background

PWC, Sustainable finance, Green finance

Latest News Thumbnail

Sustainability Important to Make Investment Decisions

WriteCanvas News


94 % of investors in a recent PWC survey said that corporate reporting on sustainability performance contains unsupported claims.

Sustainability continues to be pivotal for investors:

Sustainability continues to remain pivotal to investors, according to the PWC report. Investors are looking for stronger reporting standards amid greenwashing concerns.

75% said that how a company manages sustainability-related risks and opportunities is an important factor in their investment decisions, although this is down 4% from last year.

Investors this year highlighted a strong undercurrent of doubt around the reliability of sustainability reporting and information. This is often referred to as greenwashing.
• 94% believe corporate reporting on sustainability performance contains some level of unsupported claims (up from 87% in 2022)
• 15% think unsupported claims to be high to a very large extent
• 79 % said unsupported claims are present to a moderate or greater extent, which is up one percentage point from last year
• 57% said if companies meet the upcoming regulations it will meet their information needs for decision-making to a “large” or “considerable extent”
• The upcoming regulations include CSRD, the SEC proposed climate disclosure rules in the US, and ISSB standards

These perceptions of greenwashing may explain why investors are looking to regulators and standard setters to create clarity and consistency in companies’ reporting, PWC said.

Investor focus:

The focus of investors on meeting the cost of ESG commitments has also risen, the PWC researchers noted.

• 76% of investors find this information important or very important.
• 75% agree that companies should disclose the monetary value of their impact on the environment or society, up from 66% in 2022
• 85% say that reasonable assurance (akin to an audit of financial statements) would give them confidence in sustainability reporting to a “moderate”, “large”, or “considerable extent”

The survey – now in its third consecutive year – queried 345 investors and analysts across geographies, asset classes, and investment approaches. The aim was to get insights into the factors that most affect the companies they invest in and cover.

Key highlights:

• Three-quarters of investors say sustainability is important to their investment decisions
• More than half (57%) back greater clarity and consistency in sustainability reporting
• Technological transformation is driving the investment landscape
• 59% identified technological change as the most likely factor to influence how companies create value over the next three years
• 61% say faster adoption of AI is very or extremely important
• Macroeconomic and inflationary concerns fall from 2022 highs
• Concern about climate change rises from 22% to 32%, putting climate on par with cyber risks

Investors favor accelerated AI adoption, despite risks

This year’s survey findings show investors view the accelerated adoption of artificial intelligence (AI) as critical to value creation while recognizing the importance of managing risks.

• 61% say faster adoption is “very”, or “extremely important”
• 85 % noted moderately important
• 59% identified technological change as the factor most likely to influence how companies create value over the next three years
• Innovation and emerging technologies (including AI, the metaverse, and blockchain) among their top five priorities for evaluating companies
• 86% see AI presenting considerable risk from a “moderate” to “very large extent” when it comes to data security and privacy; insufficient governance and controls (84%), misinformation (83%); and bias and discrimination (72%).

Quotes:

Nadja Picard, Global Reporting Leader, PwC Germany said, “We are seeing significant steps towards more consistent reporting from companies around climate change, however, there is a need for improvement. All the while, investors are calling for greater engagement around how companies manage the opportunities and risks of new technologies, particularly generative AI, as new technologies increasingly drive business transformation and investment.”

James Chalmers, Global Assurance Leader, PwC UK, said, “We are moving from a period of awareness raising around the importance of climate and technological change to a time where investors are increasingly asking specific and tough questions about how companies are addressing those issues in their strategy, how they assess risk and opportunity, and what is truly material for them. In this context, corporate reporting needs to continue to evolve so it provides reliable, consistent, and comparable information investors – and other stakeholders – can rely on.”

 


Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

background

ESG

Latest News Thumbnail

Is ESG losing steam?

Sonal Desai


Is ESG losing steam?

Is ESG being pushed over to maintain profits? Are compliances being watered down for short-term gains? Though it is too early to conclude, indicators point in that direction.

Governments and corporates are finding it difficult to answer a blunt question: What and where is the impact of your ESG strategies?

Global compliance and regulatory mandates have made it possible for the stakeholders to report on the Environment and the Governance components. Where is the social component?

Our irresponsible behavior, utter disregard for the environment, and apathy toward the problems of fellow beings are leaving the planet in a quandary.

The impact is equally horrifying: unprecedented floods and heatwaves, melting glaciers, poverty, hunger, and displaced lives.

Global organizations led by the UN, the World Bank, the Asian Development Bank, and countries united on a common platform (Paris Agreement) to retain the temperature to 1.5-to-2 degrees C (pre-industrial period). UN SDGs, climate action, carbon capture and removal, renewable energy, and Net Zero are the new fashionable buzzwords. Or are they?

I am inspired by the daily reportage of ESG events, and governmental, NGO, and global initiatives to combat climate change. But I am also a bit confused with the on-the-ground signals.

For example, the number of naysayers or anti-ESG brigade is on the rise. Led by the West which is soft-landing ESG theories, the turnover has slowly percolated into Asia upward/downward.

Two things are tweaking the ESG story. One: Greenwashing and two: data and financial risk/security—the crux of any business SMB, MSME, large or multi-national. While data security has always been challenging for organizations, the new viruses stump the businesses worldwide. What is equally important to understand is: that data security laws, frameworks, and regulatory compliances are far more granular. They cover the end-to-end data security policies and practices including the human angle. Lack of compliance also has a far-reaching impact.

The ESG sector has yet to see that kind of whole-hearted and collective acceptance: across the sectors, across countries, across organizations, and end customers. Country-wise, each nation has its own set of regulatory compliances for ESG. Are they enough? For instance, one just has to look at the BRSR forms—they account for just box ticking. Or the recent EU Green Bond Standards which mandate EuGB holders to ensure 85% of the bond’s raised funds are used for taxonomy-compliant economic activities until the taxonomy framework is fully operational. The balance of 15% can be allocated to other economic activities as long as they clearly explain its
allocation.

Secondly, the impact of ESG needs to be properly documented. Instead of being a part of an exclusive club for the elite, who are busy voicing opinions on domestic and global platforms, the influencers must unite and play a proactive role. The need of the hour, according to me is to develop a strong community and bring ESG into the mainstream. Convey the impact in a manner that everyone can relate to. The narrative does not always have to be scary. If we are reporting about the deluge, let us also highlight the positives that effective ESG, sustainability, climate action strategies, and implementation can affect.

It is time, ESG is dusted off the silos and integrated into the mainstream. While arguments for and against continue, I want the voices, even constructive critics to be vocal about the change they want.

Meanwhile, here are some statistics to chew on:

The global ESG market is expected to quadruple from $7.7 billion in 2020 to $31.2 billion by 2030. Asia is expected to drive growth with ESG AUM expected to surpass $500B by 2025. Not to be left behind, India’s ESG market is predicted to constitute 34% of its domestic AUM by 2051, aligning with its goal of net-zero emissions.

ESG is real. ESG can be effective. It needs a collective effort…


Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , ,


Fatal error: Uncaught Error: Call to undefined function twenty_twenty_one_the_posts_navigation() in /home2/writecxc/public_html/wp-content/themes/twentytwentyone-child/archive.php:31 Stack trace: #0 /home2/writecxc/public_html/wp-includes/template-loader.php(106): include() #1 /home2/writecxc/public_html/wp-blog-header.php(19): require_once('/home2/writecxc...') #2 /home2/writecxc/public_html/index.php(17): require('/home2/writecxc...') #3 {main} thrown in /home2/writecxc/public_html/wp-content/themes/twentytwentyone-child/archive.php on line 31