ESG is not Sustainability

ESG is not Sustainability

The world of ESG has taken off and is catching on in Asia. Everyone is talking about how important adopting ESG initiatives is and how investors are taking notice of risk mitigation through ESG performance.?The term has become one of those acronyms that many people recognize, yet not everyone understands. Without getting too pedantic, definitions are important to ensure alignment, prevent misallocation of valuable resources and guard against accidental greenwashing.

In my years as a university lecturer, I have observed this sense of confusion amongst my students as well as from the wider community, regarding the concept of ESG. Often it is mistakenly used interchangeably with sustainability or even perceived as solely focusing on climate change.

ESG stands for Environment, Social and Governance. Governance has been around for a while, most companies report on their share structure, ownership and most investors actually do want to know if managers are being paid too much and if the Board is qualified. Although G doesn’t necessarily have a dollar figure attached to it, it is important, and investors know that. Around the time of the 2005 UNEP report, when the term was first coined, environment was also considered very important. The S or social issues only taking on more relevance latterly, especially with the 2008 financial crisis and the renewed debate about ESG and fiduciary duty. There is plenty of evidence that the ESG factors impact the financial well-being of a business and that without due consideration of the E and S businesses not only increase their risk, they also miss opportunities.

That’s what it stands for but what actually is it??It is an assessment approach popularly used by investors, where the aim is to have a “score” for overall performance from which investors can gauge the business like a “credit’’ score i.e., how investable, or low risk is the business based on its performance of responsible behaviour.

Although primarily developed to be an evaluation tool for investors to assess the level at which the business is managing risk and disclosing performance improvements on specific “material” topics, it has become a valuable tool when partnered with reporting and other assessment tools. It has increased the pressure on businesses, but also on authorities and intermediaries, to raise the bar, such as listing requirements.?As ESG has grown and been adopted, it has:

- helped investors reduce risk

- supported businesses to drive performance improvements

- increased the quantity of reporting and to some extent improved reporting quality

- improved the information available to investors and the public

As the ESG ‘’industry’’ has expanded, the term has become erroneously intertwined with sustainability. However, it is essential to emphasise that sustainability is not a subset of ESG but rather the encompassing concept to which all ESG efforts contribute.?Sustainability embodies the principles and values of living in harmony with the planet while achieving peace and equality through our activities and institutions. In contrast, ESG efforts, simply put, are how organisations measure, monitor and manage their performance to be more sustainable.

If an organisation is merely focussing on philanthropical and volunteering programmes, that is CSR or Corporate Social Responsibility efforts (and not ESG or Sustainability). Yes, CSR was effective in driving the responsibility agenda but it became too broad, and philosophical for businesses. Whereas ESG has gained traction as it gave quantitative measures to which business leaders and investors could relate more directly to their business, and therefore could more readily adopt the related frameworks.

Understanding where it came from, its purpose and objectives, gives us insights as to how the term ESG has been used, misused and perhaps abused. It’s not in anyone’s interest, let alone a company’s self-interest, to reduce ESG to mere marketing or differentiation strategies or view it solely as a risk management exercise.? Whilst important to look back and establish clarity on definitions, I now find myself looking to the future. As we move forward, I begin to wonder where in ESG does humanity and well-being fit? How might we evolve this tool from doing less bad i.e., mitigation, to positive or regenerative investments i.e., the real impact of ESG capital??

Written by Dr Margaret Burnett, TPB Advisor and Programme Director, Master in Sustainability Leadership and Governance at Hong Kong University.

Ali Mansi

Dynamic Hotelier | Hotel General Manager | Expert in Operational Excellence & Pre-Opening Success | PGC-MBA | Proven Leader Driving Revenue Growth | Egypt Branch Manager at Sheraton

1 年

ESG initiatives mitigate risks, attract investors, and promote sustainable practices.

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Faisal R. Alyousef

Monitoring and Evaluation Director with expertise in ESG,Sustainability, Social Development and Impact

1 年

Agreed, ESG term and other has become erroneously intertwined with sustainability. Sustainability is not ESG, CSR, LEED or Green. All those are tools, standards and practices to measure, monitor and manage our organisation’s effort and performance to be more sustainable.

Bridgitte B.

Striving to be #MAD (Make A Difference) every day. Visiting fellow at SAID business school, University of Oxford.

1 年

Blain van Wyk some food for thought

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Ben Kellard

Director of Business Strategy at Cambridge Institute for Sustainability Leadership (CISL)

1 年

Agreed, ESG and sustainability have become conflated and they arent the same. ESG was originally a screening tool for fund managers, taking more of a 'no harm' or risk approach. So it doesnt include how sustainable a company actually is, largely because the metrics dont include all material impacts and include environmental limits. Consequently it also fails to identify the full risks a business faces by externalising its costs (typically on society and nature) thereby creating liabilities. Crucially, it also fails to identify the opportunities for a business to use its core capabilities to serve society's fast changing needs. Our reports set out the different types of business response. https://www.cisl.cam.ac.uk/resources/unleashing-sustainable-business BSI's PAS 808 is also the first-ever national standard to set out the worldviews, principles and behaviours of a sustainable, purpose led organisation. It can be downloaded for free here- https://www.bsigroup.com/en-GB/standards/pas-808/

Patricia Dwyer

Founder, The Purpose Business

1 年

Thank you Dr. Margaret Burnett (Hinch) this really helps ground concepts to action. You asked, "Where in ESG does humanity and well-being fit??" - If the meta purpose of sustainable development is wellbeing of all people and planet- and this is what all organisations are working towards, then ESG is part of the set of metrics that indicate being on the path towards business driving and existing for that wellbeing end goal. We need to move from Business As Usual ,, including ,as you mentioned- CSR (which is just BAU with doing good on the periphery not core to the business) to Enlightened Shareholder Value (ESV) - which shifts time horizons to longer term, and expands focus on more stakeholders - but shareholders are still the primary focus to being more Purpose -Driven , which really is about focusing on well-being over a longer period of time, delivered profitably. ?ESG helps measure the way we manage impacts until we shift the business model completely, to being truly purpose-driven. This is precisely the space that The Purpose Business works in- the intersection of sustainability and purpose. Purpose Disruptors Dr Victoria Hurth Ben Kellard Blurred Company of Good Rupen Desai BSI

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