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CEO Climate Policy Recommendations

CEO Climate Policy Recommendations to G8 LeadersCEO Statement
Forum Partner companies lead business input into the Gleneagles Dialogue on climate International business leaders, together with governments and climate specialists, have drawn up a comprehensive set of business recommendations on a post-2012 framework for global climate policy. The “CEO Climate Policy Recommendations to G8 Leaders” will help inform G8 leaders’ climate change discussions at their Hokkaido-Toyako summit this July.
The recommendations are received by the Japanese government just ahead of the G8 Summit. The statement is the result of 16 months of high-level consultation among senior CEOs – Industry Partners of the Forum – from a range of companies and countries. The statement was circulated among a wider group of Forum Partner firms; it invites their CEOs to join the endorsing group.

The CEO statement is international businesses’ input to the G20 Gleneagles Dialogue on Climate Change, Clean Energy and Sustainable Development. It is a pragmatic and practical leader-level document that contains clear messages and suggestions on issues of mitigation, technology, finance and adaptation. It also outlines ideas on long-term and intermediate international goals and supports bold action from the leaders of the major economies.

A Steering Board consisting of the following World Economic Forum Industry Partner companies guided development of this CEO statement for the G8: Alcoa (USA), AIG (USA), Applied Materials (USA), Basic Element (Russian Federation), British Airways (UK), Deutsche Bank (Germany), Duke Energy (USA), Electricité de France (EdF) (France), Eskom (South Africa), Petrobras (Brazil), RusHydro (Russian Federation), Royal Dutch Shell (Netherlands), Telstra (Australia), Tokyo Electric Power (Japan), TNT (Netherlands), Vattenfall (Sweden).

The process was coordinated by the World Economic Forum in collaboration with the World Business Council for Sustainable Development. The Pew Centre on Global Climate Change served as a resource partner. For more information, please contact gleneagles@weforum.org



Global Business Leaders Deliver Practical Climate Change Plan to G8 Leaders

• 100 CEOs of global companies endorse detailed statement, representing all sectors and regions and collectively more than 10 percent of the value of the world's publically quoted firms
• “Environmentally effective and economically efficient” framework proposed to succeed Kyoto Accord
• Call for both long-term and practical medium-term targets, “such as the aspiration to at least halve greenhouse gas emissions by 2050”
• New public-private agenda for a combined top-down/bottom-up approach to reducing global emissions

Press Release I Photos




Quotes from the Steering Board

Alain Belda

We know we must address climate change. We may not have sorted out every detail, but we are willing to take a leadership position and embrace open dialogue... that will get us all to our common goals of protecting our world for future generations. The changes that are needed can't be incremental; we need major breakthroughs.


 

Alain Belda, Chairman Alcoa, USA

 


Energy and the environment are the two great social and engineering challenges of our time and will only increase in importance as world economies continue to grow. As businesses and government prepare for post-Kyoto, these proposed climate change policy recommendations serve as a useful guide.


  Mike Splinter, President and CEO Applied Materials, USA  
Mike Splinter


Phirwa Jacob Maroga

Since the Johannesburg World Summit on Sustainable Development the role of Business globally in addressing the challenges of Climate Change has been increasingly emphasised. Eskom, as a major emitter of CO2 must play its role. As such we intend to reduce our relative emissions of green house gasses up to 2025, and thereafter reduce total emissions in support of local and global goals.


 

Phirwa Jacob Maroga, Chief Executive Eskom, South Africa

 

 

Businesses compete on ingenuity, innovation, technology and strategic risk-taking. In the long-run the value we create emerges from this competition. We welcome the chance to compete on climate. A successful political framework will tell business that emissions avoided means money earned, now, tomorrow, in 30 years and beyond. The Gleneagles CEO statement clearly shows how such a framework can send the right signals and allow business and competition to transform the global economy.


  Lars Josefsson, President and CEO Vattenfall, Sweden  
Lars Josefsson


Josef Ackermann

The Gleneagles CEO Statement provides an essential framework for a market-based climate policy. By leveraging the markets, financial institutions like Deutsche Bank can accelerate clean energy investments, particularly in emerging market countries, and thereby help fight climate change. However, we are only at the start of a long journey, and we need to progress much more quickly than in the past. We now have to considerably reduce CO2 or CO2-equivalent emissions per unit of GDP, while ensuring continued growth.


 

Dr. Josef Ackermann, Chairman of the Management Board and the Group Executive Committee, Deutsche Bank AG, Germany

 


Global warming and energy security are two of the biggest challenges the world faces. If we are to minimize the harmful impact on the environment of human activity then stakeholders across government, business and civil society, from both developed and emerging economies, must work effectively together. It is time now that we stop just talking about these problems and start implementing the practical measures needed to tackle them. We all believe that these recommendations, prepared and signed by CEOs from many of the world's largest companies, will serve as guidelines for G8 leaders and help them build a new model to tackle effectively the world's environmental and energy issues."


  Oleg Deripaska, Basic Element, Russian Federation  
Oleg Deripaska


Peter Bakker

Business is a very important actor when it comes to fighting climate change. It’s good to see that so many companies have come together to deliver a solid statement to the G-8 leaders and are ready to step up to their responsibilities.


 

Peter Bakker, CEO TNT, Netherlands

 



Business has the skills, expertise and drive to help combat climate change. Telstra, for instance, has already taken the lead in Australia by cleaning up our own business and showing that better use of telecommunications - from phones to broadband connections - can reduce greenhouse gas emissions across the country by as much as 5 per cent. But businesses need governments to provide regulatory certainty and to encourage investment in emissions-reducing technologies. Only then can markets respond rapidly and with confidence.


  Solomon D. Trujillo, CEO Telstra Corporation, Australia  
Solomon D. Trujillo


Supporting CEO quotes


Ian Livingston

BT recognises the critical importance of leadership from the G8 in tackling climate change. Governments, business and citizens need to act urgently and in concert to meet this challenge. We are determined to play our part and support moves that will move us all towards a low carbon economy.


 

Ian Livingston, CEO, BT Group, United Kingdom

 



    
 
 Related documents

 Task Force on Low-Carbon Prosperity (Summary of Recommendations)
 Open Letter to the G20 Leaders
 Scaling up in a downturn (briefing paper for AM 2009)
 CEO Climate Policy Recommendations to G8 Leaders
 CEO Climate Policy Recommendations to G8 Leaders (with Chinese translation)
 CEO Climate Policy Recommendations to G8 Leaders (with Russian translation)
 CEO Climate Policy Recommendations to G8 Leaders (with Spanish translation)
 Endorsers of CEO Climate Recommendations
 Press Release
 Factsheet
 Summary of CEO Statement to G8 on Climate
 Q & A
 Interview: Dominic Waughray


  Interactive map

 Climate change

  Related links

 Gleneagles Dialogue Industry Partnership Project
 Chiba Gleneagles Dialogue, Japan, 2008
 Hokkaido Toyako G8 Summit, Japan, 2008
 G8 Gleneagles Dialogue, 2005
 Davos Climate Alliance
 The CDSB at the Carbon Disclosure Project
 Photos


  Media coverage

 BBC, UK
 Reuters, UK
 The Guardian, UK
 New Zealand Herald, NZ
 International Herald Tribune, FR
 The Associated Press, USA
 Bloomberg, USA
 The New Strait Times, MY
 Guardian, UK
 Real Truth, USA
 Earth Times, UK
 Earth Times, UK

    
 
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