Government not motivating industry to reduce carbon emissions
Colchester, UK - 1st
April 2009 - A recent carbon accounting survey by Access
Accounting has highlighted that the Government is not doing enough
to motivate businesses to make carbon-reduction initiatives a
priority in the workplace. A staggering 84% of respondents felt
that the government needed to do more, while only 5% felt no
motivation was needed.
Furthermore, 62% of respondents felt that the Government should
incentivise businesses to reduce their carbon footprint by
introducing beneficial tax breaks. Over half (57%) felt that
greater education and public initiatives were required. As many as
36% of respondents felt that the Government should impose tougher
regulations on carbon emissions even during the economic
downturn.
Kevin Misselbrook, Customer Services Director for Access
Accounting said, "With such a strong majority feeling, I'm
surprised that green incentives haven't been prioritised. The
Government is committed to cutting greenhouse-gas emissions by 80%
in the UK by the middle of the century, and this would be a big
step in the right direction."
Misselbrook continued, "While the Government needs to do more to
encourage carbon-reduction, businesses should look beyond the
environmental benefits of going green and understand the cost
benefits associated with reducing carbon emissions. By measuring
its current carbon footprint, a company can start to understand
where carbon-cuts can be made. This might be initiatives to reduce
power consumption and waste in the office, or utilising new
communication technologies to cut back on unnecessary
travelling.
"The real key to reducing carbon emissions is to encourage
behavioural changes within the organisation. Businesses may be
surprised when they identify their areas of highest carbon
consumption and the potential associated cost savings to be made.
To gain this understanding it is vital to have the right tools to
measure emissions - after all, you can't manage what you can't
measure." (To read more on Kevin's opinions visit http://blog.access-accounts.com/)
John Doyle, Sustainable Development Policy Co-Coordinator,
Information Society DG, European Commission said, "The carbon
challenges set by governments are virtually unachievable, and the
2020 guidelines are not realistic. However, companies must start
acting proactively in understanding their carbon footprints. If
more companies measured and reported their carbon emissions, we
would be able to get more mileage for carbon reduction."
In 2008, Access Accounting launched Accounting for Carbon
Emissions (ACE), the first practical tool to incorporate carbon
emissions in the finance function. It was a landmark change, and
now enables businesses to easily measure their footprint at low
cost with little complexity. Access Accounting pioneered carbon
footprint measurement into the day-to-day accounts function so that
reporting on a business' carbon footprint is now as easy as
extracting financial reports.
Doyle continued, "ACE is an enabler, providing a tool that can
help organisations manage and gain visibility of their carbon
footprint. Eventually tools like ACE will be obligatory for all
businesses."
Access.010409.DC.GovtCarbonSurvey
Media information:
Helen Carpenter
Head of Group PR
Access Uk Ltd
T: +44 (0) 1206 321324 / 07833 936311
F: +44 (0) 1206 322956
E: helen.carpenter@theaccessgroup.com
W: www.theaccessgroup.com
Tim Cole
PR Executive
T: +44 (0) 1206 321335
E: tim.cole@theaccessgroup.com