GRI Guideline

Indicators GC
Principle
WEB
1.Strategy and Analysis
1.1 Statement from the most senior decision-maker of the organization (e.g., CEO, chair, or equivalent senior position) about the relevance of sustainability to the organization and its strategy.   Greetings
1.2 Description of key impacts, risks, and opportunities.
2.Organizational Profile
2.1 Name of the organization.  

CSR of the DOWA group

Harmony in the DOWA group

Basic Requirements

IR Library

2.2 Primary brands, products, and/or services.
2.3 Operational structure of the organization, including main divisions, operating companies, subsidiaries, and joint ventures.
2.4 Location of organization's headquarters.
2.5 Number of countries where the organization operates, and names of countries with either major operations or that are specifically relevant to the sustainability issues covered in the report.
2.6 Nature of ownership and legal form.
2.7 Markets served (including geographic breakdown, sectors served, and types of customers/beneficiaries).
2.8 Scale of the reporting organization, including: -Number of employees; -Net sales (for private sector organizations) or net revenues (for public sector organizations); -Total capitalization broken down in terms of debt and equity (for private sector organizations); and-Quantity of products or services provided.
2.9 Significant changes during the reporting period regarding size, structure, or ownership including:-The location of, or changes in operations, including facility openings, closings, and expansions; and-Changes in the share capital structure and other capital formation, maintenance, and alteration operations (for private sector organizations).
2.10 Awards received in the reporting period.   Relations with Society
3.Report Parameters
Report Profile
3.1 Reporting period (e.g., fiscal/calendar year) for information provided.  

Editorial Line

Basic Requirements

3.2 Date of most recent previous report (if any)
3.3 Reporting cycle (annual, biennial, etc.)
3.4 Contact point for questions regarding the report or its contents.
Report Scope and Boundary
3.5 Process for defining report content, including: -Determining materiality; -Prioritizing topics within the report; and Identifying stakeholders the organization expects to use the report.   

Editorial Line

Basic Requirements

3.6 Boundary of the report (e.g., countries, divisions, subsidiaries, leased facilities, joint ventures, suppliers). See GRI Boundary Protocol for further guidance.
3.7 State any specific limitations on the scope or boundary of the report.
3.8 Basis for reporting on joint ventures, subsidiaries, leased facilities, outsourced operations, and other entities that can significantly affect comparability from period to period and/or between organizations.    
3.9 Data measurement techniques and the bases of calculations, including assumptions and techniques underlying estimations applied to the compilation of the Indicators and other information in the report.   

Greenhouse Gases

External Economical Benefit Evaluation EEBE®

3.10 Explanation of the effect of any re-statements of information provided in earlier reports, and the reasons for such re-statement (e.g., mergers/ acquisitions, change of base years/periods, nature of business, measurement methods).     
3.11 Significant changes from previous reporting periods in the scope, boundary, or measurement methods applied in the report.    Editorial Line
GRI Content Index
3.12 Table identifying the location of the Standard Disclosures in the report.   GRI Guideline
Assurance
3.13 Policy and current practice with regard to seeking external assurance for the report. If not included in the assurance report accompanying the sustainability report, explain the scope and basis of any external assurance provided. Also explain the relationship between the reporting organization and the assurance provider(s).  

External Economical Benefit Evaluation EEBE®

Third Party’s Opinion

4. Governance, Commitments, and Engagement
Governance
4.1 Governance structure of the organization, including committees under the highest governance body responsible for specific tasks, such as setting strategy or organizational oversight.   IR Library
4.2 Indicate whether the Chair of the highest governance body is also an executive officer (and, if so, their function within the organization's management and the reasons for this arrangement).
4.3 For organizations that have a unitary board structure, state the number of members of the highest governance body that are independent and/or non-executive members.
4.4 Mechanisms for shareholders and employees to provide recommendations or direction to the highest governance body.  

Relationship with Stakeholders

Working Together with Shareholders and Investors

4.5 Linkage between compensation for members of the highest governance body, senior managers, and executives (including departure arrangements), and the organization's performance (including social and environmental performance).   

IR Library

4.6 Processes in place for the highest governance body to ensure conflicts of interest are avoided.
4.7 Process for determining the qualifications and expertise of the members of the highest governance body for guiding the organization's strategy on economic, environmental, and social topics.   Environmental Management
4.8 Internally developed statements of mission or values, codes of conduct, and principles relevant to economic, environmental, and social performance and the status of their implementation.   CSR Guideline
4.9 Procedures of the highest governance body for overseeing the organization's identification and management of economic, environmental, and social performance, including relevant risks and opportunities, and adherence or compliance with internationally agreed standards, codes of conduct, and principles.  

Corporate Governance

Environmental Management

4.10 Processes for evaluating the highest governance body's own performance, particularly with respect to economic, environmental, and social performance.   -
Commitments to External Initiatives
4.11 Explanation of whether and how the precautionary approach or principle is addressed by the organization.     

Corporate Governance

Internal Control System

Compliance

4.12 Externally developed economic, environmental, and social charters, principles, or other initiatives to which the organization subscribes or endorses.  

Relationship with Central and Local Governments and Industrial Groups

4.13 Memberships in associations (such as industry associations) and/or national/international advocacy organizations in which the organization: -Has positions in governance bodies; -Participates in projects or committees; -Provides substantive funding beyond routine membership dues; or Views membership as strategic.   Relationship with Central and Local Governments and Industrial Groups
Stakeholder Engagement
4.14 List of stakeholder groups engaged by the organization.  

Editorial Line

Relationship with Stakeholders

4.15 Basis for identification and selection of stakeholders with whom to engage.   -
4.16 Approaches to stakeholder engagement, including frequency of engagement by type and by stakeholder group.   Relationship with Stakeholders
4.17 Key topics and concerns that have been raised through stakeholder engagement, and how the organization has responded to those key topics and concerns, including through its reporting.   Questionnaire Results
5. Performance index
Economic
Management Approach
    Goals and performance  

Economic Report

IR Library

policy
Additional Contextual Information
Economic Performance
Core Indicators EC1. Direct economic value generated and distributed, including revenues, operating costs, employee compensation, donations and other community investments, retained earnings, and payments to capital providers and governments.   IR Library
EC2. Financial implications and other risks and opportunities for the organization's activities due to climate change. GC
principles
7,8 

Greetings

Our Vision to Fight Global Warming

DOWA’s Eco-products

EC3. Coverage of the organization's defined benefit plan obligations.    Not applicable
EC4. Significant financial assistance received from government. Not applicable
Additional Indicators EC5. Range of ratios of standard entry level wage compared to local minimum wage at significant locations of operation. GC
principles
6
-
Market Presence
Core Indicators EC6. Policy, practices, and proportion of spending on locally-based suppliers at significant locations of operation.   Together with Customers
EC7. Procedures for local hiring and proportion of senior management hired from the local community at locations of significant operation. GC
principles
6
-
Indirect Economic Impacts
Core Indicators EC8. Development and impact of infrastructure investments and services provided primarily for public benefit through commercial, in-kind, or pro bono engagement.   Relationship with  Society
EC9. Understanding and describing significant indirect economic impacts, including the extent of impacts.  

Environmental Accounting

External Economic Benefit Evaluation EEBE®

Environmental
Management approach
       Goals and Performance GC
principles
7,8,9
Environmental & Social Goals and their Present Status
Policy

Basic Environmental Policy

IR Library

Organizational Responsibility Environmental Management System
Training and Awareness Environmental Education and Enlightenment
Monitoring and Follow-up

Conducting Environmental Audits

Additional Contextual Information  
Materials
Core Indicators EN1. Materials used by weight or volume GC
principles
8

Business Activity and Environmental Material Flow

Raw Materials and Accepted wastes

EN2. Percentage of materials used that are recycled input materials. GC
principles
8,9
Energy
Core Indicators EN3. Direct energy consumption by primary energy source. GC
principles
8

Business Activity and Environmental Material Flow

Energy

EN4. Indirect energy consumption by primary source.
Additional Indicators EN5. Energy saved due to conservation and efficiency improvements. GC
principles
8,9
Energy
EN6. Initiatives to provide energy-efficient or renewable energy based products and services, and reductions in energy requirements as a result of these initiatives. Energy
EN7. Initiatives to reduce indirect energy consumption and reductions achieved. Energy
Water
Core Indicators EN8. Total water withdrawal by source. GC
principles
8
Water Resource
Additional Indicators EN9. Water sources significantly affected by withdrawal of water. Not applicable
EN10. Percentage and total volume of water recycled and reused. GC
principles
8,9
-
Biodiversity
Core Indicators EN11 Location and size of land owned, leased, managed in, or adjacent to, protected areas and areas of high biodiversity value outside protected areas. GC
principles
8
-
EN12. Description of significant impacts of activities, products, and services on biodiversity in protected areas and areas of high biodiversity value outside protected areas.
Additional Indicators EN13. Habitats protected or restored. Biodiversity
EN14 Strategies, current actions, and future plans for managing impacts on biodiversity. Biodiversity
EN15 Number of IUCN Red List species and national conservation list species with habitats in areas affected by operations, by level of extinction risk. -
Emissions, Effluents, and Waste
Core Indicators EN16 Total direct and indirect greenhouse gas emissions by weight. GC
principles
8
Business Activity and Environmental Material Flow
Greenhouse Gases
EN17 Other relevant indirect greenhouse gas emissions by weight. -
Additional Indicators EN18 Initiatives to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and reductions achieved. GC
principles
8,9
Business Activity and Environmental Material Flow
Core Indicators EN19 Emissions of ozone-depleting substances by weight. GC
principles
8
Other emissions (Greenhouse gas)
EN20 NOx, SOx, and other significant air emissions by type and weight. Prevention of Air Pollution
EN21 Total water discharge by quality and destination. Prevention of Water Pollution
EN22 Total weight of waste by type and disposal method. Business Activity and Environmental Material Flow
Wastes
EN23 Total number and volume of significant spills. Not applicable
Additional Indicators EN24. Weight of transported, imported, exported, or treated waste deemed hazardous under the terms of the Basel Convention Annex I, II, III, and VIII, and percentage of transported waste shipped internationally. -
EN25. Identity, size, protected status, and biodiversity value of water bodies and related habitats significantly affected by the reporting organization's discharges of water and runoff.
Products and Services
Core Indicators EN26. Initiatives to mitigate environmental impacts of products and services, and extent of impact mitigation. GC
principles
8,9

DOWA’s Eco-products

Business Activity and Environmental Material Flow

EN27. Percentage of products sold and their packaging materials that are reclaimed by category. Recycling
Compliance
Core Indicators EN28. Monetary value of significant fines and total number of non-monetary sanctions for noncompliance with environmental laws and regulations. GC
principles
8
Compliance
Transport
Additional Indicators EN29. Significant environmental impacts of transporting products and other goods and materials used for the organization's operations, and transporting members of the workforce. GC
principles
8
-
Overall
Additional Indicators EN30. Total environmental protection expenditures and investments by type. GC
principles
8
Environmental Accounting
Social
Labor practices and Decent Work
Management Approach
       Goals and performance GC
principles
3,6
-
Policy

Relationship with Employee

Organizational Responsibility Relationship with Stakeholders
Training and Awareness

Human resource

Employment

Effort of Operating Companies

Health and Safety
Monitoring and Follow-Up -
Additional Contextual Information
Employment
Core Indicators LA1. Total workforce by employment type, employment contract, and region.   Employment
LA2. Total number and rate of employee turnover by age group, gender, and region. GC
principles6
-
Additional Indicators LA3. Benefits provided to full-time employees that are not provided to temporary or part-time employees, by major operations.
Labor/Management Relations
Core Indicators LA4. Percentage of employees covered by collective bargaining agreements. GC
principles
1,3
IR Library
LA5. Minimum notice period (s) regarding operational changes, including whether it is specified in collective agreements. GC
principles
3
-
Additional Indicators LA6. Percentage of total workforce represented in formal joint management worker health and safety committees that help monitor and advise on occupational health and safety programs.  
Occupational Health and Safety
Core Indicators LA7. Rates of injury, occupational diseases, lost days, and absenteeism, and number of work-related fatalities by region.    Health and Safety
LA8. Education, training, counseling, prevention, and risk-control programs in place to assist workforce members, their families, or community members regarding serious diseases.
Additional Indicators LA9. Health and safety topics covered in formal agreements with trade unions.  
Training and Education
Core Indicators LA10. Average hours of training per year per employee by employee category.     Environmental Education and Enlightenment
Additional Indicators LA11. Programs for skills management and lifelong learning that support the continued employability of employees and assist them in managing career endings. Developing Human resource
LA12. Percentage of employees receiving regular performance and career development reviews.   -
Diversity and Equal Opportunity
Core Indicators LA13. Composition of governance bodies and breakdown of employees per category according to gender, age group, minority group membership, and other indicators of diversity. GC
principles
1,6
-
LA14. Ratio of basic salary of men to women by employee category.
Human Rights
Management Approach
       Goals and performance GC
principles
1,2,4,5,6
-
Policy

CSR Guideline

Participation in various international organizations and consortiums

Organizational Responsibility

Relationship with Stakeholders

Corporate Governance

Training and Awareness -
Monitoring and Follow-Up
Additional Contextual Information
Investment and Procurement Practices
Core Indicators HR1. Percentage and total number of significant investment agreements that include human rights clauses or that have undergone human rights screening. GC
principles
1,2,4,5,6
-
HR2. Percentage of significant suppliers and contractors that have undergone screening on human rights and actions taken.
Additional Indicators HR3. Total hours of employee training on policies and procedures concerning aspects of human rights that are relevant to operations, including the percentage of employees trained. GC
principles
1,4,5
Non-Discrimination
Core Indicators HR4. Total number of incidents of discrimination and actions taken. GC
principles
1,6
-
Freedom of Association and Collective Bargaining
Core Indicators HR5. Operations identified in which the right to exercise freedom of association and collective bargaining may be at significant risk, and actions taken to support these rights. GC
principles
1,3
-
Child Labor
Core Indicators HR6. Operations identified as having significant risk for incidents of child labor, and measures taken to contribute to the elimination of child labor. GC
principles
1,5
-
Forced and Compulsory Labor
Core Indicators HR7. Operations identified as having significant risk for incidents of forced or compulsory labor, and measures to contribute to the elimination of forced or compulsory labor GC
principles
1,4
-
Security Practices
Additional Indicators HR8. Percentage of security personnel trained in the organization's policies or procedures concerning aspects of human rights that are relevant to operations. GC
principles
1,2
-
Indigenous Rights
Additional Indicators HR9. Total number of incidents of violations involving rights of indigenous people and actions taken. GC
principles
1
-
Society
Management Approach
       Goals and performance GC
principles
10
Environmental & Social Goals and their Present Status
Policy

CSR Guideline

Corporate Governance

Corporate Governance
Organizational Responsibility
Training and Awareness Developing Human resource
Monitoring and Follow-Up

Internal Control System

Compliance

Additional Contextual Information -
Community
Core Indicators SO1. Nature, scope, and effectiveness of any programs and practices that assess and manage the impacts of operations on communities, including entering, operating, and exiting. GC
principles
1
-
不正行為
Core Indicators SO2. Percentage and total number of business units analyzed for risks related to corruption. GC
principles
10
-
SO3. Percentage of employees trained in organization's anti-corruption policies and procedures.
SO4. Actions taken in response to incidents of corruption. Internal rules
Public policy
Core Indicators SO5. Public policy positions and participation in public policy development and lobbying. GC
principles
10
Relationship with Central and Local Governments and Industrial Groups
Additional Indicators SO6. Total value of financial and in-kind contributions to political parties, politicians, and related institutions by country. -
Anti-Competitive Behavior
Additional Indicators SO7. Total number of legal actions for anticompetitive behavior, anti-trust, and monopoly practices and their outcomes.   -
法令遵守
Core Indicators SO8. Monetary value of significant fines and total number of non-monetary sanctions for noncompliance with laws and regulations.  

Compliance

Product
Management Approach
         Goals and performance   Environmental & Social Goals and their Present Status
Policy   -
Organizational Responsibility      Relationship with Stakeholders
Training and Awareness -
Monitoring and Follow-Up
Additional Contextual Information
Customer Health and Safety
Core Indicators PR1. Life cycle stages in which health and safety impacts of products and services are assessed for improvement, and percentage of significant products and services categories subject to such procedures.   -
Additional Indicators PR2. Total number of incidents of non-compliance with regulations and voluntary codes concerning health and safety impacts of products and services during their life cycle, by type of outcomes.    Not applicable
Product and Service Labeling
Core Indicators PR3. Type of product and service information required by procedures, and percentage of significant products and services subject to such information requirements. GC
principles
8
-
Additional Indicators PR4. Total number of incidents of non-compliance with regulations and voluntary codes concerning product and service information and labeling, by type of outcomes.
PR5. Practices related to customer satisfaction, including results of surveys measuring customer satisfaction.  
Marketing Communications
Core Indicators PR6. Programs for adherence to laws, standards, and voluntary codes related to marketing communications, including advertising, promotion, and sponsorship.    -
Additional Indicators PR7. Total number of incidents of non-compliance with regulations and voluntary codes concerning marketing communications, including advertising, promotion, and sponsorship by type of outcomes.
Customer Privacy
Additional Indicators PR8. Total number of substantiated complaints regarding breaches of customer privacy and losses of customer data.   -
Compliance
Core Indicators PR9. Monetary value of significant fines for noncompliance with laws and regulations concerning the provision and use of products and services.   -

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