Sources: WHO, UNICEF, Atlas of Canada, Grundfos, U.S. Energy Information Administration, U.S. Geological Survey, Environment Canada
The change in corporate leadership between the Copenhagen (2009) and Paris (2015) climate change conferences couldn’t have been more clear cut. While
The Global 100 process begins each year on October 1, when the starting universe for the index is established. Companies in the
The auto industry hasn’t had much to boast about lately when it comes to corporate social responsibility given the steady stream of
This piece appeared as an editor’s note in the Winter 2016 issue of Corporate Knights Corporate Knights releases the Global 100 Most
It’s no longer news – or, at least, it shouldn’t be news – that gender-diverse boards make good business sense. Time and
“I’m going to give you a speech without a joke, I’m afraid.” Wearing a crisp black tuxedo, Mark Carney, the 50-year-old former
When Corporate Knights published its first Responsible Investing Guide in 2003, socially responsible mutual funds comprised 1 per cent of the Canadian
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If you want to see water start a fire, suggest to a Canadian that their country should consider selling any of its
Karen McDonald’s heart sank when she learned that two grass carp were caught at the wetland construction project she manages for the
Australia is the driest inhabited continent on the planet, a reality that was underscored by wildfires, dry riverbeds and struggling farmers during
In a world struggling to meet a growing demand for energy while also managing carbon emissions, hydropower is a source of hope.
The U.S. Department of Justice and the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) are no longer the only two cops on the global
Human civilization developed over a period of 10,000 years during which global average surface temperatures remained remarkably stable, hovering within one degree Celsius
Cows, coal and cars. Together they account for roughly half of all human-caused greenhouse gases. To solve global warming, the world need
Bank of England governor Mark Carney recently called on companies “to disclose how they plan their transition to the net-zero [carbon] world of the future.” Carney