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The Climate-Social Story of Kerala

Renjini Liza Varghese


Many of you may wonder why I titled my blog: The Climate Social Story of Kerala.

The main reason is the unprecedented social connect demonstrated by the local people and communities to reach out to the distressed, post-Wayanad tragedy.

Resilience

What caught my attention first was the cooperative approach of the community and the government to handling a climate incident of this scale. I was impressed by the fast pace of mobilization for search and rescue operations, medical support, and food and shelter.

Evolving social fabric

The second, and most important point for me was the human connect and compassion for the orphaned children and the elderly. This at a time when many families are ruthlessly shifting their parents to old age homes in the state.

Another thing that caught my attention was the manner in which people came forward to help the children and the elderly.

I am listing below three key examples:

  • Breast-feeding infants
  • Adopting orphaned children
  • Adopting elderly people

The kindness no doubt manifests the significance of the S-factor of the social component in ESG, which is at play in this instance.

Unlike corporate compliance, which mandates enterprises conduct business ethically and socially responsibly or spend CSR funds for social good, this kindness wave was motiveless.

 It was a perfect setting of how people in a tight-knit community can selflessly put others before them, open doors to neighbours on even strangers in this case who may have been washed in the torrent from far-off villages.

Beyond the blame game:

The third thing that impressed me was a united political soul, one bared of ideological and political differences.

The netas were united and concentrated on search and rescue during the tragedy instead of gaining political mileage.

This rare unity in politics empowered the chief minister to take quick decisions and focus on saving maximum lives (humans and animals), and other rescue efforts.

Ofcourse, as is the normal course in politics, there was a fall-out. But that was after the emergency had passed and the primary work was completed.

From my perspective, what is now required is hard-core action. And here are some of the immediate action points I can think about.

  • Educate the local bodies and the communities about the impact of climate change.
  • Widen the scope of discussion and include the communities to prepare for climate incidents.
  • Use technology for prediction and mapping
  •  Create a social system that can spearhead rebuilding
  •  Create a dedicated fund for the entire activity outside the existing funds.
Our take:

The people of Kerala have set an example for the rest of the country and the world to follow. Such humanitarian acts go a long way in not just keeping the social fabric connected but also igniting HOPE in people that All’s not Lost yet.


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DEI: What is prevalent, Greenwashing? 

Renjini Liza Varghese


It is sad to see that greenwashing in each segment of ESG is prevalent.

The other day, when my colleague wrote about whether ESG is losing its steam, we had a lengthy conversation on how the segment is panning out globally and in India. We deduced that a section of society is driving the message that ESG is outdated.

However, we also agreed that compliance, statute, and an intent will drive ESG implementation in a developing country like India. Moreover, we have also noticed that the ‘S’ factor of ESG is the least cared for. The S factor has many facets, from diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) on one side to human rights and community development on the other.

DEI is the new buzzword in the corporate world. We have come across some eye-opening facts during our conversations with various stakeholders in the last year. For example, a CXO associated with a large company in the aviation segment admitted that though the organization releases a Sustainability/ESG report for the past few years, it is yet to appoint a woman at the board level. This particular company is not an exception. Many large organizations that are also under BRSR purview have appointed women at the board level. However, experts argue that it is a token meant to tick box the compliance. The point I am making here is that diversity is a vital criteria of ESG.

Let us move to the noises (it is just noise and not voice yet) around us on DEI. Each industry segment, whether tech, manufacturing, BFSI or services, has DEI experts on board. But they all refuse to answer critical, uncomfortable questions. We have noticed that everyone wants to be there at the top order. Keywords such as DEI, inclusion, women, leadership vision, etc, meet their SEO criteria. Beyond the conversations in the boardroom, they have done zilch to act upon the valuable treasure trove of data (both in-house and through external agencies), on the impact. Ironically, they dodge any DEI questions within their organization but sit on the judge’s chair and discuss DEI best practices at industry events. They know how to make a lot of noise and get noticed in the process. Initially, I took the conversations with these people at face value. Thankfully, I learnt my truth faster and now rely on my gut instinct and research to counter them.

By voicing my experience, I am not trying to paint a gloomy picture. Infact, there are corporates that have implemented DEI, and it continues to be among their top priority. From freshers’ recruitment levels to the board, they have skilfully integrated diversity.

Our aim at WriteCanvas is to create the narrative—sift the noise from the actual use cases (however small the integration maybe), and enable a system supported by the policy. And that allows DEI or inclusion in the true sense and not just tickboxing.  Join us if you believe in creating the structure.

As part of this endeavor, WriteCanvas in association with the DEI Committee of ASSOCHAM Southern Region, is conducting a survey on the S factor of the ESG implemented by companies. Here is the link to the questionnaire. LINK:

We will publish the findings and will share key take-aways with you.


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