
Your company’s share price can be negatively affected if you fail to behave responsibly in your business practices.
I have written here a couple of times about environmental risks companies could potentially face. This first time I wrote about this it was in reference to FaceBook’s decision to source the power for their new data center from a utility which uses coal-fired power primarily.
I followed that up with a post about how the EPA, the SEC and institutional investors are becoming more interested in environmental risk, asking companies to report on risks which may impact on a business’ sales, properties or even their reputation.
The importance of this has been driven home forcibly over the last couple of days as GreenPeace launched an international campaign targeting Nestlé. Why? Because it turns out Nestlé is purchasing palm oil from companies whose plantations cause deforestation of Indonesian rainforests with all the attendant knock-on effects this has (massive CO2 emissions, indigenous communities destroyed, and devastation of the Orang-utan’s habitat to name but a few).
As part of the campaign, Greenpeace launched a report called Caught Red Handed [PDF] outlining the connections between Nestlé, their suppliers and habitat destruction in Indonesia. As part of the launch campaign, Greenpeace had people on the ground at Nestlé offices in Orang-utan costumes publicising the report and they posted a spoof video on YouTube.
Unfortunately Nestlé, decided that instead of fixing their supply chain, that they should go down the censorship route. They quickly contacted Google and had the video removed from YouTube. Nestlé didn’t reckon with the Streisand effect though and in very short order the video was posted on vimeo and promptly re-posted on many other sites.
Nestlé’s lawyers quickly abandoned the take-down option realising they’d merely be playing a game of whack-a-mole if they continued. The storm of publicity which ensued even spread as far as CNN and within 24 hours Nestlé was forced to backtrack . The video is now back up on YouTube.

As these things do, the debate took place on FaceBook and Twitter too with many people calling for a boycott of Nestlé products! In a classic social media shot to the foot Nestlé warned people:
we welcome your comments, but please don’t post using an altered version of any of our logos as your profile pic – they will be deleted.
Now, in any social media forum (or any forum for that matter), threatening people with censorship is definitely not a way to win friends or influence people. And predictably this threat inflamed an already upset audience. The censorship threat went viral and Nestlé’s reputation went into freefall.
The end result, as you can see at the top of this post, Nestlé’s stock price fell too.
This was eminently preventable.
And it is a clear demonstration of the need to be fully aware of all the potential risks in your supply chain.
If Nestlé was utterly transparent and ethical in its business practices, then it couldn’t have been ambushed by Greenpeace.
If Nestlé had ensured that its supply chain was completely free of controversy it would have avoided the pr storm, the reputational damage and the financial losses from loss of sales and the fall in its share price.

Photo credit Unhindered by Talent
Here is this Friday’s Green Numbers round-up:
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Nissan: 500,000 Electric Cars by 2012 – News – Automotive Fleet
Nissan is planning for a production capacity of 500,000 Leaf electric cars in North America, Japan and Europe by 2012, the Chicago Tribune reported.
tags: nissan leaf, nissan, greennumbers, electric cars, electric vehicles
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Carbon capture storage will ‘generate 100,000 jobs and £6.5bn a year’ | Environment | guardian.co.uk
The UK’s carbon capture and storage (CCS) sector will be able to sustain 100,000 jobs by 2030 and generate up to £6.5bn a year, the government claimed today.
Unveiling a new strategy to encourage the growth of CCS, the energy and climate change secretary, Ed Miliband, said it represents a “massive industrial growth opportunity”.
tags: greennumbers, carbon capture and storage, ccs, coal, co2, uk, jobs
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Report: Shell CEO expects plug-in cars to reach 40% market share… in 2050 — Autoblog Green
Forty years is a long, long time from now, so making predictions about the state of the world in 2050 is a pretty easy thing to do. Who’s going to remember to fact check you? Nobody, that’s who. Still, it’s worth noting that Shell chief executive Peter Voser said yesterday that he expects plug-in vehicles to make up up to 40 percent of the global car market in 2050
tags: greennumbers, shell, 2050, royal dutch shell, plug in hybrid, electric vehicles
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Daylight saving time doesn’t save energy
You can’t save daylight by moving around the hands on your clock, of course. So daylight saving time remains as absurdly named as it ever was.
The general pointlessness of DST was the subject of a Rachel Maddow interview Friday (video below) with the author of a whole book (!) on the subject.
What’s germane here is that DST saves about as much energy as light, according to most studies. In fact, a 2008 study found DST “may actually waste energy”
tags: greennumbers, Daylight saving time, time, energy, light
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Energy Efficiency Can Create New Jobs, Save Consumers Billions of Dollars, and Meet Nearly One-Quarter of North Carolina’s Energy Demand
“Energy efficiency can create 38,000 new jobs for North Carolinians while saving consumers $3.6 billion in energy bills, according to a new report released today by the American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy (ACEEE). The report, North Carolina’s Energy Future: Electricity, Water, and Transportation Efficiency, suggests a broad set of policies that can meet nearly a quarter of the state’s energy demand and enables North Carolina to become a national leader in clean energy development and deployment while boosting the state’s economic growth.
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tags: greennumbers, aceee, American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy, energy bills, north carolina, energy efficiency, clean energy
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Denver International Airport sewage spill of 1m gallons may head for Barr Lake
The largest airport in the country, with the “greenest” parking lot, is in a bit of environmental trouble: a DIA raw sewage spill may have sent a million gallons of disgusting into waterways that can feed into the Barr Lake fishery and bird sanctuary (enjoy that, bald eagles).
tags: Denver International Airport, airport, sewage, raw sewage, greennumbers, pollution
Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.