details below or click an icon to log in:

WordPress.com Logo

You are commenting using your WordPress.com account. Log Out /  Change )

Facebook photo

You are commenting using your Facebook account. Log Out /  Change )

Connecting to %s