London and New York, October 23, 2012 -
There is a sharp rise in company reports of detrimental impacts
from drought and other water-related issues, yet little change in
the number of companies with board level oversight of water
strategies and no increase in the number of corporations providing
transparent water-related risk assessments to investors.
These are some of the key findings from global analysis of the
largest listed companies released today by the Carbon Disclosure
Project (CDP).
The CDP Global Water Report, prepared by Deloitte,
is produced for 470 investors representing $50 trillion in assets
and is based on information submitted to CDP by 185 Global 500
companies1.
The 2012 report reveals that over half
of companies (53% up from 38% in 2011) have experienced negative
impacts from water-related challenges including water scarcity,
flooding, rising compliance costs, regulatory uncertainty and poor
water quality in the past five years.
This has likely helped catalyze the growing awareness of water
risk, with a jump from 59% to over two thirds (68%) of companies
viewing water as a substantial risk to their business. Corporations
perceive these risks as real and current, stating that the majority
(62%) have the potential to impact their businesses by 2017.
Similarly, more companies this year identify commercial
opportunity arising from an effective water stewardship strategy
(71% up from 63% in 2011), and 79% of the opportunities reported
have the potential to generate a substantive change in business now
or in the next five years, some with a sales potential of more than
€800 million by 2020.
Despite these significant risks and an improvement in awareness
of supply chain risk - 71% of respondents are able to state whether
or not they are exposed to such risk, up from 62% in 2011 - a third
(29%) of respondents remain unable to provide a complete picture of
water risks by failing to establish if water threatens their supply
chain.
This could be linked to the limited number of companies
recognizing water as a board level issue. While reported risks and
opportunities have risen notably in comparison to 2011 response
rates, companies citing board-level oversight of their
water-related policies, strategies or plans has increased by just
1% to 58%.
Furthermore, the percentage of firms responding to the investor
request for water information through CDP remains the same as last
year at 60%, while the proportion with concrete targets or goals in
areas such as water efficiency and quality improvements has
decreased from 57% last year to 55%.
"We look to Global 500 companies for examples of
leadership," says CDP's chief executive officer Paul
Simpson, "While it is encouraging that their awareness of
the commercial risks and opportunities associated with water is
improving, progress in responding to them is varied and in many
cases insufficient. We need to see greater corporate accountability
through more transparency, concrete targets and goals and board
level oversight of water-related issues."
An encouraging three quarters (74%)
of respondents are taking some form of collective action to develop
collaborative solutions to address water-related problems and enjoy
shared benefits.
"Global business leaders, especially in Global 500 companies,
must understand their business value at risk from water related
issues and implement strategic plans to help mitigate these
risks.
Increased competition for water, a finite and irreplaceable
resource, requires prompt action now," says William
Sarni, director and practice leader of Enterprise Water Strategy at
Deloitte Consulting LLP, "These companies can set the tone
for how smaller business can contribute to making informed water
decisions."
Although more than 100 additional investors have this year asked
companies to report their water strategies and use through CDP's
global system, there has been no change in the number of companies
disclosing.
"A higher proportion of companies in 2012 identified water as a
substantive risk or opportunity compared with the previous year.
While we welcome this increased awareness, companies need to
improve transparency on their water management strategies.
Companies should disclose metrics that show their exposure to
water-related risks and opportunities, and that measure the
performance of their water management strategy.
This will provide important information for investors seeking to
manage water-related risks and opportunities in their
portfolios," says Jan Thomsen, Chief Risk Officer at
Norges Bank Investment Management (NBIM), manager of the
Norwegian Government Pension Fund Global.
Paul Simpson added, "We know that it can take companies some
time to catch up with measurement, strategy and action once they
identify risk so we expect to see more companies developing water
strategies and disclosing next year".
Of the sectors responding, only 44% of the Energy sector
companies requested to provide water information responded, placing
the sector as the least transparent for the second year running.
Health Care has retained its position as the most responsive in
reporting with a 77% response rate.
The CDP Global Water Report 2012 is being launched at
the CDP Global Water Forum, which is being
broadcast live via the internet from 09.00 EDT. The
report and public company responses are available to download at
the CDP website.
1The Global 500 are the largest companies by market
capitalization included in the FTSE Global Equity Index Series. 318
Global 500 companies were invited to respond to the CDP Water
Disclosure information request because they operate in sectors
which are water-intensive or exposed to water-related risk. 191 of
the 318 companies responded and the analysis in the report is based
on the 185 responses submitted by August 6th 2012.