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EU Business Alliance on CSR

What is the CSR Alliance?

On 22 March 2006, the European Commission published a new Communication on Corporate Social Responsibility, and through it, launched the European Alliance for CSR - an umbrella network for discussion and debate on new and existing CSR initiatives by large companies, SMEs and their stakeholders.

The Alliance lays the foundations to promote CSR in the future. It revolves around the following activities:

  • Raising awareness and improving knowledge on CSR and reporting on its achievements;
  • Helping to mainstream and develop open coalitions of co-operation; and
  • Ensuring an enabling environment for CSR

The Commission has adopted this approach as it is convinced that companies’ CSR activities can contribute to a number of its policy objectives, from increasing European competitiveness to making progress towards the Millennium Development Goals.

How will its goals be achieved?

The Alliance will be the hub of European activity on CSR by enabling networking across a range of businesses and facilitating the exchange of experiences and knowledge of CSR practices.

It aims to mobilise the resources and capacity of businesses and their stakeholders in order to:

  • Provide a valuable forum for generating dialogue;
  • Fertilise ideas and stimulate new CSR activity; and
  • Build partnerships between businesses and stakeholders

While the Alliance will be principally business-led and business-run, it is an opportunity to create new partnerships and develop new opportunities with other stakeholders - charities and other civil society organisations that benefit from the wealth of CSR programmes businesses are engaged in.

Who can join?

The Alliance is addressed to individual businesses. This reflects the European Commission’s view that CSR takes primarily a voluntary approach, encouraging engagement from a diversity of European businesses. The success of the Alliance and the effectiveness of its outcomes also depend on business engagement with other stakeholders, who are invited to make full use of the opportunities the Alliance offers, by working closely with businesses who would like to take part. Any business, whatever its size, can become involved.

How will the Alliance be run?

It is an informal grouping and does not involve specific rules or requirements, a charter, signatures or heavy processes, nor will it be managed by the European Commission. It relies on the support of business organisations and the business community itself. Business organisations such as UNICE, the European business federation, will help co-ordinate matters in relation to the Alliance, keep track of developments and activities and communicate them to companies. They will generally act as an interface between Alliance companies and the EU institutions, and foster contacts between those companies. The CBI will form the link in the UK and BERR will work closely with the Confederation of British Industry (CBI) and Business in the Community (BitC), the leading CSR charity supporting business.

What are the benefits:

The Alliance will:

  • facilitate higher visibility of companies’ CSR activities in individual member states and across Europe;
  • support networking and capacity-building opportunities;
  • provide a market place of ideas and practices across Europe;
  • demonstrate the value of voluntary business engagement and the difference it can make to a company’s triple bottom line;
  • encourage companies to understand and support the “business case” behind CSR, highlighting incentives for involvement in CSR projects and programmes;
  • highlight opportunities for using CSR as a way to assess and manage risks, such as workforce management, environmental governance and operations in fragile states; and
  • foster dialogue with the European Commission on CSR

How businesses can expect to be involved?

Businesses will be able to determine for themselves to what extent they would like to be involved. However, they are expected to:

  • be ready to share information about what CSR activity they do and how they do it;
  • consider contributing on a number of key areas suggested by the Commission in its Communication on CSR, for example:
    • innovating benefits to society;
    • improving and developing skills for employability;
    • responding to diversity challenges;
    • improving working conditions in the supply chain;
    • enhancing dialogue with stakeholders; and
    • addressing issues of communication and transparency
  • take part in periodic meetings to explore and develop projects in the priority areas under their own initiative

Commitment and mutual trust will be vital to the success of this initiative. The results will need to be ambitious, concrete and measurable in order to demonstrate that the natural path for CSR is within the everyday business practices of companies.

How do you join?

If you are interested and a company based in the EU, you are invited to express your support, at any moment in time, to the BERR. E-mail csr@dti.gsi.gov.uk

More information on the Alliance is included in the Annex of the European Commission’s Communication, available here.

Summary of Communication

The Communication (published 22 March) states that CSR can make a significant contribution to the competitiveness of the European economy and the Lisbon strategy for growth and jobs. The Communication aims to make Europe a ‘pole of excellence’ on CSR. A new approach that inspires more enterprises to become involved in the agenda.


It proposes that the European business community should publicly demonstrate its commitment to CSR, sustainable development, economic growth and more and better jobs. This includes co-operation with other stakeholders. The European Commission is keen to give greater visibility to CSR, to acknowledge what European enterprises already do in this field and to encourage them to do more. In line with this approach the Commission has announced its backing for the launch of a European Alliance on CSR - an open alliance for which European enterprises of all sizes are invited to express their support and contribute to developing CSR across Europe. The proposed alliance is a loose umbrella, which will encourage a climate of participation and thinking on CSR.


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