DATAMONITOR VIEW 1
CATALYST 1
SUMMARY 1
ANALYSIS 2
Corporate social responsibility (CSR) has expanded in scope, increasing the onus on utilities to respond to a range of issues 2
Corporate social responsibility has broadened to include a range of sustainable development and corporate governance issues 2
Corporate social responsibility has evolved in the last 10 years to include both environmental and non-environmental issues 3
Sustainable development emerged as a key non-core business focus for companies in the early 1990s 4
Corporate governance emerged as a dominant CSR issue in the early 2000s 4
Climate change is now a prominent feature of CSR reporting, driven by an increase in consumer awareness 5
Utilities may bear the brunt of increasing climate change awareness 6
Independent standard setting and accreditation are becoming common in the CSR field 7
Several organizations have developed international CSR standards and accreditation procedures 7
Large European utilities tend to be members of the United Nations Global Compact 8
Utilities outperform in independent assessments of corporate social responsibility 9
CSR has expanded to encompass an extensive list of sustainable development-related issues 10
The concept of sustainable development for energy utilities has evolved since the 1992 Rio Earth Summit 10
A range of environmental sub-issues have become standard parts of utility CSR programs and reporting 11
Social dimensions to sustainable development for utilities often form the core part of CSR programs and reporting 12
Increasingly, economic dimensions to sustainable development for utilities form an important part of CSR programs and reporting 13
Health and safety is traditionally the issue with the most extensive coverage in utility CSR reporting 14
Measurements of the changing focus of utility CSR reporting show a significant increase in the prominence of climate change issues 14
The single greatest focus in utility CSR reports tends to be health and safety 15
Since 2004, utility CSR reports have expanded in terms of the breadth and depth of issues they cover 16
Utilities have dramatically increased their coverage of climate change and stakeholder engagement in CSR reporting 17
The prevalence of climate change issues in utility CSR reporting has dramatically increased in recent years 17
Most utilities have dramatically increased the level of reporting focused specifically on biodiversity 18
Health and safety issues are a prominent, stable part of utility CSR reporting 19
In many utilities a focus on staff training and development has been stable or decreasing 20
Attention to profiling research and development activities differs significantly between utilities 21
Attention to charitable activities in CSR reporting varies greatly between utilities, with no trend emerging in recent years 22
A strong trend towards increasing the focus on stakeholder engagement is evident across the utility industry 23
Many utilities have dramatically increased their focus on the issue of ethical business practices 24
APPENDIX 25
Definitions 25
Datamonitor Consultancy 25
Ask the Analyst 25
Disclaimer 25
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