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How is the ICICI Bank Propelling its SDG Journey?

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The ICICI Bank’s Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) framework is aligned with the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (UN SDGs). The bank reiterated that besides SDGs, most of its objects meet India’s commitments under the Paris Agreement, in its ESG report 2023-24. The , the report is titled “Being Responsible, Being Sustainable: ICICI Bank ESG Report 2023-24.”

Here are some ways ICICI Bank is aligning its ESG goals with the UN SDGs:
  • Carbon neutrality: ICICI Bank aims to achieve carbon neutrality for scope 1 and 2 emissions by 2032. The bank has increased its use of green energy and is focused on minimizing greenhouse gas emissions.
  • Water conservation: The bank has installed water recycling facilities at its offices in Mumbai and Hyderabad, and uses recycled water for landscaping and cooling towers. It also installs water-efficient plumbing fixtures in new and existing offices and branches. Additionally, its water conservation initiatives have generated an annual rainwater harvesting capacity exceeding 25.8 billion litres across the country.
  • Sustainable procurement: The bank is focused on sustainable procurement and has implemented OHSAS 18001 at 13 of its premises.
  • In its report, the bank said it has allocated Rs 5.19 billion for corporate social responsibility (CSR) activities in financial year 2024, up from Rs 4.63 billion the previous year. The projects focus on livelihood and social interventions, and have benefited over 10.7 million people as of the end of 2024.
  • Gender equality: The bank has supported over 10 million women entrepreneurs through self-help groups and prioritizes women in its skill and value chain development programs.
  • Through its philanthropic arm, the ICICI Foundation for Inclusive Growth, the bank planted more than 1.1 million trees in the financial year 2024.
  • Healthcare: The bank expanded its healthcare initiatives to include cancer care in 35 hospitals across India and committed Rs 12 billion for the development of new institutions for the Tata Memorial Centre.
  • Renewable energy: In financial year 2024, the bank increased the proportion of renewable energy within the total energy consumption from the grid and on-site solar generation to 35 per cent from 9 per cent in financial year 2023. With this, the Bank’s total green energy usage increased to 75.73 million kilowatt-hours (kWh).”
C-Suite thurst:

Girish Chandra Chaturvedi, Chairman, ICICI Bank, said, “We have set the goal of becoming carbon neutral in scope 1 and scope 2 emissions by financial year 2032. Our endeavor to measure and monitor water consumption at our own premises has led to per capita per day consumption being lower than the national average indicated by National Building Code. The bank is adopting responsible practices for embracing circularity related to waste management, disposal and encouraging recycling through authorized vendors.”

 


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Presenting a right sustainability narrative imperative to achieve SDGs: IMC banking conference

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The UN’s 17 SDGs address critical issues like access to clean water and sanitation, sustainable energy, and building sustainable cities. Importantly, the SDGs are interconnected. Progress on one goal can support the progress of the other. For example, ensuring access to clean energy (SDG 7) can contribute to reducing poverty (SDG 1) and improving health outcomes (SDG 3). This interconnectedness highlights the need for a balanced approach to social, economic, and environmental sustainability. This was the crux of IMC’s 14th Annual Banking & Finance Conference.

Experts discussed the pivotal role that the banking, non-banking, and financial industries is playing in the government of India’s ambitious financial inclusion drive during a day-long event.

Inaugurating the conference, Himanish Chaudhuri, Partner and Financial Services Industry Leader, Deloitte India, said that India is the poster child of financial inclusion. “We have conquered the complexities of the problem by using technology. We are data-rich. We want to go from being information-rich to being data-rich to reach the insight-rich stage. This will help us to drive last-mile financial inclusion.”

One such panel discussion was on: How Financial Institutions can play a Pivotal Role in Achievement of Sustainable Development Goal

The panel included Manish Kumar, Head of ESG & CSR, ICICI Bank Ltd, Renjini Liza Varghese, CEO, WriteCanvas,  Smitha Hari. President (India), auctus ESG, Heena Khushalani, Partner, Climate Change and Sustainability Services, EY India, Jitesh Shetty, Co-Founder/CEO, Credible ESG. The panel was moderated by  Swati Agrawal, CEO & President – Advisory, CARE Analytics and Advisory Pvt. Ltd.

Some edited excerpts:

Manish Kumar 

​All conventional sources that specify and use green are termed green bonds. Some new instruments, like securitization, have been introduced in the market. In this case, a pool of receivables with sustainability or green as an end-use can be securitized as a source for raising liabilities.

Heena Khushalani

We have witnessed tremendous momentum being created at the awareness level​ of green lending among banks during the past year. Has it progressed? Not really. They’re trying to figure out how to do it while maintaining the economics, which is why it’s not progressing because of everyone’s current predicament or dilemma.

Smitha Hari 

Projects related to the Sustainable Development Goals are seen as having a high risk and low return when looking at the capital stack. ​ For these, the grants or philanthropies come with the lowest rate, followed by government subsidies, equity, and debt. Dfis and MDB Capital can influence the market ​with diverse instruments​ in the form of credit enhancements. ​Instead of directly lending, if they come in with a credit enhancement, that can multiply the market

Renjini Liza Varghese

The absence of a clear narrative, inconsistent delivery, and missing data points present the three main obstacles to effectively communicating with the stakeholders. Filling in the blanks with data is crucial to constructing a consistent story.

Jitesh Shetty

Customers want data to flow in a seamless automated way. But the challenge is from within the bank or the enterprise. They don’t have the right owners of the data. The data not in the right place. But that is changing now with BRSR.

Other panels also touched upon ESG and rising climate risk :

Dr. Srikanta K. Panigrahi, Director General and Distinguished Research Fellow, Indian Institute of Sustainable Development (IISD), New Delhi

These days, risk finance is becoming increasingly popular. Thanks to the RBI’s climate-related financial risk disclosure on the public platform, leading banks like the State Bank of India have developed risk assessment procedures and are hiring climate risk officers in prime branches. The banking sector is empowering the green offshoot.

Rajiv Anand, Deputy Managing Director, Axis Bank Limited

Axis Bank has a board-level ESG committee, with its chair also serving on the credit committee. When it comes to green financing, we view the world through two lenses: our credit lens, which acts as a ban, and our ESG lens.


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NSE-listed companies’ CSR spending Reached Rs 155.24 B in FY23

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Between FY22 and FY23, the CSR expenditures of 1,296 NSE-listed companies under India Inc. increased by 5%, from Rs 148.16 billion to Rs 155.24 billion.

The top three contributors in this category were HDFC Bank (Rs 8.20 billion), Tata Consultancy Services (Rs 7.83 billion), and Reliance Industries (Rs 7.44 billion).

Prime Database Group’s primeinfobase.com revealed that in FY23, ten businesses, including three previously mentioned ones, accounted for 33% of all CSR spending. Tata Steel (Rs 4.80 billion), Oil and Natural Gas Corp (Rs 4.75 billion), ICICI Bank (Rs 4.62 billion), Infosys (Rs 3.91 billion), ITC (Rs 3.65 billion), Power Grid Corporation of India (Rs 3.21 billion), and NTPC (Rs 3.15 billion) were other noteworthy companies among the top 10 in terms of CSR expenditure.

The CSR law, effective since April 2014, mandates businesses meeting financial requirements to allocate 2% of their average net profit for CSR initiatives. The average net profit of 1,296 companies in the past three years has increased from Rs 7.20 trillion in FY22 to Rs 8.14 trillion. Companies were supposed to spend Rs 157.13 billion on CSR but only set aside Rs 155.24 billion, according to an Economic Times report. Businesses transferred Rs 16.43 billion to the Unspent CSR Account, resulting in a difference in future use and remaining unspent.

Public sector units (PSUs) experienced a 17% decrease in spending from FY22, with 56 PSUs spending Rs 31.36 billion in FY23 compared to 59 PSUs’ Rs 37.66 billion in FY22.

The largest allocation in the previous year was to education, followed by healthcare. The largest increase in spending was towards environmental sustainability (76%) followed by education (41%) and rural development (26%).


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ICICI Bank’s RE Thrust

Renjini Liza Varghese


One of the leading private banks in India, ICICI Bank recently released its ESG report for the year 2022- 2023. Though a detailed comparison of ICICI’s performance on the ESG metric vis-à-vis its peers will follow soon, I want to highlight the bank’s achievements in the energy and renewable energy segments, in the last one year.

The bank in its ESG report has written about the usage of renewable energy, e-vehicles and green workplace (IBC-certified buildings) along with promoting sustainable living and support to the community through its CSR activities.

ICICI Foundation, the philanthropic arm of the bank, implements environment-supportive projects in the areas of tree plantation, sustainable forests, watershed management, rainwater harvesting and renewable energy.

In fiscal 2023, the renewable energy usage at ICICI Bank was 17.08 million kilowatt/hour. This was 9% of the bank’s total energy consumption, up from 7% in fiscal 2022. “We are continuously enhancing the usage of renewable energy at our premises. We took a major leap in the RE journey with the adoption of green tariff from electricity distribution companies (DISCOMs) in Maharashtra and Telangana,” said the report

A green tariff is a special price offered by a DISCOM which enables large commercial and industrial customers to purchase bundled renewable electricity. The bank regularly conducts energy audits of its premises, implements green practices and invests in advanced technology with an endeavour to lower our carbon footprint, ICICI said in the ESG report.

Renewable Energy Consumption  (In million kWh)

ICICI Bank’s RE Thrust

ICICI Bank’s RE Thrust

 

  • 3.32  On-site solar generation
  • 1.68 Solar energy through open access arrangement
  • 12.08 Renewable energy through green tariff
  • 17.08 total

 

 

 

 

As per the report, “In the year 2023, we extended our rural social development agenda to the remote border villages of the country in partnership with the defence and paramilitary forces. The programmes support villagers through welfare initiatives in education, healthcare, livelihood support, renewable energy, watershed management, sanitation, waste management, and environment…”

Interestingly the report has increased focus on climate action. The authors noted, “Climate change considerations have become important for organisations as they steer their strategies around decarbonisation. The challenges facing us are the evolving regulatory and policy framework, and the need to meet the expectations of a diverse set of stakeholders. The Bank is committed to acting on these aspects and building on the opportunities that will emerge within India’s national goals and commitments. ICICI Bank is aligned with the government’s push in areas like renewable energy, green hydrogen, electric mobility, sustainable buildings and water security.”

The best example is the bank’s initiative enabling 2,000 Schools with solar power with a total capacity of 5 MW, in 2023. This means that ICICI follows and implements the initiatives mentioned in the report. We may see the bank conquering the  ESG parameters with ease beyond just ticking the boxes against regulatory requirements.


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