Posts Tagged ‘Social Responsibility’

Kado – Hunza Environmental Committee (Hec)

September 22nd, 2009

The Hunza Environmental Committee (HEC) was formed in December 1997 as a project of KADO.It is a community response to the civic needs of the growing tourist and business towns in central Hunza, where in the absence of any municipal agency, the issue of solid waste disposal was getting worst day-by-day and there was no mechanism to arrest the situation and manage the problem.  

After initial funding support for start-up costs by AKF-UK/EU and NORAD through AKCSP, and mobilization of local resources to create an endowment fund, the project now sustains operations through user-fees and utilizes local resources and collaborates with local institutions for awareness raising programmes, independent of any external donor support.

HEC executes the first and only community-based municipal service in the country. Its approach to solid waste management is distinctive in that it has used an innovative approach by linking local voluntarism and technical capacity of a local NGO with the social responsibility of the private sector while keeping close coordination & linkages with the local administration/government.  

Almost 90 % of the clients are from the business community; shopkeepers, traders, cabins, hotels, restaurants, barbershops, auto workshops etc. Other clients include; Institutional/organizational clients like hospitals, offices, Schools, Colleges, Banks, Mosques/Community Centers etc. and a small number of individual households near the roadsides are also users. Total number of users is around 600 and 85% of them pay their user fee regularly.

The total waste daily generated in central Hunza has been estimated to be around 3,293 kg. It is estimated that HEC handles 50% of the total waste generated in the area and the remaining 50 % of the solid waste is dumped into the rivers, streams, water courses and in the backyards posing grave threat to both human and animal health.




By: shahid

How Environmental Accounting Can Benefit Your Business

August 22nd, 2009

It is no great secret that businesses are created to deliver products and services in order to earn a profit. However it is important that companies think about their balance sheet in terms of whether they are in the red or the black and also the “green”, too. With the growing green consumer awareness, companies are now expected to align their business strategies with environmental schemes. Environmentally conscious businesses have already discovering that they are able to initiate strategies to help them reduce their carbon footprint, minimise their environmental impact, make the best use of natural or local resources, become more energy efficient, reduce costs, and display social responsibility – all at the same time. More and more companies want to know how they can be part of a growing movement of doing green business and benefiting from the change. The first step is to consider green accounting into their business model. What is Environmental Accounting? The term, Environmental accounting, is a way of describing changes to your business practices that would be more environmentally friendly. This could be improving environmental performance, controlling costs, investing in technologies that require less energy or produce fewer emissions. Doing greener business is not about increased costs and can attract a new customer base that would have never considered you before. Environmental Management Accounting According to the EPA, environmental management accounting is “the identification, prioritisation, quantification or qualification, and incorporation of environmental costs into business decisions.” Environmental Management Accounting uses “data about environmental costs and performance for business decisions. It collects cost, production, inventory, and waste cost and performance for business decisions. It collects cost, production, inventory, and waste cost and performance data in the accounting system to plan, evaluate, and control.” Environmental management accounting therefore represents a combined approach which provides the switch from conventional accounting to consider things such as increase material efficiency, reduction in environmental impact and risk, and reduction in costs of waste. Implementing Environmental Accounting When making the move to implement environmental accounting there is a lot to consider and for big businesses it makes sense to consult specialist help. You need to consider the working site, research and development, and how staff will be informed and even trained. In the past, green initiatives were hampered by lack of understanding by management, who would normally consider them to be costly and a waste of time. Environmental accounting can help management recognise that the tax benefits, rebates and lower costs of being environmentally friendly add up to a real savings for being greener in business.




By: jamiehanson