Nippon Shokubai Co Ltd 2013 SR

The report details Nippon Shokubai's environmental and social performance for fiscal year 2012, with a significant focus on the response to a major explosion and fire at the Himeji Plant in September 2012. The company outlines comprehensive measures to prevent recurrence, including strengthening its safety culture and risk assessment processes. Key highlights include maintaining zero waste emissions and reducing PRTR-regulated substance emissions by 32% compared to 2005 levels. The report also covers social initiatives like forest development and community engagement, alongside detailed production site reports and group company activities.

Company: Nippon Shokubai Co Ltd

Sector: Materials

Country: Japan

Year: 2013

Type: SR

Pages: 19

Back to company

Nippon Shokubai Co Ltd

Nippon Shokubai Co Ltd 2013 Environmental and Social Report

Environmental And Social Report

The report details Nippon Shokubai's environmental and social performance for fiscal year 2012, with a significant focus on the response to a major explosion and fire at the Himeji Plant in September 2012. The company outlines comprehensive measures to prevent recurrence, including strengthening its safety culture and risk assessment processes. Key highlights include maintaining zero waste emissions and reducing PRTR-regulated substance emissions by 32% compared to 2005 levels. The report also covers social initiatives like forest development and community engagement, alongside detailed production site reports and group company activities.

Sign in for free to access detailed sustainability data, reporting standards, and ESG metrics.

Document Details

Report Year

2013

Reporting Period

Apr 1, 2012 - Mar 31, 2013

Fiscal Year

2012

Published

Nov 1, 2013

Type

Sustainability Report

Language

English

Pages

 

File Size

 

Standards & Assurance

Materiality Assessment

Assurance

Other Standards

ESG Data?Experimental — AI-extracted data, may contain inaccuracies

Emissions

Scope 1:

Energy Consumption

Water Consumption

Total Waste

Workplace Fatalities

Employees