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Water reporting standards are being pushed for by the rise in water-related risks

A lack of a global accounting system that tracks water usage in the same way across the globe makes it difficult to assess risk as climate change and population increase strain freshwater resources. This has prompted a new initiative aimed at promoting a standard approach.

Water use, unlike carbon emissions, is reported using a patchwork system of standards and definitions that makes it difficult to compare companies, sectors, and regions.

Lauren Enright is the programme manager for water services at SCS Global. She's helping to bring the group together.

Investors, auditors and communities who are trying to figure out what companies do with water face real challenges.

The initiative, which is backed by the World Resources Institute (WRI), WWF, and the U.N. CEO Water Mandate will launch in April. It's expected to be named Corporate Guidance on Assessing Water Scopes 1 - 3?in Value chains.

It is not intended to replace existing reporting regimes, such as the European Union Corporate Sustainability Reporting directive. Instead, it is meant to sit below them and provide a set of common definitions?and core concepts.

Water stress is affecting sectors like?technology where data centres have sparked protests in communities around the world.

Ida Hempel, a climate-focused investment firm's Ida Hempel, said that the framework would allow investors to turn narrative or qualitative disclosures into "very useful" data.

It would enable us to compare specific interventions and companies on a more like-for-like base." Reporting by Simon Jessop. Mark Potter edited the article.

(source: Reuters)