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CHAPTER 10 • BUSINESS ETHICS/SOCIAL RESPONSIBILITY/ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTAINABILITY  317

              foreign workers is known as gaikokujin roudousha in Japanese. Many Filipinos have
              recently been hired now to work in agriculture and factories throughout Japan.
                 The percentage of foreign workers to the total population is 20 percent in the United
              States, nearly 10 percent in Germany, 5 percent in the United Kingdom, and less than 1
              percent in Japan. But most Japanese now acknowledge that this percentage must move
              upward, and perhaps quickly, for their nation’s economy to prosper. 10


              Environmental Sustainability

              The strategies of both companies and countries are increasingly scrutinized and evaluated
              from a nautral environment perspective. Companies such as Wal-Mart now monitor not
              only the price its vendors offer for products, but also how those products are made in terms
              of environmental practices. A growing number of business schools offer separate courses
              and even a concentration in environmental management.
                 Businesses must not exploit and decimate the natural environment. Mark Starik at
              George Washington University says, “Halting and reversing worldwide ecological destruc-
              tion and deterioration is a strategic issue that needs immediate and substantive attention by
              all businesses and managers. According to the International Standards Organization (ISO),
              the word environment is defined as “surroundings in which an organization operates,
              including air, water, land, natural resources, flora, fauna, humans, and their interrelation.”
              This chapter illustrates how many firms are gaining competitive advantage by being good
              stewards of the natural environment.
                 Employees, consumers, governments, and society are especially resentful of firms that
              harm rather than protect the natural environment. Conversely people today are especially
              appreciative of firms that conduct operations in a way that mends, conserves, and preserves
              the natural environment. Consumer interest in businesses preserving nature’s ecological
              balance and fostering a clean, healthy environment is high.
                 No business wants a reputation as being a polluter. A bad sustainability record will
              hurt the firm in the market, jeopardize its standing in the community, and invite scrutiny by
              regulators, investors, and environmentalists. Governments increasingly require businesses
              to behave responsibly and require, for example, that businesses publicly report the pollu-
              tants and wastes their facilities produce.
                 In terms of megawatts of wind power generated by various states in the United States,
              Iowa’s 2,791 recently overtook California’s 2,517, but Texas’s 7,118 megawatts dwarfs all
              other states. Minnesota also is making substantial progress in wind power generation. New
              Jersey recently outfitted 200,000 utility poles with solar panels, which made it the nation’s
              second-largest producer of solar energy behind California. New Jersey is also adding solar
              panels to corporate rooftops. The state’s $514 million solar program will double its solar
              capacity to 160 megawatts by 2013. The state’s goal is to obtain 3 percent of its electricity
              from the sun and 12 percent from offshore wind by 2020.

              What Is a Sustainability Report?
              Wal-Mart Stores is one among many companies today that annually provides a sustainabil-
              ity report that reveals how the firm’s operations impact the natural environment. This
              document discloses to shareholders information about Wal-Mart’s firm’s labor practices,
              product sourcing, energy efficiency, environmental impact, and business ethics practices.
                 It is good business for a business to provide a sustainability report annually to the public.
              With 60,000 suppliers and over $350 billion in annual sales, Wal-Mart works with its suppli-
              ers to make sure they provide such reports. Wal-Mart monitors not only prices its vendors’
              offer for products, but also the vendors’ social-responsibility and environmental practices.
              Many firms use the Wal-Mart sustainability report as a benchmark, guideline, and model to
              follow in preparing their own report.
                 The Global Reporting Initiative recently issued a set of detailed reporting guidelines
              specifying what information should go into sustainability reports. The proxy advisory firm
              Institutional Shareholder Services reports that an increasing number of shareholder groups
              are pushing firms to provide sustainability information annually.
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