Service
Environmental ,Social & Governance Technical Support
Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG)
To achieve a cleaner, safer and more sustainable world, organizations must realize the importance and value of managing -related business challenges
in a way that fits their pace and unique objectives. ESG is emerging as the common framework to evaluate the overall health of a business’s operating model and the along-term resiliency. Key stakeholders are searching for, and are increasingly demanding, thoughtful, forward-looking policies and programs in all three of these areas. ESG is quickly emerging as the common framework to evaluate the overall health of a business’s operating model and the company’s long-term resiliency are increasingly demanding, thoughtful, forward-looking policies and programs in all three areas.
From understanding what is most material to your business and how to establish baselines and goals, to developing roadmaps, and tracking metrics and reporting on progress, a strong ESG program can withstand the test of time, respond to investor demands, and be agile to societal shifts.
A Critical Business Focus
As the greater landscape of industry shifts beneath our feet, a crucial element is quietly evolving with it: the expectations of investors.
To determine the value of a potential investment, firms have begun using a specific set of criteria designed to evaluate a company’s sustainability.
That is to say, how well will an organization hold up to environmental scrutiny? How strong are its relationships in its social ecosystem? Is leadership transparent or will they end up in the headlines in a few years?
These questions address investor priorities that have been developing for years and the focus has been shifting toward socially responsible investing. And with ESG standards, they’ve gotten better than ever at asking them.
What does ESG stand for?
ESG stands for Environmental, Social, and Governance. Together, these three aspects make up a framework to evaluate issues pertaining to an organizations long-term health and prosperity.
Environmental
What kind of impact is your organization having on the environment?
This can encompass issues of carbon emissions, runoff, disposal procedure, pollution of all kinds, resource efficiency, carbon emission reduction, climate change, water pollution and water scarcity, air pollution, greenhouse gas emissions, biodiversity, and history with environmental regulatory bodies. If your organization is falling short in terms of environmental responsibility, investors are only getting more interested. On the other hand, excellent environmental stewardship can show commitment and capability to follow through.
Social
What kind of relationships does your company have with the people in its ecosystem?
This covers how your company manages relationships with its employees, customers, suppliers, partners and communities. Here’s where your employee treatment, benefits, pay, and diversity will be evaluated along with your company values and how they have (or haven’t) been put into practice. Matters of human rights, sourcing, gender and diversity inclusion, community relations, customer success customer service, and customer protection will also factor into these criteria, as well as the social impact that your operations have left on the surrounding area. This involves consideration of humans and our interdependencies. i.e.
Governance
How does the board of directors run the company?
This aspect involves examining the executive governance of the company. Investors will evaluate stakeholder incentives, executive compensation, executive compensation guidelines bonuses, prioritized metrics of success, matters of corruption, conflicts of interest, levels of transparency, and the hierarchy of governance.
Two decades ago, a framework like this could be categorized as a special interest. Today, it amounts to due diligence. No one wants to complete an acquisition only to be unpleasantly surprised. This involves Logistics and defined process for running a business or organization. i.e.
ESG helps to surface relevant risks and liabilities so buyers can make accurate decisions based on the past, present, and prospective future of the organization and make sustainable investments.
At Eco we take you through a deep dive into why and how developing and implementing an ESG program can be systematic, yet flexible enough to fit the scope and scale of your business operations. Our services include:
- ESG Strategy Development: Developing robust ESG strategies that align with business objectives and stakeholder expectations.
- Risk Assessment and Management: Identifying, assessing, and mitigating ESG risks to protect reputation and financial performance.
- ESG Reporting and Disclosure: Ensuring compliance with evolving regulatory requirements and investor demands through accurate and transparent ESG reporting.
- ESG Due Diligence: Conducting thorough ESG due diligence on investments, acquisitions, and partnerships.
- Stakeholder Engagement: Building strong relationships with investors, employees, customers, and other key stakeholders to enhance ESG reputation.