SYSTEMS THINKING: Is there safety in sustainability?
by James E. Leemann, Ph.D.
June 4, 2009
Global reporting barely gives you a clue
This month we welcome our newest columnist,
Dr. James Leemann, who will focus most of his
writing on the need for greater systems thinking in
safety and health.
With all the talk of “green” jobs, I
thought it might be worthwhile
to explore how safety, health and
industrial hygiene work is viewed
through the lens of sustainability, sustainable development,
corporate social responsibility, and so on.
First and foremost, safety, health and industrial
hygiene professionals are responsible for ensuring
employees in their organization are afforded the best
opportunity to be injury- and illness-free at work and
safe at home. The challenge to make it happen can
be overwhelming. Gaining management’s attention in
today’s hectic economic environment is more difficult
than ever, so if hooking safety and health
initiatives to the company’s “Green Wave
Bandwagon” gains attention and financial
support — why not?
The following is the first in a two-part
article on the safety and health professions
and the sustainability or “green”
movement. Part I provides a bit of background
and Part II will address some
ideas on aligning with the movement
to improve safety and health
performance.
Current status
Curious as to whether or not safety and
health are addressed in corporate sustainability
reports, I visited some of the most notable websites
promoting sustainability guidelines and
metrics, which included the Global Reporting
Initiative, Global Environmental Management
Initiative (GEMI), Leadership in Energy and
Environmental Design, and the World Business
Council for Sustainable Development.
Next, I reviewed 30 company social responsibility
reports found at the Global Reporting Initiative,
Sustainability-Reports, CSRwire and GEMI,
which point to company sustainable development/
social responsibility portals. Another excellent site
I visited was the Roberts Environmental Center,
which publishes an evaluation index of sustainable
reports by industry sector.
Essentially, all 30 reports followed, in some
measure, the “Environmental, Social and
Economic Sustainability” format or the G3
Guidelines (v. 3.0) of the Global Reporting
Initiative. Even so, Goldman Sachs JBWere,
PriceWaterhouseCoopers, and Innovest, to name
a few, are promoting their own forms of definitions,
metrics and ratings. An excellent site that
has compiled the lion’s share of reporting guidelines
is The International Corporate Sustainability
Reporting Site, where 24 such guidelines are currently
listed.
Virtually none of these guidelines are available
online and almost all organizations charge to gain
access to their guidelines. Indeed, sustainable
development reporting has become a “cottage
industry.”
Old school metrics
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| Does anyone have a new metric for reporting safety performance? |
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In general, when it comes to safety, occupational
health and industrial hygiene topics, virtually
all of these reporting methods ask for traditional,
decades-old safety statistics — recordable
injury rates, loss workday rates, fatality numbers,
employee vehicle accident rates, etc. As far as
providing information on occupational health and
industrial hygiene, these reports, with very few
exceptions (I found one), are sparse at best and
most do not even mention these topics at all.
Even though guideline-producing organizations,
such as GRI, have no doubt spent countless
hours wordsmithing their reporting guidance
documents, there is essentially no control or
requirement over which topics any company
must report.
The treatment of safety and health reporting is
mentioned as an example in GRI’s Reporting Practice
guidance document entitled “Reaching Investors –
Communicating Value through ESG Reporting.” The
guidance assumes a company reporting routinelygathered
safety and health statistics and maintaining
a high standard of performance would not present an
investor with any degree of risk for his or her investment
in the company, unless the company sustained a
major workplace accident. A quick review of several
past major industrial accidents with multiple fatalities
and injuries and their impact on the company’s stock
prices reveals virtually no deterioration in stock prices
following the accident.
Obviously, to sell the public reporting idea inside
companies, one of the stipulations had to allow a company
to pick and choose which topics it wants to pitch
to the public. By only asking for traditional safety data,
one might conclude the guidance writers view safety in
the context of driving into the future looking into the
rearview mirror.
Low participation
What is truly disconcerting is the total number of
industrial manufacturing companies in the United States
who submitted corporate sustainability reports in 2008
to the sustainability guidance websites. Many of the
submitted 2008 reports only cover years prior to 2008.
As of April 2009, a review of the GRI list of submitted
2008 sustainability reports reveals a worldwide, repeat
WORLDWIDE, total of 942 companies and subsidiaries
submitting a report, of which only 97 are U.S.-based
companies and 58 of these are industrial manufacturing
companies. There are more than 500,000 U.S.-
headquartered manufacturing firms with literally millions
of manufacturing sites located here and abroad.
After reviewing 30 corporate social responsibility
reports, all I can conclude is the G3 Guidelines provide a
collection of topics from which companies can selectively
choose to publicly report data in a prescribed format,
which they have, for the most part, been compiling and
reporting, as required by law, for decades. These reports
present reams of data, stories about what has been and
is going to be, and a few offer goals for sometime in the
future. Many of the sample sustainable projects focus
on reducing or eliminating non-sustainable activities as
opposed to presenting truly sustainable projects — it is
all in how one defines the word “sustainable.”
In total, these reports are understandably outwardly
focused with essentially no discussion on the impacts
their sustainability projects are having or will have on
worker safety and health, the general public or the environment.
The presumption is anything “green” must be
good for you and the environment, right?
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