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World's Top Firms Cause $2.2 Trillion of Environmental Damage, Report Estimates
Report for the UN into the activities of the world's 3,000 biggest companies estimates one-third of profits would be lost if firms were forced to pay for use, loss and damage of environment
The cost of pollution and other damage to the natural environment caused by the world's biggest companies would wipe out more than one-third of their profits if they were held financially accountable, a major unpublished study for the United Nations has found.
Black clouds over the central business district, Jakarta. The report into the activities of the world's 3,000 biggest public companies has estimated the cost of use, loss and damage of the environment. Photograph: Jewel Samad/AFP/Getty Images The
report comes amid growing concern that no one is made to pay for most
of the use, loss and damage of the environment, which is reaching crisis
proportions in the form of pollution and the rapid loss of freshwater,
fisheries and fertile soils.
Later this year, another huge UN study - dubbed the "Stern for nature" after the influential report on the economics of climate change by Sir Nicholas Stern - will attempt to put a price on such global environmental damage, and suggest ways to prevent it. The report, led by economist Pavan Sukhdev, is likely to argue for abolition of billions of dollars of subsidies to harmful industries like agriculture, energy and transport, tougher regulations and more taxes on companies that cause the damage.
Ahead of changes which would have a profound effect - not just on companies' profits but also their customers and pension funds and other investors - the UN-backed Principles for Responsible Investment initiative and the United Nations Environment Programme jointly ordered a report into the activities of the 3,000 biggest public companies in the world, which includes household names from the UK's FTSE 100 and other major stockmarkets.
The study, conducted by London-based consultancy Trucost and due to be published this summer, found the estimated combined damage was worth US$2.2 trillion (£1.4tn) in 2008 - a figure bigger than the national economies of all but seven countries in the world that year.
The figure equates to 6-7% of the companies' combined turnover, or an average of one-third of their profits, though some businesses would be much harder hit than others.
"What we're talking about is a completely new paradigm," said Richard Mattison, Trucost's chief operating officer and leader of the report team. "Externalities of this scale and nature pose a major risk to the global economy and markets are not fully aware of these risks, nor do they know how to deal with them."
The biggest single impact on the $2.2tn estimate, accounting for more than half of the total, was emissions of greenhouse gases blamed for climate change. Other major "costs" were local air pollution such as particulates, and the damage caused by the over-use and pollution of freshwater.
The true figure is likely to be even higher because the $2.2tn does not include damage caused by household and government consumption of goods and services, such as energy used to power appliances or waste; the "social impacts" such as the migration of people driven out of affected areas, or the long-term effects of any damage other than that from climate change. The final report will also include a higher total estimate which includes those long-term effects of problems such as toxic waste.
Trucost did not want to comment before the final report on which sectors incurred the highest "costs" of environmental damage, but they are likely to include power companies and heavy energy users like aluminium producers because of the greenhouse gases that result from burning fossil fuels. Heavy water users like food, drink and clothing companies are also likely to feature high up on the list.
Sukhdev said the heads of the major companies at this year's annual economic summit in Davos, Switzerland, were increasingly concerned about the impact on their business if they were stopped or forced to pay for the damage.
"It can make the difference between profit and loss," Sukhdev told the annual Earthwatch Oxford lecture last week. "That sense of foreboding is there with many, many [chief executives], and that potential is a good thing because it leads to solutions."
The aim of the study is to encourage and help investors lobby companies to reduce their environmental impact before concerned governments act to restrict them through taxes or regulations, said Mattison.
"It's going to be a significant proportion of a lot of companies' profit margins," Mattison told the Guardian. "Whether they actually have to pay for these costs will be determined by the appetite for policy makers to enforce the 'polluter pays' principle. We should be seeking ways to fix the system, rather than waiting for the economy to adapt. Continued inefficient use of natural resources will cause significant impacts on [national economies] overall, and a massive problem for governments to fix."
Another major concern is the risk that companies simply run out of resources they need to operate, said Andrea Moffat, of the US-based investor lobby group Ceres, whose members include more than 80 funds with assets worth more than US$8tn. An example was the estimated loss of 20,000 jobs and $1bn last year for agricultural companies because of water shortages in California, said Moffat.

32 Comments so far
Show AllOften overlooked is the fact that, the same measures needed to mitigate global warming would be necessary even if it were no issue. Conservation,alternative energy development, anti- pollution refinements, etc are essential for other vital environmental reforms such as air and water quality, reductions in toxic waste generation, land preservation, etc.
Contrary to right wing assertions, measures to reduce greenhouse gases could only improve our economy by lessening our trade deficits, and improving our security by reducing our dependance on foreign oil. We could also regain some of our lost world respect that has resulted from our rejection of Kyoto and dismal participation in Copenhagen, while arrogantly contributing disproportionally to carbon pollution. With our participation in international efforts, China & India could no longer use our non-compliance as an excuse for their non-participation.
The environmental and social damage from our indifference to carbon pollution--and conflicts between the main contributors to it and those who suffer most from it--can only intensify until we show responsibility and detooth the special interests,who have blocked these vital reforms in the past.
Conservation and care for the environment are necessary under any economic system, considering the earth is a closed system and human population keeps growing. Capitalism is virulently opposed to anything that cuts into short term profits and will deploy lobbyists and armies and will buy off the media to oppose any restrictions. That is a huge reason to work toward limitations on crass mega-capitalism.
In other systems, few as the examples are, one problem is short term thinking to solve the pressing problem of poverty. Also there are always people who will try to play any system. Integrity is important.
Joe
While Earth is not an _entirely_ closed system it is close enough to make your point very valid -- polluting the system is madness. A continuing failure of capitalism (think of the polluted skies and waters of 19th century Britain that Dickens wrote about) to pay the full costs, either in emergy (no sic) or in pollutants. Let alone payment for the toil upon human beings and human "capital." The corporations are pillaging bandits, raping and looting our world for personal gain.
Gary
"If honesty is the best policy, then by elimination, dishonesty must be the second best policy."
-- George Carlin
Nothing new here. Profits = Externalized Costs
Including the Army & Navy to secure the theft of OPS - Other People's Stuff. Does this sound like the British Empire, the German Empire, the French Empire, the U.S.A. Empire... Duh
"WHAT business does Science and Capitalism got, bringing all these new inventions into the works before Society has produced a generation educated to using them?"
HENRIK IBSEN..playwrite.
The answer: Human Lungs, Liver and Kidneys.
The question: How is the externalization of cleaning costs by big coal and multinational oil accomplished?
probably a conservative estimate too
The rich and powerful of this world. They are few and we are billions.
They are surrounded and taken care of by unrich people, without whom they would be helpless.
The day is soon coming when they will be asked, politely and compassionately and repeatedly, to give everything they have away to the starving, the destitute, the poor and the unrich and get themselves as expeditiously as possible to a slum, where they will live out their lives impoverished, powerless and in silence, begging.
All of this for the sake of their immortal selfs, which, at this time, are doomed; as in: How many times larger than the eye of a needle is an adult camel?
They must be loved to death. Simple. Clear.
You say not? I say yes.
How many times during every one period of 48 hours is the word "economy" being written and/or spoken on this earth?
I suggest that the word "health" will replace it when describing the state of the world and its people.
People MUST begin to clean up their own messes!!!!! These corporations must be FORCED to clean up the mess they have made irregardless of the financial cost to them, or they should be forced to live in their own putrid sewage! Wake up, you are responsible for the crap or goodness your create. Pick up after yourself, whether you're a billionaire, a working class person or a pauper!!!!!
The cost of cleanup and restoration should be paid by the banks and corporations who profited from the damage they caused, not by the public. Why does the public usually get saddled with the costs?
That's why they are called *externalities.* The corporation *externalizes* whatever expenses it can and tries to force others to pay them.
This is totally insane from an ecological perspective. Those inside the corporate bubble-reality either dont *see* the ecological perspective, or, dont care because the plan is to reduce the population through war, famine and disease and of course pollution. It's like the U.S. elite wars: they grab for what they want and dont give a damn how many people die because of it. The MIC extracts wealth from the earth and from people, and turns the earth to shit in the process.
Presidents,US congressmen,local and international environmental groups, hundreds of demonstrations, halting all financial investment, increasing taxes, no further tax breaks, no individual picketing of their products and complete government takeover of those three thousand corporations will not stop the killing of the earths environment and its population.
The ONLY occurrence that could POSSIBLY shock these corporations out of their obscene and insane desire for more and more wealth could be catastrophic death worldwide;millions of people dead due to their largess.
Then again,maybe not...........and the beat goes on.
Why does the word GOD appear to be so censored in "our" political language? The ONE God that is given lip service by so many of this planet's inhabitants? The ONE God—Omniscient, Omnipotent, Omnipresent— that is ignored by those who won't make the effort to live the core values of Truth, Dharma (living by honesty and constancy), LOVE, PEACE, and Harmlessness?
Can we neglect these core values without destroying the planet? Are we doomed to live as DEMONIC babies who stumble their way through life, ignoring the genuine needs of other suffering humans [and other animals] after "learning" to walk? who are unwilling to explore whether unselfish prayer and unselfish action really work?
THERE IS NO GOD.
Isn't this one of the benefits of globalisation?
Pursuit of Profit Pollutes and Poisons People and Planet Period
Everyone knows that all this is a big lie. The experts at Fox and the religious right and the Republicans have told us so.
Externalized costs will bury the planet as we reach environmental, social and economic tippings points with ever decreasing cycles with ever increasing damages.
Join the fight by helping advance www.ex-cost.org .
Their site has been fire stormed shut twice in the last 6 months and they are looking for better security experts to make the site less vulnerable to attacks.
Please help. We are truly one people on one very small planet.
The only thing that surprises me is that they could fix all these problems, and still have 2/3 of their profits intact. I'm suspicious that many things are not included even in this accounting, and that the books are still cooked, but still... no excuse! And no excuse for us not to insist they do it before we give them one more euro, yen, yuan or peso.
Paying a worker 2 dollars a day for work that is worth 30 dollars a day accounts for the other 2/3rds of profits.
Not to mention, free use of the Armed Forces of the People of the USA...an externalized expense, heh?
From the article:
"The study, conducted by London-based consultancy Trucost and due to be published this summer, found the estimated combined damage was worth US$2.2 trillion (£1.4tn) in 2008 - a figure bigger than the national economies of all but seven countries in the world that year."
This is merely the tip of the iceberg, and the iceberg is melting.
-30-
Yes, these Powerful Few, outwardly they continue in their ascent to the top of the top. Inwardly, however, they have been descending towards the bottom.
The bottom of the bottom is bottomless, is: a knowledge given to those who have been there again and again.
Rich and powerful in life means poor and soul starved in death.
As the production obsession of the Industrial Revolution has been extended, it has created today’s disaster. It has created the addiction to consumption. When business produces excessively, in order to feed their gluttonous profit requirements, they must convince consumers to consume excessively, and consumers have responded well.
Today’s Jurassic Park of businesses are monster industrialized government, industrialized agriculture, industrialized science and industrialized manufacturing. Their executives and lawyers fill governments, from agencies to, in the USA, the Supreme Court, appointed or elected, protecting their wealth. They thwart government intervention in their operations, by laws and regulations. They are strategically positioned to deny government protection from their operating mistakes.
Today’s call for conservatism is a façade for policies and programs to conserve the wealth for the rich and power for the powerful. Unwittingly, Americans are being organized into a group called the Tea Party and Conservative Americans. What the masses do not realize is that they are being used like the cattle on the factory-farms of monster agribusinesses. They will suffer along with the rest because their organizers do not see them as anything but a means to an end.
The only way to tame a monster is cut off its food supply. Withdraw investments, stop gluttonous consuming, slim them down and actively cleanse the government.
Externalizing costs is the name of the profiteering game. Profiteering is a massively corrupt racket but the reason is rarely cited: Profiteering ignores the better interests of the people and focuses exclusively on growing profits. So if addicting the people to something highly destructive that they don't need grows bigger profits, then it's fair game, while it should be a crime. Actually it violates the spirit of the Antidumping Act of 1916. USan corporate godzilla monsters DUMPING energy opiates, transport warez, and agriculture commoditeez, while hiding (externalizing) the true costs, gets the people hooked. Once addicted, they reliably demand more. Once released from civic/personal responsibility, they feel only entitlement. In the USA, the petro-addicts feel only entitlement while ranting about entitlements for the poor. The solution is to end the profiteering. First end elite rule and then antisocial behaviors (profiteering/warmongering, etc) will diminish. Help end elite rule by voting third party in the elections and in all of your exchange/association. It's best to gain enlightenment first, so you know why/how. You gain enlightenment by taking out all of your trust/hope in elites, laying it out on the street, and smashing it to smithereens with a sledgehammer.
Cooperation and realization are the route out of the modern dilemma. Boycott the corporatist economy as much as possible, trade with friends and local enterprise. Corporatists have armies and mercenaries with mega armament power, they also depend on a system of faster and faster growth to infinity upon one small and beautiful planet; that is their flaw and their utterly helpless weakness. Plus, as our neighbor soldier and police friends begin to see the returning vets so callously exposed to the burn pits, they will turn from the manipulators and realign with their original friends, especially if their friends are generating a more fun present and describing a healthy future. Abandoning the goodies was not an easy thing to do in the past, but now the goodies stream has dried up except for the chosen few in the governing and corporate class. Forget the socioeconomic model that externalizes costs and establish a sustainable future that is based on quality and fun while externalizing profits. There is a model we can see for the externalized profit, the honey bee makes sweet gold for its economy and as a sideline pollenates the world. And before the honeybee there were bacteria that eked out a living without even noticing their external profit, which created an atmosphere suitable for everything that lives today. Forget backroom lobby parties that know how to smile for media presentations that manipulate. Establish a parallel culture and watch the state wither as a new way is born. Learn to cooperate. Trade locally. Boycott corporatist businesses as much as possible, they are as weak as dinosaurs on the verge of extinction. This is the dawning of Aquarius, sympathy and understanding are our magic wands.
I guess outsourcing does have an up side...
There needs to be an international MAKE THE BASTARDS PAY movement. Good lord, so they lose a little profit for their non-working stock holders who do nothing but sit on their ass and suck money.
Now there's irony...laws protect the stockholder from losing profits for their investments in these corps, but nothing protects the world's population from the poisoning of the planet. I just don't get it. Well, yes I do. Money = more money = hiring politicians to be elected to protect the profits of the corps(e) that pay for them to listen to what they want so they have more stuff and more money...what a mess. Those people were either abused as children or someone took their toys.
Oh BTW...I saw no mention of the estimated 23,600 lives lost yearly to air pollution death...collateral damage that no one seems to really give a rat's ass about.