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Murdoch
sets emissions goal,
by Saffron Howden, May10,2007
(Credit:
Herald
Sun)
THE
world's top media company, News Corporation, will
slash its global carbon footprint to zero under a
bold plan revealed by its chairman, Rupert Murdoch.
Saying
the global media empire produced 641,150 tonnes of
greenhouse gas last year, the News chairman and CEO
last night pledged to go green.
"We
could make a difference just by holding our emissions
steady as our businesses continue to grow, but that
doesn't seem to be enough," Mr Murdoch said.
"We
want to go all the way to zero," he told News
Corp's worldwide employees.
"This
is about changing the DNA of our business to re-imagine
how we look at energy."
Under
the plan, all News Corp businesses, including News
Limited, publisher of the Herald Sun, will be carbon
neutral by 2010.
Mr
Murdoch said this goal would be met by slashing energy
use, switching to renewable power sources and, as
a last resort, offsetting unavoidable emissions.
News
Corp will today join other multinational businesses
in the Climate Group, a non-profit organisation that
works to reduce greenhouse emissions globally.
"Climate
change poses clear, catastrophic threats," Mr
Murdoch said. "We may not agree on the extent,
but we certainly can't afford the risk of inaction."
Mr
Murdoch, who grew up in Melbourne, saw on recent visits
the effects of the devastating Australian drought.
He
said Melbourne's 10th consecutive year of below-average
rain had made clear the risks of climate change.
Mr
Murdoch will encourage business partners to follow
News Corp's lead and reduce their carbon footprint.
But
he said individuals acting collectively were the key
to big change.
"We
can set an example and we can reach our audiences,"
he said.
"Our
audience's carbon footprint is 10,000 times bigger
than ours -- that's the carbon footprint we want to
conquer."
Mr
Murdoch said News Corp's newspapers, television stations,
magazines, books, internet media and films could inspire
readers and viewers across the world to change their
ways.
But
there would be limits. "Not every hero on television
can drive a hybrid car. Often times it just won't
fit," Mr Murdoch said.
"We
must avoid preaching -- and there has to be substance
behind the glitz."
Mr
Murdoch asked News' 50,000 employees to think about
what they could do to reduce their environmental impact
on the planet, and pointed to financial incentives
offered to Fox workers to buy hybrid cars.
"I've
started myself -- I bought a hybrid car a few months
ago," he said.
The
move to go carbon neutral was a risk, he said, but
that was part of the company's history too.
"The
unique potential -- and duty -- of a media company
is to help its audiences connect to the issues that
define our time," Mr Murdoch said.
Profile
2nd
Annual Climate Change Summit
2008
24July - Ken Hickson CEO, ABC Carbon & Governor
WWF Australia

'This
is about changing the DNA of our business to re-Imagine
how we look at energy'-----------------------------------------
Rupert Murdoch---------------------
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