When the government dithers business leads.
Posted by: Stuart Singleton-White | Comment (0)Today sees another report confirming a rise in global mean surface temperatures. It is yet another report completely unable to disprove the impact that humans are having on that temperature rise (natural fluctuations accepted). Yet our government dithers. Worse, the recent speech by George Osborne, addressing the Tory faithful, and the subsequent about face by his junior energy ministers, shows that not only are elements of this Coalition Government beginning to see the need to take action as being too expense, many are now openly hostile to any action on climate change and the requisite planned transition to a low carbon economy that must follow. Ideology trumping evidence once more.
Is tax a CSR issue?
Posted by: Stuart Singleton-White | Comment (0)With this being my last blog for 2010 I’m not going to succumb to the temptation of re-caping the year passing. Instead I want to look at what I think should be one of the Corporate Social Responsibility challenges of 2011. It is certainly something that should be a matter of debate within and among the CSR community.
Cancun climate summit: too early to claim success.
Posted by: Stuart Singleton-White | Comment (0)For environmentalist December is becoming one of the busiest months of year. Add to the annual meeting of EU Fisheries Ministers – and their annual spat about quotas – the now annual meeting of the parties as part of the UN’s climate change framework; the UNFCCC. This year is took place in Cancun, Mexico and right at the very end the Mexican government seemed to pull a deal out from the teethe of utter defeat. But what sort of deal? And can anyone claim success?