Wednesday, June 25, 2008

http://www.economist.com/finance/displayStory.cfm?story_id=11610918

Yesterday we had a meeting here at UNCTAD to discuss the role of TNCs in climate change. Ultimately, who does responsibility lie with, producers or consumers? How do you separate responsibility along the value chain?

2 comments:

Ian said...

Does it matter? If the market doesn't self-regulate due to corporate reputational concerns ("greenwashing") -- something not likely to solve the climate change crisis, assuming it exists -- then government regulation is the answer. Ultimately, the consumer will bear the cost of all of it. So place responsibility where you will. It is the consumer who bears the burden.

Mike said...

There's a special report in either this or last week's Economist about climate change, and I recommend everyone read it. It covers the movement in the corporate world to start making money off of 'green' technology.

As much as people like to accuse the corporate world of being the cause, it's almost certain that they'll be the solution (assuming that carbon emissions are actually a significant causal factor in climate change, which I personally doubt).