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Google, Facebook, Amazon and Others Urge SEC To Mandate Regular Climate Reports (cnbc.com) 55

A group of seven tech companies urged the Securities and Exchange Commission to require businesses to regularly disclose climate-related matters to their shareholders. From a report: In a letter to SEC Chairman Gary Gensler on Friday, Google parent Alphabet, Amazon, Autodesk, eBay, Facebook, Intel and Salesforce shared their view in response to a request for public input on such disclosures. The tech industry has been vocal on climate issues in the past, even as employees have pressed the companies themselves to do better. "We believe that climate disclosures are critical to ensure that companies follow through on stated climate commitments and to track collective progress towards addressing global warming and building a prosperous, resilient zero-carbon economy," the companies wrote.
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Google, Facebook, Amazon and Others Urge SEC To Mandate Regular Climate Reports

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  • by Echoez ( 562950 ) * on Monday June 14, 2021 @11:15AM (#61486050)

    Whenever you see stories like this, it helps to remember that compliance with onerous legislation benefits larger companies. Larger companies like the FANG above can easily absorb the costs to produce such a report. But, competitors would have to go down the rabbit-hole of hiring consultants, lawyers and environmental engineers to create this while also trying to produce competitors.

    Imagine if Vimeo or Craiglist or even smaller ecommerce sites had to produce a report like this? Where does the environmental impact of running a site begin and end? Craigslist allows person-to-person sales of used items. Would they be on the hook for calculating the environmental impact for each sale, or simply the cost of running CL servers?

    This is well-intentioned but it also serves to consolidate power in the hands of large profitable companies by creating additional legislative burdens on smaller competitors to knock them aside.

    • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Monday June 14, 2021 @11:28AM (#61486100)

      This is well-intentioned

      No, it isn't. The advantage to the FAANG incumbents is the primary motivation, not a mere unintended side-effect.

      • I remember being furious at the FDA banning CFCs as delivery systems for emergency inhalers.

        Turns out they were fine with it since it was as a small use for medical emergencies, and it was the drug companies pushing it so they could say, oh well, I guess you have to buy our much more expensive, newly-patented inhalers!

      • It's more than financial; it's virtue-signalling and fanaticism.
      • by js80 ( 1534197 )
        Bingo
    • That's exactly what this is. More barriers to entry to hinder competition from smaller companies.

      • by SirSlud ( 67381 )

        The amount of "barrier" this is versus the other competitive advantages they wield isn't worth the finger they had to lift to suggest it. It's just as stupid to think companies don't exercise advantages like position and size over competitors as it is to think everything they do is motivated by it.

        • The amount of "barrier" this is versus the other competitive advantages they wield isn't worth the finger they had to lift to suggest it.

          But worth "the finger" it took to virtue signal? Don't think so. Everything they do is money driven, including this.

          • by SirSlud ( 67381 )

            Everything they do is money driven

            That's exactly what I said is stupid, because it's so demonstrably untrue. You can say lots of things - probably even most things. But companies are still run by people, and people still have emotions, and they do things to be vindictive, or because the people in positions of making decisions have things they are particularly passionate about or interested in.

            Saying everything is driven by money is dumb.

            Although in this case, I don't see why people can't accept that lots of

    • These companies already generate massive amounts of reports that say they're doing wonderful things for the environment. All quite truthful, within the bounds of the law.

      By calling for everyone else to do it, they can virtue signal even harder, with no additional work on their part.

      And, if by some chance, the SEC is pushed into requiring this (expect a legislative push this summer, to deflect attention away from all the other congressional attention they are getting), they only need to revamp their current

    • Craigslist isn't publicly traded so proposal doesn't affect them, and Vimeo has a market value of $8.4 billion. They can afford to put together a report on their emissions. Publicly traded companies are by definition large enough to support this requirement. If anything, limiting this reporting to companies with shareholders is a problem. Whatever the motivation of the FANG companies, this should be public information updated and published every year by every company with yearly revenue above a certain am
      • au contraire. I worked for a publicly traded company that had 8 people. When the office manager/receptionist went on leave the CEO and CFO alternated as to who would answer the door. Microcap companies grossly outnumber large caps and regulation like this costs them real money.

        As another example, I just went through a public-private conversion for a company I owned, Westell, annual revenue $~30M. They went private because the cost of public reporting and was a million bucks a year. 1/30 is a huge perc

        • That is interesting to know, thanks for the info. But regardless, we need reports on emissions for every public and private company above some revenue threshold. If that is a meaningful cost, so be it. But companies have been externalizing the costs of these emissions on others for many years. What that revenue threshold is, how in depth the reporting needs to be, and what kind of services the government can provide to cut down on many companies doing redundant work, I don't know. But companies must accou
          • ...But companies must account for their emissions.

            Why, specifically?

            I can see the argument for it for companies that produce energy, but I have a very hard time explaining for companies beyond that. Case in point, consider my local Waffle House restaurant. Aside from the feel-good exercise that greenwashing that number would be, how does it benefit the owners, customers, employees, or environment for them to collect and publish it?

            Extending that, the franchisee company for that restaurant owns 22 stores,

            • Why, specifically?

              Because these costs (which are significant and growing rapidly) are externalized on to tax payers, people around the globe, and future generations, but are treated as a free resource when businesses account for their own costs. But it is not free. It's very expensive, and companies should not be able to silently offload this expense on to other people.

              In addition, by making companies account for the costs they are currently foisting on others they can be taxed accordingly to pay for those operational costs,

          • But regardless, we need reports on emissions for every public and private company above some revenue threshold.

            Whenever I see someone say "we need", I just mentally replace it with "I want".

  • . . . .then how about shutting down all those power-intensive data centers, full of chips made from rare earths with massive toxic wastestreams ??

    Somehow, I doubt they're going to do that. . .

  • Out of the kindness of their hearts, all those powerful companies promote such important mandates. There can't be any sinister agendas behind it, because hey hey hey, it's CLIMATE CHANGE(TM) we're talking about here! As everyone knows, dealing with CLIMATE CHANGE is a noble goal, always, and it can't possibly be a vessel for sinister corporate agendas of incredibly powerful corporations.
  • We believe that climate disclosures are critical to ensure that companies follow through on stated climate commitments and to track collective progress towards addressing global warming and building a prosperous, resilient zero-carbon economy.

    That's swell, but it's not immediately obvious what it has to do with the SEC.

    The best argument I can make off the top of my head is that if a publicly-traded company is externalizing costs in a fraudulent manner (and this would involve all forms of pollution, not just

    • by XXongo ( 3986865 ) on Monday June 14, 2021 @12:22PM (#61486276) Homepage

      p>That's swell, but it's not immediately obvious what it has to do with the SEC. The best argument I can make off the top of my head is that if a publicly-traded company is externalizing costs in a fraudulent manner (and this would involve all forms of pollution, not just CO2, and plenty of other types of shenanigans too), they might eventually get caught and their stock would take a sudden hit, instead of increment hits as various hidden liabilities come to light over time.

      I agree that this doesn't seem to be central to the SEC's purview.

      An alternate thought as to why it might be within the SEC's purview is that companies put out vast amounts of publicity (and shareholder reports) saying how ecological and green they are. People may hold their stock because they believe that the companies are socially conscious. If internal documents, however, show that they are deliberately withholding information on their damage to the environment, in order to boost their share price, that could be securities fraud.

  • ... big companies in favor of adding burdensome requirements.

    In totally coincidental news, small competitors hardest hit.

  • by companies, as their only concern is going to be profit. Corporations in particular will just have their CEOs replaced if they do anything that impacts quarterly earnings.

    It's also not going to be addressed by individual actions. You tossing a soda bottle in a recycling bin isn't going to stop what's coming.

    What's needed is mass action by an organization without a profit motive. One that can take the losses the businesses refuse to while taking the action individuals can't. We typically call these
    • What's needed is mass action by an organization without a profit motive. ... Government

      Bwahahaha! Government indeed does have a profit motive. It's just that the profit isn't cash, it's jobs for party affiliates.

      • So say the partisans who completely ignore whether something might actually be good for the country, as opposed to being a good look for their party.

  • This doesn't belong within the auspices of the SEC, it's up to shareholders to hold their collective boards of directors accountable for whatever issues that they feel are important in terms of company plans and strategy. More bureaucracy brings nothing more than fat profit-driven lawyers to the table looking for any missing "disclosures" that they can seek class status in litigation of course in friendly judicial districts. every 10K, 5K or whatever filing brings a wrath of potential litigants who just nee

  • Is it because they want people to a) treat the reports as white noise, or b) get more people more stressed. Either way, it does nothing useful, unless you sell stress medication.
  • Hosting conservative speech on social media platform is compelled speech and therefore could not be mandated. Also, having SEC to mandate climate reports is not compelled speech and therefore should be mandated.

    Did I summarize SJW position on speech correctly?
  • I see that the stoic corporations that wish to make the same profits tomorrow that they did today by doing exactly the same thing are rolling out the "over regulation" whining brigade.

    Listen folks, regulation is just another piece of the business landscape. It invites companies to excel at a new piece of the business landscape and perform better than their competition.

    It would just mean that companies could choose to suck at their climate impacts and let the companies that do it better attain higher market

  • The biggest, richest companies which incidentally use a tremendous amount of energy want to burden smaller ones with costly reporting requirements.

    Sure, they claim they are "green" but it's really "greenwash"

    https://bsic.it/big-tech-playi... [bsic.it]

    "Critics claim that many of the companies’ pledges are greenwash, a simple PR stunt aimed at appeasing climate-conscious employees or ESG investors. Often, they are right. Carbon neutrality is extremely hard to quantify. Companies often engage in window dressing wh

  • Problem with Google/Facebook mandating morality and acting as the arbiter of truth, is that they have a poor record in these things. We know from their past actions that Schmidt, Zuckerberg et al. are greedy and unethical pieces of garbage.

    Whatever it is that they're peddling right now, climate change or mental purity or w/e, might very well be good and worthwhile things. But you really have to think hard about who's behind it and ask yourself, do we really want to give these power-hungry scum even more pow

  • More money wasted on regulatory red tape that helps nothing.

"Don't try to outweird me, three-eyes. I get stranger things than you free with my breakfast cereal." - Zaphod Beeblebrox in "Hithiker's Guide to the Galaxy"

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