The resources on which business relies are becoming more
difficult to access and more costly. Changing patterns of economic
growth and wealth are likely to strain infrastructure and natural
systems . The unpredictable results of a changing climate will
affect physical assets and supply chains. And businesses can expect
an ever more complex web of sustainability legislation and fiscal
instruments.
GLOBE-Net, February 15, 2012 - New research
from KPMG International has identified 10 "megaforces" that will
significantly affect corporate growth globally over the next two
decades.
The KPMG study, Expect the Unexpected: Building
Business Value in a Changing World, explores
issues such as climate change, energy and fuel volatility, water
availability and cost and resource availability, as well as
population growth spawning new urban centers.
The analysis examines how these global forces may impact
business and industry, calculates the environmental costs to
business, and calls for business and policymakers to work more
closely to mitigate future business risk and act on
opportunities.
Michael Andrew, Chairman of KPMG International, said: "We are
living in a resource-constrained world. The rapid growth of
developing markets, climate change, and issues of energy and water
security are among the forces that will exert tremendous pressure
on both business and society."
"We know that governments alone cannot address these challenges.
Business must take a leadership role in the development of
solutions that will help to create a more sustainable future. By
leveraging its ability to enhance processes, create efficiencies,
manage risk, and drive innovation, business will contribute to
society and long-term economic growth."
The KPMG research finds that the external environmental costs,
which today are often not shown on financial statements**, of 11
key industry sectors jumped 50 percent from US$566 to US$846
billion in 8 years (2002 to 2010), averaging a doubling of these
costs every 14 years.
The report calculated that if companies had to pay for the full
environmental costs of their production, they would lose 41 cents
for every US$1 in earnings on average, the study found, noting that
global sustainability megaforces will significantly increase the
complexity of the business environment.
"Without action and strategic planning,
risks will multiply and opportunities will be lost. Corporations
are recognizing that there is value and opportunity in
responsibility beyond the next quarter's results; that what is good
for people and the planet can also be good for the long term bottom
line and shareholder value."
Yvo de Boer, KPMG Special Global Adviser on
Climate Change and Sustainability.
John B. Veihmeyer, Chairman of KPMG's Americas region and
Chairman and CEO of KPMG LLP (U.S.), said KPMG has taken a
leadership role in helping organizations to understand the
opportunity side of the equation, not just the risk.
"KPMG's clients and others are seeing the link between
sustainability and financial results becoming increasingly clear.
Companies that recognize the external influences on their
organizations and leverage them as opportunities are realizing a
competitive advantage. To that end, the exercise of measuring and
reporting sustainability activities to stakeholders with clear,
accurate data is increasingly relevant and quickly becoming a
priority," he added.
The 10 global sustainability megaforces that may impact business
over the next two decades are:
- Climate Change: This may be the one global
megaforce that directly impacts all others. Predictions of annual
output losses from climate change range between 1 percent per year,
if strong and early action is taken, to as much as 5 percent a
year-if policymakers fail to act.
- Energy & Fuel: fossil fuel markets are
likely to become more volatile and unpredictable because of higher
global energy demand; changes in the geographical pattern of
consumption; supply and production uncertainties and increasing
regulatory interventions related to climate change.
- Material Resource Scarcity: as developing
countries industrialize rapidly, global demand for material
resources is predicted to increase dramatically. Business is likely
to face increasing trade restrictions and intense global
competition for a wide range of material resources that become less
easily available. Scarcity also creates opportunities to develop
substitute materials or to recover materials from waste.
- Water Scarcity: it is predicted that by 2030,
the global demand for freshwater will exceed supply by 40 percent.
Businesses may be vulnerable to water shortages, declines in water
quality, water price volatility, and to reputational
challenges.
- Population Growth: The world population is
expected to grow to 8.4 billion by 2032. This will place intense
pressures on ecosystems and the supply of natural resources such as
food, water, energy and materials. While this is a threat for
business, there are also opportunities to grow commerce and create
jobs, and to innovate to address the needs of growing populations
for agriculture, sanitation, education, technology, finance, and
healthcare.
- Wealth: the global middle class (defined by
the OECD as individuals with disposable income of between US$10 and
US$100 per capita per day) is predicted to grow 172 percent between
2010 and 2030. The challenge for businesses is to serve this new
middle class market at a time when resources are likely to be
scarcer and more price volatile. The advantages many companies
experienced in the last two decades from "cheap labor" in
developing nations are likely to be eroded by the growth and power
of the global middle class.
- Urbanization: in 2009, for the first time
ever, more people lived in cities than in the countryside. By 2030
all developing regions including Asia and Africa are expected to
have the majority of their inhabitants living in urban areas;
virtually all Population Growth over the next 30 years will be in
cities.
These cities will require extensive improvements in infrastructure
including construction, water and sanitation, electricity, waste,
transport, health, public safety and internet and cell phone
connectivity.
- Food Security: in the next two decades the
global food production system will come under increasing pressure
from megaforces including Population Growth, Water Scarcity and
Deforestation. Global food prices are predicted to rise 70 to 90
percent by 2030. In water-scarce regions, agricultural producers
are likely to have to compete for supplies with other
water-intensive industries such as electric utilities and mining,
and with consumers. Intervention will be required to reverse
growing localized food shortages (the number of chronically
under-nourished people rose from 842 million during the late 1990s
to over one billion in 2009).
- Ecosystem Decline: historically, the main
business risk of declining biodiversity and ecosystem services has
been to corporate reputations. However, as global ecosystems show
increasing signs of breakdown and stress, more companies are
realizing how dependent their operations are on the critical
services these ecosystems provide. The decline in ecosystems is
making natural resources scarcer, more expensive and less diverse;
increasing the costs of water and escalating the damage caused by
invasive species to sectors including agriculture, fishing, food
and beverages, pharmaceuticals and tourism.
- Deforestation: Forests are big business - wood
products contributed US$100 billion per year to the global economy
from 2003 to 2007and the value of non-wood forest products, mostly
food, was estimated at about US$18.5 billion in 2005. Yet the OECD
projects that forest areas will decline globally by 13 percent from
2005 to 2030, mostly in South Asia and Africa. The timber industry
and downstream industries such as pulp and paper are vulnerable to
potential regulation to slow or reverse deforestation. Companies
may also find themselves under increasing pressure from customers
to prove that their products are sustainable through the use of
certification standards. Business opportunities may arise through
the development of market mechanisms and economic incentives to
reduce the rate of deforestation.
The report was released on the opening day of KPMG's global "Business Perspective on Sustainable Growth:
Preparing for Rio+20" summit occurring this week in New York.
The event has attracted more than 400 top CEOs and senior business
leaders from many of the world's major corporations, along with key
policymakers.
KPMG International is hosting the event, in cooperation with the
UN Global Compact (UNGC), the World Business Council for
Sustainable Development (WBCSD) and the United Nations Environment
Programme (UNEP).
The Report is available for download
here.