Corporate Knights

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Corporate Knights
CategoriesClean Capitalism
FrequencyQuarterly
Circulation147 500+
FounderToby Heaps
First issueJune 2002
CountryCanada and USA
Based inToronto
LanguageEnglish
Websitecorporateknights.com
ISSN1703-2016

Corporate Knights (CK) is a media, research and financial information products company based in Toronto, Canada, focused on promoting an economic system where prices fully incorporate social, economic and ecological costs and benefits, and market participants are clearly aware of the consequences of their actions. The company calls such a system "clean capitalism". Founded in 2002, Corporate Knights has a media and research division, which includes the award-winning sustainable business magazine Corporate Knights, and a research division which produces corporate rankings, research reports and financial product ratings based on corporate sustainability performance. Its best-known rankings include the Best 50 Corporate Citizens in Canada and the Global 100 Most Sustainable Corporations. In June 2013, Corporate Knights was named "Magazine of the Year" by Canada's National Magazine Awards Foundation.[1]

In addition to its two divisions, Corporate Knights Inc. spearheaded the creation in 2012 of the Council for Clean Capitalism, a multi-industry group of leading Canadian companies dedicated to advocating economic and social policy changes that reward responsible corporate behaviour and remove barriers to clean capitalism. The council's 10 members include Telus, Vancity, and Teck Resources.[citation needed]

History[]

Corporate Knights Inc. was co-founded in 2002 by Toby A. Heaps and Paul Fengler. Fengler was an International Relations and Russian Language graduate, and Heaps majored in Economics and International Development.[2] The pair created the magazine as a "halfway house between Adbusters and Forbes", according to Heaps.

The magazine was first published in the wake of the accounting scandals at Enron and WorldCom with the objective of holding companies more accountable while recognizing that "power is where the money is, and if you want to make social change, it's through business." Heaps has made clear since the magazine was founded that there's no pretending that corporations are saints. .

CK Media[]

Corporate Knights magazine is a publication about.sustainable business focused on how companies, markets and governments are advancing social and environmental sustainability e. Calling itself "the magazine for clean capitalism", it highlights and analyses sustainable corporate practices and investment products. In 2012, an overhaul of the magazine's content and design was conducted. On June 6, 2013, the National Magazine Awards Foundation named Corporate Knights "Magazine of the Year". The publication was also nominated for having Best Feature Package and Best Artistic Package in 2012.

There are approximately 147,500 copies of the magazine distributed quarterly through The Washington Post and Canadian newspaper The Globe and Mail. The magazine is also direct-mailed to corporate and political decision makers worldwide. Its largest presence is in North America and Europe. A digital version was launched in spring 2012 through iTunes in partnership with e-publisher PixelMags,[3] and an additional 10,000 digital copies are distributed through the Globe and Mail's Globe2Go e-paper delivery service.

CK Media also produces an e-newsletter and is active on social media. In 2013, the magazine launched a mobile app, CK Ranker[4] that lets any company rank its sustainability performance and compare itself against industry peers.

Research[]

The magazine's research division produces corporate rankings, research reports and financial product ratings based on corporate sustainability performance. A significant portion of this research is used in the rankings and reports published in Corporate Knights magazine.

Reports and rankings[]

Corporate Knights magazine issues annual rankings, special reports and annual awards for companies. Some of which are listed below (date indicates the year each began):

  • 2002 – Best 50 Corporate Citizens in Canada (annual ranking);
  • 2003 – Sustainable MBA Ranking (ran as Knight Schools Ranking 2003 to 2012)
  • 2005 – Global 100 Most Sustainable Companies (annual ranking);
  • 2006 – Greenest Prime Minister (special award)
  • 2007 – Diversity Report (periodic ranking);
  • 2007 – Cleantech Ranking (annual ranking);
  • 2012 – America's Greenest Presidents (special report);
  • 2013 – Global Green MBA Survey (annual ranking);
  • 2013 – Canada's Greenest Chief Executive (annual award);
  • 2013 – North American Sustainable Cities Scorecard (annual ranking);

Annual Rankings

  • The Global 100

In 2005, CK started the first annual list of the Global 100 Most Sustainable Corporations. This annual ranking is a comprehensive data driven analysis of the world's largest public firms. It has been recognized as a leader in transparency and industry best practices for sustainability rankings, according to SustainAbility's Rate the Raters project.[5]

  • 50 Best Corporate Citizens in Canada

Since 2001, CK has published the annual list of Canada's top corporate citizens. Companies are transparently ranked on their relative carbon, water, waste and energy impacts as well as citizenship indicators including pension fund quality, board diversity, ratio of CEO-pay to lowest paid worker, and tax dollar generation, as well as sector specific indicators such as renewable energy investments (for financial companies) and respect for human rights (for resource extraction companies).

  • Cleantech Ranking

The magazine began publishing a special report on the cleantech sector in 2006, when it created its Cleantech 10 and Next 10 lists of established and up-and-coming Canadian clean technology companies. A Cleantech 10 list of U.S. companies was created in 2012 in partnership with the Cleantech Group. In 2013 the magazine shifted gears by focusing its coverage on the Cleantech Group's Cleantech 100 list of global cleantech leaders, part of an effort to better represent its North American (and global) readership.

  • Global Green MBA Survey

The magazine created its annual sustainability ranking of Canadian MBA schools in 2003. Called Knight Schools, it section periodically ranked engineering and other professional schools over the years. In 2013, a decision was made to expand the ranking beyond Canada.

Awards of Distinction

  • Greenest Prime Minister

This was a one-off award. In 2006, the organization solicited the input of prominent Canadians to rank the environmental impact of Canadian Prime Ministers: , Brian Mulroney was selected. .[6][7][8]

Events[]

Global 100 Dinners

At the annual World Economic Forum in Switzerland, CK hosts the Global 100 Davos Dinner and announces the year's most sustainable companies.

Best 50 Gala

The Annual Best 50 Corporate Citizens in Canada are announced each summer at a gala in Toronto. Awards of distinction are also presented at this event.

Public policy[]

Corporate Knights also undertakes initiatives to influence public policy, including a 2006 $100 billion carbon pricing plan for Canada to reach its Kyoto target,[9] convening the first Energy Ministers' meeting on building a transcanadian grid for transporting green electricity from where it is generated to where it is needed,[10] and the Option 13 initiative to make trade implications a central consideration of the Copenhagen meeting in November–December 2009.[11]

In 2007 CK helped put together a working group to explore a Green Power Corridor summit.[12]

Option13 was a 2008 initiative intended to promote three choices for 2013 in the face of climate change. Ralph Nader and CK's Toby Heaps published an article about it in The Wall Street Journal.[13]

In 2010 CK supported Bill C-300 and testimony was given by Toby Heaps to support the business case for ethical mining.[14]

Links to external studies[]

Prioritizing Global Reporting Initiative Indicators

The Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) created the G3 sustainability reporting guidelines as well as 14 sector-specific supplements. GRI identified these barriers to sustainable investing that must be overcome:

  • 1. Lack of prioritization: When investors calculate ROI there are hundreds of indicators not deemed financially significant and if there's limited disclosure anyhow, investors naturally shy from the challenge.
  • 2. Data doubts: Consensus on ESG factors is hard to come by and even when it is approached there can be uncertainty about sources, limitations and characteristics of available data.
  • 3. Lack of guidance on how to integrate ESG metrics into standard valuation models: There isn't yet a default model of using ESG data once it is collected and ratified by the investor.[15]

G3.1 is GRI's most recent iteration of its Sustainability Reporting Guidelines.[16]

In 2010, the Prince of Wales' Accounting for Sustainability Project (A4S) and the Global Reporting Initiative announced the formation of the International Integrated Reporting Committee (IIRC).[17]

Canadian Institute of Chartered Accountants: Environmental, Social and Governance Indicators

In 2010, the Canadian Institute of Chartered Accountants (CICA) published a report stating that mainstream institutional investors are beginning to factor environmental, social and governance (ESG) indicators into their decision making.[18]

Key people[]

Toby Heaps, Editor-in-Chief

References[]

  1. ^ "Get to know Corporate Knights: Canada's Magazine of the Year - Magazine Awards". Magazine Awards. 13 June 2013.
  2. ^ The McGill Daily - McGill Alumni Launch Business Ethics Magazine Archived 2006-05-17 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ http://www.pixelmags.com
  4. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2013-06-12. Retrieved 2013-06-28.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  5. ^ "Rate the Raters – Projects - SustainAbility". sustainability.com.
  6. ^ "The Greenest Prime Minister". Canuck Politics.
  7. ^ "CTV News - Top Stories - Breaking News - Top News Headlines". ctv.ca. Archived from the original on 2007-10-23.
  8. ^ CBC News - Mulroney honoured for environmental record
  9. ^ The Globe and Mail - Opposition MPs mull carbon-tax proposal
  10. ^ The Globe and Mail - Ministers call for national grid
  11. ^ Ralph Nader and ToHeaps (3 December 2008). "We Need a Global Carbon Tax". WSJ.
  12. ^ Corporate Knights- Green Power Corridor Summit in Ottawa Archived 2012-07-30 at archive.today
  13. ^ Ralph Nader and ToHeaps (3 December 2008). "We Need a Global Carbon Tax". WSJ.
  14. ^ "Canada must guarantee ethical mining practices with Bill C-300, says panel of experts". cnca-rcrce.ca. Archived from the original on 2012-05-11.
  15. ^ EMC- GRI Index Archived 2012-06-12 at the Wayback Machine
  16. ^ Global Reporting- G3.1 Guidelines Archived 2012-06-09 at the Wayback Machine
  17. ^ "404 - Page Not Found". cica.ca. Cite uses generic title (help)[permanent dead link]
  18. ^ "404 - Page Not Found". cica.ca. Archived from the original on 2012-07-10. Retrieved 2012-05-23. Cite uses generic title (help)

External links[]

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