It’s Time to Give Up Spreadsheets for Tracking Carbon Emissions

CFOs, CIOs and sustainability teams at large companies have used spreadsheets for years to track corporate carbon emissions.

We are now, however, at a tipping point where the benefits of carbon management software, also known as enterprise carbon accounting (ECA) software, outweigh the benefits of spreadsheets.

With many large companies recently completing their Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) reports and Carbon Disclosure Project (CDP) questionnaires, and entering budget planning in the fall, it is time to move away from spreadsheets to reduce risk, save money, increase productivity, and establish an enterprise-class source of record for carbon emission data.

Investors and Top Customers Demand High Quality Carbon Emission Data

The calculation and reporting of carbon emissions today is a standard, mainstream business process and needs to be treated as such. The majority of Fortune 500 companies now publicly report carbon emissions via their website and registries such as CDP; companies that don’t are viewed as laggards.

Regulators, such as the Securities and Exchange Commission, and investor advocacy groups, such as Ceres, are demanding more accurate data. Meanwhile, emission data submitted to the CDP is widely available to investors through Bloomberg terminals and Google Finance. Financial accounting groups, including the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) and International Accounting Standards Board (IASB), are debating carbon emission disclosure standards and approaches, which will likely become a future requirement.

Investors are ever more insistent that reported environmental data have the same rigor and processes of reported financial data. Leading companies, including BASF Global and Novo Nordisk, already report with fully integrated financial and non-financial information, both of which are supported by rigorous data, control, and auditing processes. Other companies treat voluntarily reported carbon data with same transparency as financial data. El Paso Corporation, for example, issued a press release to correct an error in its voluntary submission to the CDP.

Companies are finding their top customers, such as Bank of America, HP, Procter and Gamble, and Walmart, asking for carbon emission data and, in some cases, scoring their processes against competing suppliers.

Large companies simply cannot afford the brand and image risk of incorrectly reported emission data to these important stakeholders.

7 Major Problems with Spreadsheets

Spreadsheets allow a single user to enter, manipulate, analyze and visually represent numerical data with great flexibility. It can also be easily distributed via e-mail or a network-accessible location. Without a content management system to coordinate and track changes from multiple sources, however, spreadsheets quickly becomes unwieldy and error-prone.

Problems are compounded when a spreadsheet becomes so complex that only the original author can make required fixes and improvements. This leads to the “spreadsheet guru” — the irreplaceable employee who is the only person in the company who understands the 15MB spreadsheet.

As carbon data collection and reporting needs increase, spreadsheet disadvantages become more acute and lead to additional labor costs and frustration when coordinating changes and updates. The major problems of spreadsheets include:

• Lack of proper documentation and audit trails
• Propensity for errors, especially without proper cell protection and lack of validation and
testing of spreadsheet formula and macros
• Difficulties in reconciling year-to-year data sets
• Poor tools for creating and enforcing data ownership, including global standards for asset
types and energy usage
• Inability to generating real-time reports and read-only views across the organization
• Difficulties obtaining ad-hoc reports and analysis for numerous internal and external
stakeholders
• Difficulties in managing and sharing large files

These problems are compounded by sporadic backup processes and high training cost if or when the spreadsheet guru leaves.

Moreover, spreadsheets hamper sustainability team effectiveness. Sustainability team members with responsibility for the carbon emissions file spend an inordinate amount of time managing this spreadsheet. These activities include gathering, correcting and inputting data, reconciling current emissions with emissions from previous years and baseline calculations, and creating custom reports by country, division, product line or customer.

Team members should focus on communicating and educating stakeholders about sustainability plans and identifying reduction efforts, not draining time as spreadsheet monkeys.

To reduce risk when using spreadsheets, firms must spend more money on labor, either with its employees or outside consultants. The good news is that this does not need to be the case.

Numerous Cost-Effective Software Solutions Are in the Market

The market for carbon management or ECA software has emerging during the past few years. Our research shows that more than 75 companies now offer a solution, including a handful of leaders. Many of these solutions more than adequately meet customer needs and are cost effective.

Sustainability teams need to educate the CFO and CIO about the importance of good carbon management processes and tools, and to develop budget requests for software investment during the upcoming fall budget season.

This summer, too many hours were spent on managing spreadsheets for CSR and CDP reports for this important, and now mainstream, business process. Better solutions now exist.

IASB and FASB Quarterly Report Shows Continued Progress towards Convergence Goal

NORWALK, Conn.–(Business Wire)–
The International Accounting Standards Board (IASB) and the US Financial
Accounting Standards Board (FASB) today published a report on their work to
improve and achieve convergence of International Financial Reporting Standards
and US generally accepted accounting principles.

In November 2009 the two boards, with the support of their respective Trustee
bodies and the IASC Foundation Monitoring Board of public capital market
authorities (a body that also includes the US public authority), demonstrated
their shared commitment to convergence by establishing a comprehensive work plan
to complete their joint programme by the June 2011 target. To accomplish that
objective, the boards have accelerated and intensified their joint work and,
instead of meeting jointly every four months, have held ten joint meetings
totalling more than 100 hours of discussions since the agreement.

The next progress report is expected to be published in July 2010.

Notes for editors

About the IASB

The IASB was established in 2001 and is the standard-setting body of the
International Accounting Standards Committee (IASC) Foundation, an independent,
private sector, not-for-profit organisation. The IASB is committed to
developing, in the public interest, a single set of high quality, global
accounting standards that provide high quality, transparent and comparable
information in general purpose financial statements. In pursuit of this
objective the IASB conducts extensive public consultations and seeks the
co-operation of international and national bodies around the world. The IASB has
15 full-time members drawn from ten countries and a variety of professional
backgrounds. By 2012 the IASB will be expanded to 16 members. Members are
appointed by and accountable to the Trustees of the IASC Foundation, who are
required to select the best available combination of technical expertise and
diversity of international business and market experience. In their work the
Trustees are accountable to a Monitoring Board of public authorities.

About the Financial Accounting Standards Board

Since 1973, the US Financial Accounting Standards Board has been the designated
organization in the private sector for establishing standards of financial
accounting and reporting. Those standards govern the preparation of financial
reports and are officially recognized as authoritative by the Securities and
Exchange Commission and the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants.
Such standards are essential to the efficient functioning of the economy because
investors, creditors, auditors and others rely on credible, transparent and
comparable financial information. For more information about the FASB, visit its
Website at www.fasb.org.

Photos/Multimedia Gallery Available:

http://www.businesswire.com/cgi-bin/mmg.cgi?eid=6249331〈=en

IASB
Mark Byatt, +44 (0)20 7246 6472
Director of Corporate Communications
mbyatt@iasb.org
or
US FASB
Neal McGarity, +1 203-956-5347
Director of Communications
nemcgarity@f-a-f.org

Copyright Business Wire 2010

US stocks rally on G20 deal, changes in accounting rules

New York, April 3 (DPA) US and global stocks surged Thursday as a summit of the world’s major industrial and emerging powers agreed on a more than $1-trillion aid package to help revive the global economy.

Major stock indices in the US climbed nearly 3 percent and the Euro Stoxx index surged more than 5 percent on the Group of 20 (G20) deal in London.

The G20 leaders after a one-day summit pledged ‘to do whatever is necessary to restore confidence, growth and jobs’ in the global economy and agreed on an overhaul of the financial regulatory system to prevent another financial crisis in future.

The International Monetary Fund’s lending resources were tripled to help developing countries weather the downturn.

US investors were also buoyed by a change in accounting rules that could help relieve the stress on US banks at the centre of the financial turmoil.

The Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) voted to relax so-called mark-to-market accounting rules, allowing banks greater discretion to determine the value of their troubled mortgage assets.

Banks have already written off more than $1 trillion in mortgage securities over the last two years, but have long argued that the toxic assets are far healthier than the current market turmoil allows.

The blue-chip Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 152.68 points, or 2.01 percent, to 7,761.6. The broader Standard and Poor’s 500 Index rose 13.21 points, or 1.66 per cent, to 811.08. The technology-heavy Nasdaq Composite Index was up 23.01 points, or 1.51 percent, to 1,551.6.

The US currency dropped against the euro to 74.28 euro cents from 75.57 euro cents on Wednesday. But the dollar rose against the Japanese currency to 99.46 yen from 98.72 yen.

US accounting standards relaxed to help banks out of crisis

Washington, April 3 (DPA) US accounting standards were relaxed Thursday to allow banks to take a longer-term view on the value of toxic mortgage assets, which have already cost the industry more than $1 trillion and lie at the heart of the financial crisis.

The Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB), an industry group, voted that banks would not have to tie the value of mortgage securities to current market prices.

The value of bank mortgage holdings has been decimated by an unprecedented housing downturn that prompted millions of Americans to foreclose on their homes. But banks have long argued that their mortgage assets are still far healthier than investors are willing to acknowledge in the midst of the current financial turmoil.

The FASB changes, pushed by banks and also by US legislators, relax so-called ‘mark-to-market’ accounting rules, giving banks greater discretion to decide the price of their ‘distressed’ assets when they report quarterly earnings.

US stocks rally on G20 deal, changes to accounting rules

US stocks rally on G20 deal, changes to accounting rules New York – US and global stocks surged Thursday as a summit of the world’s major industrial and emerging powers agreed on a more than 1-trillion-dollar aid package to help revive the global economy.

Major stock indices in the US climbed nearly 3 per cent and the Euro Stoxx index surged more than 5 per cent on the Group of 20 (G20) deal in London.

The G20 leaders after a one-day summit pledged “to do whatever is necessary to restore confidence, growth and jobs” in the global economy and agreed on an overhaul of the financial regulatory system to prevent another financial crisis in future.

The International Monetary Fund’s lending resources were tripled to help developing countries weather the downturn.

US investors were also buoyed by a change in accounting rules that could help relieve the stress on US banks at the centre of the financial turmoil.

The Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB) voted to relax so- called mark-to-market accounting rules, allowing banks greater discretion to determine the value of their troubled mortgage assets.

Banks have already written off more than 1 trillion dollars in mortgage securities over the last two years, but have long argued that the toxic assets are far healthier than the current market turmoil allows.

The blue-chip Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 152.68 points, or 2.01 per cent, to 7,761.6. The broader Standard & Poor’s 500 Index rose 13.21 points, or 1.66 per cent, to 811.08. The technology-heavy Nasdaq Composite Index was up 23.01 points, or 1.51 per cent, to 1,551.6.

The US currency dropped against the euro to 74.28 euro cents from 75.57 euro cents on Wednesday. But the dollar rose against the Japanese currency to 99.46 yen from
98.72 yen. (dpa)

US accounting standards relaxed to help banks out of crisis

US accounting standards relaxed to help banks out of crisis Washington – US accounting standards were relaxed Thursday to allow banks to take a longer-term view on the value of toxic mortgage assets, which have already cost the industry more than 1 trillion dollars and lie at the heart of the financial crisis.

The Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB), an industry group, voted that banks would not have to tie the value of mortgage securities to current market prices.

The value of bank mortgage holdings has been decimated by an unprecedented housing downturn that prompted millions of Americans to foreclose on their homes. But banks have long argued that their mortgage assets are still far healthier than investors are willing to acknowledge in the midst of the current financial turmoil.

The FASB changes, pushed by banks and also by US legislators, relax so-called “mark-to-market” accounting rules, giving banks greater discretion to decide the price of their “distressed” assets when they report quarterly earnings. dpa