Top 10 ESG Markers - May 2022
Terence Jeyaretnam
APAC Leader & Partner, Climate Change & Sustainability Services, EY
The dial shifted on climate, diversity and integrity this month, the E, S and the G of the Federal elections, which I have obviously covered.?The month in ESG over May was also busy with extreme weather records, a dire warning from the UN around total societal collapse, but also some good news with a ‘rights of nature’ verdict out of India and net zero progress in California and Tasmania.
Again, if I happen to miss some key markers in a particular month. Just drop me some comments, and I will pick them up next month!?
*‘ESG Markers’ – like biomarkers that tell us how healthy our body may be, ESG Markers showing us the big movements in the field of ESG in Oceania and globally.?
So, here are my Top 10 for May 2022, again in no particular order.
Last seven years hottest on record
The first analysis of global temperature in 2021 shows it was 1.2 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels - ranking as the fifth hottest year on record and confirming a trend towards increasing greenhouse gas concentrations that is trapping more heat than ever before.?This assessment now indicates that we are no longer able to say that we are 1.1 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels, but 1.2 degrees, heading rather quickly towards the 1.5 degree mark that we are hoping to stay under.
The global climate crisis continues to unfold with extreme weather striking across the world. Europe suffered its hottest summer on record and broke their maximum temperature records in Sicily, while intense wildfires raged throughout Italy as well as Greece and Turkey; severe floods made up to nine times more likely by this heating also wreaked havoc during Germany.
Extreme heat also caused the heatwaves in the west of the US and Canada, with temperature records being broken by 5C and reports that the event was made at least 150 times more likely by global heating.
Some parts of Eastern Australia may be uninsurable by 2030
A report by the Climate Council suggests that one in 25 homes in Eastern Australia may not be insurable due to extreme weather caused by climate change by 2030.?The report considered 10 electorates in its analysis.?“Uninsurable” is defined in the report as an area where the required type of insurance product was expected to not be available, or only available at such high cost that no one could afford it.?As an example, the report suggested up to 27% of properties in the electorate of Nicholls, in northern Victoria, and 20% of properties in Richmond, in New South Wales, could soon be uninsurable due to flood plain risk.
Briefly, California runs on 100% renewables
While smaller grids such as that in South Australia have achieved it in the past, this is the first time an economy and grid as big as California has, albeit briefly, achieved 100% renewable-powered for the first time.?According to the California Independent System Operator, the milestone was achieved within a 15-minute period between 2.45pm and 3pm on Saturday April 30, California time. ?About 75% of this came from solar power, while the rest constituted wind, geothermal, hydro and biogas.?This presents California as being well on track to being carbon neutral by 2045.
Tasmania goes carbon negative
According to researchers from the Australian National University, Tasmania has become one of the first parts of the world to become not just carbon neutral, but carbon negative by the reduction in logging.?Notably, Tasmania already had a low emission profile, with much of the state's electricity largely coming from hydro energy.
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ISSB outlines actions required to deliver global baseline of sustainability disclosures
The IFRS Foundation’s International Sustainability Standards Board (ISSB) has outlined the necessary steps required to establish a comprehensive global baseline of sustainability disclosures. This baseline presents a unique opportunity to prevent any further fragmentation of current sustainability disclosure requirements.?
The ISSB aim to complete necessary institutional and technical-standard setting work, to create the global baseline’s core elements, by the end of 2022.?
Implementation of the global baseline will then require action by others, including public authorities and market participants, to contribute towards the development of the global baseline and to require or encourage its widespread use. The global baseline builds upon, incorporates and protects the heritage of the existing investor-focused sustainability disclosure standards, including those of the Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures (TCFD), the Climate Disclosure Standards Board (CDSB), SASB Standards, Integrated Reporting and the World Economic Forum’s metrics.
Nature has legal status on par with humans, Indian court rules
Madras High Court has recently ruled that Mother Nature” has the same legal status as a human being, which includes “all corresponding rights, duties and liabilities of a living person’, also saying that the natural environment is part of the human right to life, and that humans have an environmental duty to future generations.?This case is the latest in a series of ‘rights of nature’ ruling that give ecosystems, animals and the natural world rights similar to those of humans, corporations and trusts.?Countries including?Ecuador, Bolivia,?Panama?and New Zealand have enacted variations of rights of nature laws, as have over 30 communities and local governments within the United States.?(Source: Inside Climate News)
Australia’s climate election shows Australia wants to lead on climate change
Australia’s Federal Government elections saw Australians elect the opposition Labor Party to power, with incoming Prime Minister Anthony Albanese vowing to “end the climate wars” and turn Australia into a “renewable energy superpower.”?Under Albanese, Australia now plans a 43 percent emissions reduction this decade and is reportedly seeking to host a United Nations climate conference in 2024.???Polling in the lead-up showed that?8 out of 10 Australians?wanted greater climate action from the government, and 70 percent of respondents said they believe climate change was already impacting the country. “Environment” was the?most-mentioned issue?on social media during the campaign, ahead of the economy and corruption.?The incoming parliament has a super majority of climate support with not only Labor, but a wave of Greens and independent Teals being elected on a climate agenda (as well as gender and integrity). (Source: CNBC News)
Australia’s gender election brings female vote, parliamentary diversity and greater gender balance
In 2021, a groundswell of female anger over the mistreatment of women in politics saw thousands of women converge on parliament house.?In 2018, Julia Banks, a former member of parliament, quit the Liberal Party over "cultural and gender bias, bullying and intimidation" from her own party, as well as the opposition. In 2019, some prominent Liberal female members of parliament opted not to seek re-election, citing sexist bullying and misogyny.
A 2021 report compiled by the Australian Human Rights Commission found that 1 in 3 employees in Australia's federal parliament had been sexually harassed. Over half of staffers had experienced at least one incident of bullying, sexual harassment, or either actual or attempted sexual assault.?Last year, Australia slipped to 50th place out of 156 countries in the World Economic Forum's Global Gender Gap Index. This was its worst ranking ever, down from 44th in 2020.
The Labor party, and independents picked up on this disgruntlement against the ruling party, and worked to address this issue as part of the elections, but not stopping at gender diversity, also increasing cultural diversity and First Nations parliamentarians.?Now, overall women form 38% of our federal parliament but?breaking it down between the two houses?reveals a discrepancy. While women make up only 31% of the 151-member House of Representatives, they’re the majority in the 76-member Senate at 53%, which puts Australia ahead of Canada and the US in terms of female representation in the upper house.?Labor is largely responsible for the improved representation of women in the lower house, with the party nearing parity at 43%. The lag is apparent on the conservative side, however, with the Liberals at 21% and the Nationals having just two female MPs in the lower house.?Compared to New Zealand, the UK, the US and Canada – Australia is now second only to New Zealand (48%) in terms of overall female representation in federal parliament.
Japan plans to issue 157 billion in green transition bonds
Japanese Prime Minister Fumio Kishida has laid out a plan to issue an estimated 20 trillion yen ($157 billion) worth of "green transition" bonds to help finance investment to achieve a carbon-neutral society.?The government will also create a 10-year road map to promote green investment that would include financial aid and infrastructure building.?Details of the green transition bonds, including the specific amount to be issued, will be discussed at a panel to be set up later this year. (Source: Reuters)
UN warns of total societal collapse
The United Nations published its 2022 ‘Global Assessment Report on Disaster Risk Reduction’ (GAR2022) this month including its grim verdict that the world was experiencing an accelerating trend of natural disasters and economic crises.??The paper, ‘Pandemics, Climate Extremes, Tipping Points and the Global Catastrophic Risk – How these Impact Global Targets’, offers an in-depth scenario analysis of global collapse risks based on how human activities are transgressing planetary boundaries.?It finds that the continuation of ‘business as usual’ and a failure to invoke drastic policy changes means that human civilisation is moving inexorably toward collapse.?It identifies four potential pathways ahead. Yet only one of them, “stable Earth”, involves the achievement of global targets under the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals and Sendai Framework. All the others are heading toward collapse.?As the report acknowledges, there is still much that can be done. But the time for action is not after 2030. (Source: Byline Times)
Head of Sustainability, BAE Systems Australia
2 年Great update Terence!
It came late in may but AGL’s forced about face might also prove to be a local watershed moment too
Communications advisor, Earthed.au, 'Track changes' podcast host
2 年Another excellent update - thanks Terence!
Ethical Stewardship Lead at Australian Ethical Investment
2 年I love these updates. As scary as they often are. Thank you.
Freelance performer, educator and writer on Wangal country. #forloveofgaia #ulurustatementfromtheheart #alwayswasalwayswillbe #YES23
2 年Gorgeous animal.