Tagged
Fukushima


After Deepwater Horizon and Fukushima: Can sustainability reporting help fend off catastrophe?

Better GRI reporting standards would help companies avert costly disasters.

By Sanford Lewis

As many readers know, the Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) is the leading standard for corporate sustainability reports, developed through collaboration of NGOs, investors, companies and other stakeholders. About 2,000 companies currently issue reports referencing the GRI’s guidelines. Through June 30 of this year, GRI is inviting suggestions of new topics to be addressed in the next round of revision of its guidelines.

To this author, the key question is how GRI can remain relevant in light of recent environmental disasters in the Gulf of Mexico and Fukushima. What role, if any, can sustainability reports play in anticipating and preventing the worst forms of corporate destruction of our planet? Is sustainability reporting regarding catastrophic risk only reactive, or is it anticipatory?

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08:16 pm by csrwiretalkback[6 notes]

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Radiation is Harmless; Heck, It’s Even Good For You! (cont’d)

There is no safe level of radiation.

Part Two of a two-part series from CSRwire.

By CSRwire Talkback Managing Editor Francesca Rheannon

Yesterday, I wrote about the difference between exposure to external radiation - radiation that is in the air, water or soil - and internal radiation, the stuff that gets inside you. I explained why the natural phenomenon of bioaccumulation means, when radioactive particles (radionucleides) settle into the bones, organs and muscles of prey that are eaten, they become more concentrated the higher up the food chain they go.

So, even though the radioactivity in the water becomes more dilute the farther it flows from the source, it becomes more concentrated in bodies of the animals that ingest it. It’s why the “solution to pollution” is not dilution, at least in the case of substances that bioaccumulate (and damage cells, as we’ll see below).

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05:50 pm by csrwiretalkback[2 notes]

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Radiation is Harmless; Heck, It’s Even Good For You!

The media - and some environmentalists - have got it all wrong on radiation hazards.

Part One of a two-part series from CSRwire.

By CSRwire Talkback Managing Editor Francesca Rheannon

OK, OK, I know it’s a little late for an April Fools’ headline, but the real joke is on the media. From NPR to Fox, the media appear to be swallowing the nuclear power industry’s soothing nostrums that the radiation streaming out of the Fukushima Daiichi Plant into the air and water and migrating around the world is at levels that “pose no significant impact on human health.” The patsies include environmental writer and nuclear power booster, George Monbiot.

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06:46 pm by csrwiretalkback[16 notes]

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When Talk about “the Elephant in the Room” Obstructs Japan’s Recovery

Counteracting sensational reporting to construct a sustainable opportunity.

By Lavinia Weissman

The aftermath of the earthquake and tsunami disaster in Japan has surfaced conversations people often describe as “the elephant in the room” – the toxic facts no one wants to talk about, even when there is not a crisis to pause the denial. In the press, each day, as we watch the rising death toll, other messages help to weave the fabric of distress, i.e. food security, radiation or the unattended elderly left to die.

It’s a challenge for people locally and globally to find a way to have conversations about these topics without getting lost in the doom and gloom. Most people do not have the background to investigate by obtaining the scientific education critical to conducting these discussions. When they try, often the sensationalism of the mainstream media confuses them.

Since the earthquake in Japan and the aggressive way the Japanese have been seeking to bind the impact of the radiation leak from the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear plant, I have observed a difference in the way Japanese are responding to their trauma that is different than how the US has responded to Katrina, Haiti and the BP oil spill. The value that the Japanese hold for civility, dignity and respect for human life has made its appearance in the press. 

While the global press still carries headlines of survival and threat of doom, I have found a few stories hidden in the massive flow of articles streaming everywhere that provide a hidden story of the presence of the exemplary way the Japanese hold their dignity and compassion at this time.

Stories of Dignity and Compassion

A story in this context was reported in the UK Daily Mail, Elderly Patients Left to Die,” mixed in with numerous other traumatic headlines.

While reading the story, I discovered something unexpected. True to the Japanese culture of dignity and care, these elders were arranged in a community space and left to rest in their comatose state on bed cushions with bedding and blankets while others cared for them. This arrangement conveyed a picture of compassion and peace in a location that appeared clean and orderly, considering how much rubble there was everywhere else.

I don’t recall seeing images like these after the earthquake in poverty stricken Haiti or Houston Astrodome where Katrina victims were held.

Radiation Exposure: The Big Elephant

By March 19, the UK Daily Mail headline reported on the one elephant that stomps out constructive conversation anywhere: “The moment nuclear plant chief WEPT as Japanese finally admit that radiation leak is serious enough to kill people.” This admission was made days after the first radiation leak and the massive effort to contain it.

This kind of media does not inspire the organization of a research agenda followed by fundraising to build upon a base of science from which people can respond to by developing approaches to radiation that exercise precaution and organize a level of research funding that is sufficient to fund a cooperative agenda that can impact the prevention of exposure or treatment of people who develop health issues as a result of exposure.

By Saturday morning I found this story on my Facebook news feed, via my colleague and friend @doncarli:

Ann Coulter made an appearance on the Bill O’Reilly show reporting that, “Radiation is good for you.”

This report was sourced by the Huffington Post. It contained a link to the actual broadcast by Coulter, who was interviewed by Fox News host Bill O’Reilly.

Reporting like this perpetuates the debate that exacerbates public confusion on environmental and chemical toxins. This reflects an investment in media campaigns leveraged by public interest groups and corporate lobbyists that confuse the public rather than educate them on actual risks and how to exercise precaution.

A Call for Exercising Precaution

There’s always an opportunity in every situation. The Japan earthquake presents an opportunity to learn how to exercise precaution by integrating the application of science and technology into discussions that shape a research agenda that can accelerate the development of innovation in response to a trauma or catastrophe.

General Electric, a global corporate citizen and UN Global Compact Leader, is the manufacturers of the nuclear reactor installed in Fukushima. A fundraising campaign led by CEO Jeffrey Immelt began with a $5M donation and has accelerated into pledges of over $100M. Recipients of this web of donations include the Japanese Red Cross and Miyagi Prefecture Disaster Relief Fund. 

GE has also taken a lead to invest in sustainable innovation through venture programs, like Ecomagination and Healthymagination, which were shaped to accelerate a response to the harm that has been caused to our environment, people and economy.

Will telecommunication companies such as Nokia, Motorola and Sprint follow and help lead more sustainable innovation?

About Lavinia Weissman

Lavinia Weissman is a sustainable market leadership capacity builder, journalist and publisher of thestoryofmeaningfuluse.com. She is passionate about working with people from any industry or sector to help impact the health of people, environment, earth and economy to protect the well-being our global ecosystem.

Talkback Readers: Where would you like to see more innovation with respect to the health of people, communities, economy and environment? Let us know your thoughts!

06:56 pm by csrwiretalkback[1 note]

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Safety and Sustainability Lacked a Voice at Fukushima

Why worker health and safety is good for sustainability and the environment.

Originally posted on the CSRwire website.

By CSRwire Talkback Managing Editor Francesca Rheannon

It happened on March 24, 2011. The radioactive water poured over the workers’ boots and burned their feet and ankles as they struggled to lay new power cables at reactor No. 3 at the Fukushima-Daiichi nuclear plant. The estimate is that they were exposed to 330 times the amount of radiation allowable in a year. And although they were released several days later, they face a lifetime of higher risk of cancer, cataracts and bone disease. They are in their 20s and 30s, so they have a long time to worry.

Two Japanese workers joined 15 others at the doomed plant who have been injured so far due to exposure to high radiation levels (not including those who will get cancers later, which could reach as many as 50%). They and their fellows at the plant are regarded as heroes – which they are – but few stop to question whether the risks they are taking are higher than they should have been.

They aren’t regular TEPCO employees; like many of the workers currently battling to get the reactor under control, they are poorly paid day workers, working for subcontractors. The question that leaped immediately to my mind when I read the report of the accident was, “how in God’s name did water get into their boots?”

I used to train workers on health and safety during hazardous operations (the OSHA-mandated Hazwoper trainings) at The New England Consortium (TNEC), including some basic information on nuclear safety. Workers in hazmat suits - the big white Tyvek suits that have become a common site on news reports about the Japan nuke disaster - are supposed to have their boots sealed to the suit so no contaminants can get in. It’s a no-brainer.

But those workers had neither the proper boots nor the waterproof hazmat suits, TEPCO admitted - and putting on boots wasn’t even required by the company’s safety manual. They weren’t given dosimeters. Neither is it likely they got the Japanese equivalent of Hazwoper training - indications are the training they received was perfunctory, at best. Nor were they warned the water was radioactive, even though the company knew about the problem several days before the workers were exposed. Evidently the TEPCO safety officers were lax as well. They failed to arrange for radiation levels to be monitored in the area where the workers were operating, “a very big and basic oversight.”

Neither they nor the regular workers at TEPCO were unionized, which might have something to do with the lax health and safety culture at the plant. “It’s important to involve workers themselves,” TNEC’s project director Paul Morse told me. “In a lot of places where we have nuclear facilities in the U.S., we have unionized workers who have had a lot of investment in emergency response training. The people who have been part of these training programs are much better prepared and fought for plant safety protections as part of collective bargaining. It’s crucial to have a workforce that’s had a voice.”

What’s the link between injured workers battling to contain the worsening nuclear disaster in Japan and the hundreds of thousands of Japanese residents as far away as Tokyo who are worrying about the radiation spreading invisibly into their air, water and soil? It’s not that the former are trying to protect the latter, although that is true. It’s that a company that takes worker health and safety as cavalierly as TEPCO does is one that takes the health and safety of the environment just as cavalierly.

In other words: worker health and safety is the first line of defense against environmental catastrophe, whether the catastrophe is sudden or insidiously ongoing. In the case of Fukushima-Daiichi, the BP Deepwater Horizon disaster a year ago and upper Big Branch Mine disaster before that (just to mention the most famous accidents in recent history), all the companies involved had been cited for poor worker health and safety records before the disasters. But the same disregard for environmental and worker health can be seen in companies that make the list of the Toxic 100 index, like Bayer and ExxonMobil, for their ongoing contamination of the environment.

Safeguarding worker health and safety isn’t just good for workers and the environment. It’s also good for companies.

First, it improves productivity. A summary of research from New Zealand shows a safer and healthier work environment goes beyond fewer sick days taken or lower workers’ comp costs. It includes more innovation, improved quality of work, a better corporate reputation and improved employee recruitment and retention.

But even more so, a focus on worker health and safety should be something near and dear to the sustainability community. Back when I was training workers, one of the first principles we trainers covered was that reducing pollution at the source was the best practice for controlling contamination (instead of having to clean it up later). And the best way to reduce pollution at the source was substitution - using nontoxic materials in place of toxic ones.

The options for substitution were fewer then. But in the years since I taught my last training, “green chemistry” has been coming into its own, opening up a whole new promising field for innovation in clean technology.

Among its “Twelve Principles” are preventing hazardous waste from being created, maximizing the use of materials (so less are used), designing safer chemicals, using fewer additives, designing for energy efficiency, using renewable feedstocks and making products innocuously degradable. A moment’s reflection will show they not only protect worker and environmental health, but also cut production costs.

From smaller companies like Genomatica, profiled in a recent post by Marc Gunther (instead of hydrocarbons, it uses “carbohydrates”) to big ones like Dow Chemical and BASF, innovative scientists are finding solutions to pollution.

Government assistance is key. In the U.S., the increasingly beleaguered EPA has been instrumental in spurring green chemistry through its Green Chemistry Challenge. But the E.U. has been ahead of the U.S., passing several directives that mandate more easily recycled materials in electronics as well as less toxic substances in electronics production. And its REACH framework aims not only to track toxics, but also to encourage innovation in green chemistry.

Some industries are inherently dangerous to worker and environmental health - like nuclear power. The best way to control pollution at the source is to switch to 100% safe renewable energy as fast as possible - something we could do by 2030, according to a recent study.

That would ensure that no more miners would die, no more nuclear workers would become radioactive and no more workers would be blown up on oil rigs. And all of us will enjoy a safer and healthier environment.

About Francesca Rheannon

Francesca is CSRwire’s Talkback Managing Editor. An award-winning journalist, Francesca is co-founder of Sea Change Media. She produces the Sea Change Radio’s series, Back to The Future, and co-produces the Interfaith Center of Corporate Responsibility’s podcast, The Arc of Change. Francesca’s work has appeared at SocialFunds.com, The CRO and E Magazine, and she is a contributing writer for CSRwire. Francesca hosts the nationally syndicated radio show, Writers Voice with Francesca Rheannon.

Talkback Readers: Where were opportunities missed to help safeguard workers? How can companies resolve these lapses to prevent future disasters? Share on Talkback!

10:18 pm by csrwiretalkback[1 note]

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