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6 ESG Trends that will Influence Credit Outlook in 2024

Sibi Sathyan


In its report on ESG Outlook 2024, Moody’s has identified six major ESG  trends that will influence credit outlook in 2024.

Moody’s six ESG trends include environmental degradation, green technology, and disruptive innovation, complex ESG policy landscape, rising physical climate risks, climate finance gap in emerging markets, and reshaping the future of work. These trends will significantly impact credit strength in industries vulnerable to the carbon transition.

According to Moody’s, green technology and disruptive innovation will play an increasingly lead role in shaping investment and business decisions within sectors most susceptible to carbon transition. Despite this, the sluggish economic conditions and geopolitical tensions may present obstacles to achieving net-zero ambitions.

The ESG landscape is expected to become more complex for businesses and financial institutions, with mandatory climate and sustainability disclosures taking effect in various jurisdictions. Regulatory scrutiny on greenwashing, combined with a busy election calendar that could lead to shifts in climate policies and heightened social tensions, could add to the complexity.

Moody’s underscores the rising physical climate risks, predicting escalating economic and financial losses for governments and businesses. This, in turn, could result in more expensive or even unavailable insurance in certain markets, underscoring the imperative for investment in adaptation and resilience. Despite efforts to mobilize private finance, the persistent climate finance gap in emerging markets (EMs) is a hindrance. the report said.

A heightened focus on environmental degradation is identified as a source of regulatory, litigation, and market risks for businesses heavily reliant on natural capital and those facing waste and pollution risks. Factors such as carbon transition, population aging, and artificial intelligence (AI) are expected to initiate significant shifts in the future of work, carrying social and economic ramifications. The ESG Outlook 2024 positions these trends as pivotal in shaping the economic landscape in the coming years.

The Key Takeaways from the ESG Outlook:

Green Technology and Disruptive Innovation: Green technology and disruptive innovation introduce credit risks and opportunities for carbon-intensive sectors. Strong policy support, market momentum, and the growing cost competitiveness of mature clean energy technologies are expected to drive green capital spending in 2024, particularly in major markets like the US. Initiatives such as the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) in the US provide substantial financial incentives for investments in renewables, battery electric vehicles (BEVs), green hydrogen, and carbon capture, utilization, and storage (CCUS).

Navigating a Complex ESG Policy Landscape: Businesses are navigating a complex ESG policy landscape, with an increase in disclosure requirements supporting risk management. In 2024, companies and financial institutions face the challenge of meeting growing climate and sustainability disclosure demands amid a busy election calendar that contributes to polarization on key ESG issues. Regulators globally increasingly require companies to disclose ESG-related data, enhancing businesses’ ability to identify, manage, and monitor risks.

Rising Physical Climate Risks: The escalation of extreme weather events underscores rising physical climate risks, prompting shifts in business strategy. The increased frequency and severity of events like wildfires, heatwaves, and torrential rain result in significant financial and economic losses. Moody’s identifies 16 sectors with over $4 trillion in rated debt that has high exposure to physical climate risks. As climate-related disasters become more concurrent, they risk constraining investment, productivity growth, and economic output, and amplifying social strains.

The story has been syndicated from ESGTimes. WriteCanvas has changed the headline. The rest of the text remains unchanged.

 


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How technology is helping enterprises to embrace sustainability?

Sonal Desai


These days, the buzzword is sustainability. ESG, deforestation, biodiversity, DEF, and sustainable finance discussions are gaining traction across platforms. Thanks to global watchdogs, enterprises worldwide are mapping their sustainability journeys with purpose-driven impact and green outcomes.

Two major strategies are allowing businesses to accelerate their sustainability journey: 1. A top-down approach; and 2. Information technology optimization. And both strategies streamline and enable an enterprise’s tactical and operational aspirations on its path to green goals.

Experts emphasize the significance of sustainable business practices and the importance of sustainability in our daily lives. I want to emphasize the importance of technology.

Technology—in its advanced form, Web 4.0, and a select few who are piloting Web 5.0—is an enterprise’s best friend on its journey to sustainability. I am convinced that green technology will propel sustainability to unprecedented heights. I emphasize technology as the primary enabler for two reasons: 1. technology as an enabler and 2. people enablement.

The green technology market is rapidly expanding. According to a Fortune Business report, the global green technology and sustainability market will grow from $ 13.76 billion in 2022 to $51.09 billion by 2029. It will grow at a CAGR of 20.6% during the forecast period.

Both software companies and hardware OEMs are working hard to market the new opportunity. The new-age start-ups that are developing customized apps to help enterprises ranging from MSMEs to SMBs to large conglomerates meet their sustainability targets are the icing on the cake.

According to studies, survey reports, and market research commissioned by market advisory firms, technology is enabling average people to ‘just do their jobs and key in the data to their daily roaster. The apps track the data, analyze and categorize it, and assign it to the appropriate block based on the company’s sustainability goal/target.

At the end of the year, the BI software compiles and formats the data based on each disclosure the company must make, aligning the corporate goals with the UN SDGs. Taking it a step further, the predictive analysis software assists the company in predicting corporate goals for the coming fiscal year / CAGR for a forecast period.

From the perspective of the CIO, who is the co-owner of data and thus a key stakeholder in all sustainability initiatives, the automation process enables the enterprise to identify stakeholders, establish the merit of implementing the technology to the stakeholders by developing a solid narrative, and measure the goals achieved. The ROI calculator is a valuable tool for gap analysis and plug points.

But that is a story for another day…


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