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The first set of GRI Sustainability Reporting Guidelines appeared as an Exposure Draft in
1999. Following testing and public comment, the GRI released the June 2000 Sustainability Reporting Guidelines. For the past year, over 200 stakeholders from around the world have worked with the GRI to update the performance indicators of the June 2000 GRI Guidelines. The second version of the Guidelines was released in September 2002.
The release of the 200 Guidelines marks the beginning of a new cycle of revisions. The GRI Board of Directors is developing a clear and detailed due process for the further refinement of the 2002 Guidelines with the aim of releasing an updated version in 2004.
More than 100 companies have released reports based on the GRI Guidelines.
The following countries have the highest number of reporting companies: USA, UK, Japan, Sweden, Netherlands. A complete list of the companies using the
GRI Guidelines is updated regularly on www.globalreporting.org
Introduction (from the GRI 2002 Guidelines)
The Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) is a long-term, multi-stakeholder, international process
whose mission is to develop and disseminate globally applicable Sustainability Reporting
Guidelines (“Guidelines”). These Guidelines are for voluntary use by
organisations for reporting on the economic, environmental, and social dimensions of their activities, products,
and services. The aim of the Guidelines is to assist reporting organisations and their
stakeholders in articulating and understanding the overall contributions of the reporting
organisations toward sustainable development.
Since the publication of the first Sustainability Reporting Guidelines in June 2000, the trends
that catalysed the formation of GRI have continued unabated and, in most cases, have
intensified. The issues—globalisation and corporate governance, accountability, and
citizenship—have now moved to the mainstream of policy and management debates in many
organisations. The turbulent first years of the 21st century underscore the reason for GRI’s
rapid expansion: higher standards of accountability and increasing dependence on wideranging
external networks will form a significant part of the fabric of organisational practice
in the years to come.
Support for creating a new, generally accepted disclosure framework for sustainability
reporting continues to grow among civil society, business, government, and labour. GRI’s
rapid evolution in just a few years from a bold vision to a new permanent global institution
reflects the imperative and the value that various constituencies assign to such a disclosure
framework. The GRI process, rooted in inclusiveness, transparency, neutrality, and continual
enhancement, has enabled GRI to give concrete expression to accountability.
Linkages
The Global Compact (GC) has invited its corporate supporters
to use the GRI Sustainability Reporting Guidelines to demonstrate progress toward implementation of the GC's nine principles. For the Global
Compact, GRI reporting is a concrete, accountability instrument through
which companies can measure and publicly report on their social, environmental and economic performance. For the GRI, the GC's principles
represent a valuable foundation on which companies can build a strong
reporting program.
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