CEO Water Mandate Releases Final Corporate Water Disclosure Guidelines

New York, United States of America

Collaboratively-Produced Guidelines Help Companies Effectively Disclose the Many Elements of Corporate Water Management Practice

(New York, 30 September 2014) – The UN Global Compact’s CEO Water Mandate initiative has released the finalized Corporate Water Disclosure Guidelines – a common approach for companies to effectively and intelligibly disclose the many elements of their corporate water management practice to key stakeholders. The Guidelines are available as a PDF report and web-based tool.

Launched in 2007 by the UN Secretary-General, the CEO Water Mandate is overseen by the UN Global Compact, and implemented in partnership with the Pacific Institute.

Over the last several years, a proliferation of different water assessment and disclosure metrics and tools has become available. This array of tools and framework has been helpful in many respects, but has also resulted in significant confusion over what is valuable and meaningful to disclose and reporting that is often not comparable from company to company and year to year.

The Guidelines – developed by the CEO Water Mandate in collaboration with CDP, Global Reporting Initiative, PricewaterhouseCoopers, and World Resources Institute – aim to harmonize reporting approaches, minimizing reporting burdens so companies spend less time on different reports and more time actively managing water. This work is the product of a multi-year, highly-collaborative effort, informed not only by project partners with expertise in water resources and corporate reporting, but also by business representatives, civil society organizations, and UN agencies.

“Sustainable water management and advancing a common approach to disclosure begins with agreeing on what we’re talking about in terms of water scarcity, stress, and risk,” said Gavin Power, Deputy Director of the UN Global Compact and Head of the CEO Water Mandate. “These guidelines give us a starting point for common understanding which the Mandate can build on and points to the potential for and importance of coordination and alignment among the various initiatives addressing corporate water stewardship.”

A key point that came to light in the development of the Guidelines was the need for a common understanding of the terms used to describe geographic locations with water challenges. To promote meaningful information and disclosure, the terms “water scarcity,” “water stress,” and “water risk,” often used interchangeably, have been precisely defined and incorporated in the Guidelines. Nine organizations in the water stewardship field collaborated to agree on these common definitions published in the accompanying water-related terminology discussion paper.

Companies are fundamentally changing the way they address water. The Guidelines offer a common approach to disclosure, putting forward metrics that can begin to harmonize practice and also providing guidance to help companies define what water-related topics to report.

“The private sector is increasingly investing in water-efficient technologies, working with suppliers to encourage more responsible water use, designing cleaner and more efficient products that in turn help consumers lower their water use, and seeking to advance sustainable water management outside their fencelines as a way to mitigate water-related risks and negative impacts,” said Project Director Jason Morrison, Director of the Pacific Institute Corporate Sustainability Program. “Disclosure has emerged as a key component of corporate water management practice, and our outreach has shown that many companies are looking for detailed guidance on how to do it most effectively.”

In response to the growing importance to businesses of water management and water disclosure more specifically, the Guidelines address the ways companies:

  • Measure their water performance;
  • Assess conditions in the river basins where they operate;
  • Understand their water-related risks, impacts, and opportunities;
  • Develop effective water management strategies; and
  • Communicate these issues to stakeholders.

The Corporate Water Disclosure Guidelines are designed to be applicable to a broad range of corporate water users, to capture the complex and location-specific nature of water resource dynamics and corporate action. Companies that are looking for detailed guidance on how to more effectively disclose the many elements of corporate water management will also find in the Guidelines response strategies they can take to address the risks, opportunities, and impacts that come to light in their assessment.

The Corporate Water Disclosure Guidelines report and links to the terminology paper and web-based platform can be found at http://www.ceowatermandate.org/disclosure.  

About the CEO Water Mandate
Launched in July 2007 by UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, the CEO Water Mandate is a public-private initiative designed to assist companies in the development, implementation and disclosure of water sustainability policies and practices. Led by the United Nations Global Compact in partnership with the Pacific Institute, the CEO Water Mandate offers a unique action platform to share best and emerging practices and to forge multi-stakeholder partnerships to address the problems of access to water and sanitation. The CEO Water Mandate has been endorsed by 120 companies from a range of industries and sectors. www.ceowatermandate.org

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