Crompton Greaves Consumer Electricals Ltd

Lobbying Transparency and Governance

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Direct Lobbying Transparency
Overall Assessment Comment Score
Limited Crompton Greaves Consumer Electricals Limited provides only limited insight into its climate-related lobbying. The company notes that it participates in industry bodies such as ELCOMA, the Bureau of Indian Standards and other trade associations and that these forums help it “influence government regulations” on topics like e-waste rules and public-procurement orders, but it does not name any specific climate policy, bill or regulation it has tried to shape. Its description of lobbying mechanisms is confined to the indirect route of working through associations; there is no detail on direct meetings, submissions or correspondence with identifiable policymakers. Likewise, while it signals a wish for regulators to tackle non-BIS-compliant lamps and engages on e-waste regulations, it does not articulate clear, measurable climate-policy outcomes or positions. Overall, the disclosure gives a broad indication that the company seeks to influence environmental regulation through industry groups, yet lacks the specificity needed to demonstrate substantive transparency on climate lobbying. 1
Lobbying Governance
Overall Assessment Comment Score
None Crompton Greaves Consumer Electricals Ltd does not disclose any specific governance process for its lobbying activities, including those related to climate issues. Although “the Company’s ESG Committee monitors the Company’s ongoing commitment to environment, health and safety, social responsibility, governance, sustainability concerns, and other public policy matters” and the “policies of the Company are reviewed periodically or on a need-based basis by the Board of Directors, department heads, and business heads,” with “a Compliance report across all statutory requirements ... submitted to the Audit Committee on a quarterly basis” and the “Control Manager tool (Beacon)” used to track compliance, these disclosures pertain to broad policy oversight and statutory compliance rather than any direct or indirect lobbying governance. We found no evidence of a defined process for aligning lobbying activities with the company’s climate or policy positions, no mechanism to manage or monitor lobbying through trade associations, and no identified individual or formal body responsible for overseeing lobbying alignment. 0