Faith Consistent Investing: Not an Abstract Concept
By Christina C.
Herman
An important
aspect of the work of the Missionary Oblates JPIC Initiative is our engagement
with corporations on social and environmental sustainability issues. This
corporate engagement ranges across many areas, from the pricing of essential
medicines for the poor, to the impacts of corporate water use; from the
enforcement of labor standards in factories to equitable access to capital and
credit; from pressing for the rights of indigenous communities in mining operations,
to encouraging corporations to fight human trafficking.
Large corporations - whether
they are making cell phones or hamburgers – obtain their inputs from smaller
companies scattered across the world. As we know, manufacturing is truly
global, with much of the actual manufacturing taking place outside the US – in
low-wage countries like Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Guatemala – and of course,
China. Because countries vary in terms of how well they enforce worker safety
laws, environmental regulations, minimum wage requirements, etc., worker rights
and the environment are often inadequately protected.
Corporate
Impacts on Water
An issue of growing concern is
the impact of water use by corporate operations on local communities and
ecosystems. Freshwater supplies are increasingly limited in many parts of the
world, and water access and allocation are already proving to be areas of
conflict. Negative corporate impacts can come from the direct use of water and
water pollution, but also from the use of energy, which requires water for its
production.
In water-rich areas, heavy
water use is not necessarily a problem, although we need to think – and plan
into the future - to insure maintenance of those now-adequate supplies. But
in water stressed and water scarce areas, water use by corporations and
agribusiness poses a risk both to the local population and the company.
Population growth and the impacts of climate change (causing both drought and
flooding) have combined to increase the pressure on existing water supplies to
a point of crisis in some areas. Groundwater, in particular, is being used at
unsustainable rates in much of the world.
When we engage a company in a
dialog on water, we focus on risk, and encourage them to measure their water
use, so they can determine which of their facilities and what parts of their
supply chain are located in water-scarce areas. If the company has taken this
step (and many have not), we then ask if they are taking action to decrease and
offset their direct water use - to reduce negative impacts on the watershed.
Measuring and reporting - transparency - are important first steps in reducing
corporate impacts on water.
Supply
Chain Risk
A major challenge, even for companies
well along this path of awareness and water risk management, is to get a
handle on just what the risks are in the supply chain. A company’s supply chain
consists of the companies that supply it with materials, and so is not under a
company’s direct control. The lack of a direct relationship makes it harder to
both measure and reduce risk. But pressure companies do, with significant
results. Wal-Mart, for instance, is pushing elements of sustainability down
their supply chain, and having a huge impact, just by dint of their vast buying
power.
Managing water use in the
supply chain is particularly important for large food and beverage companies,
because 70-90% of the world’s freshwater use is for agricultural production,
which forms most of their inputs. Yet, it is also a difficult challenge, one
that even companies deeply concerned about water-related risks are still trying
to manage.
Community
Engagement
A very important focus for
faith-based investors is the extent to which companies engage local communities
on the impacts of their operations. Is the company working with other large
water users, the local government, and the community in that particular
watershed to figure out better ways to manage the scarce resource? Have all
elements of the community, including the disenfranchised, been included in
this process?
The Interfaith Center on Corporate
Responsibility (ICCR) hosted a Roundtable on the Human Right to Water and community
impacts of corporate operations in New York in February of 2012. The goal was
to start a more robust conversation about issues affecting both communities
and companies, as well as how the needs of affected communities can be
addressed. Much work has gone into determining how to measure the environmental
impacts of corporate operations, but the determination of social impacts is
far less developed.
ICCR has started this conversation with the publication of
its Social Sustainability Resource Guide. Further work is needed to develop
processes that will respect the particular needs of poor communities. As
always, concern for the people affected by corporate operations, and the
ecosystems on which they depend for their well-being, is what drives our
faith-consistent investment work.
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