Consistent, high-quality disclosure of ESG practices is the means by which organizations can demonstrate they are acting responsibly and in the best interest of their customers and society. Organizations may struggle with these challenges when implementing an ESG reporting program:
- Narrowing down ESG efforts to material ESG issues
- Building a sustainable reporting framework
- Assessing and solving for data gaps and data quality issues
- Being aware of the tools and best practices available to support regulatory and performance reporting
Our Advice
Critical Insight
- A tactical approach to ESG reporting will backfire. The reality of climate change and investor emphasis is not going away. For long-term success, organizations need to design an ESG reporting program that is flexible, interoperable, and digital.
- Implementing a robust reporting program takes time. Start early, remain focused, and make plans to continually improve data quality and collection and performance metrics.
- The “G” in ESG may not be capturing the limelight under ESG legislation yet, but there are key factors within the governance component that are under the regulatory microscope, including data, cybersecurity, fraud, and diversity and inclusion. Be sure you stay on top of these issues and include performance metrics in your internal and external reporting frameworks.
Impact and Result
- Successful organizations recognize that transparent ESG disclosure is necessary for long-term corporate performance.
- Taking the time up front to design a robust and proactive ESG reporting program will pay off in the long run.
- Future-proof your ESG reporting program by leveraging new tools, technologies, and software applications.
Workshop: Establish a Sustainable ESG Reporting Program
Workshops offer an easy way to accelerate your project. If you are unable to do the project yourself, and a Guided Implementation isn't enough, we offer low-cost delivery of our project workshops. We take you through every phase of your project and ensure that you have a roadmap in place to complete your project successfully.
Module 1: Determine Material ESG Factors
The Purpose
Determine material ESG factors.
Key Benefits Achieved
Learn how to identify your key stakeholders and material ESG risks.
Activities
Outputs
Create a list of stakeholders and applicable ESG factors.
- List of stakeholders and applicable ESG factors
Create a materiality map.
- Materiality map
Module 2: Define Performance and Reporting Metrics
The Purpose
Define performance and reporting metrics.
Key Benefits Achieved
Align your ESG strategy with key performance metrics.
Activities
Outputs
Create a list of SMART metrics.
- SMART metrics
Create a list of reporting obligations.
- List of reporting obligations
Module 3: Assess Data and Implementation Gaps
The Purpose
Assess data and implementation gaps.
Key Benefits Achieved
Surface data and technology gaps.
Activities
Outputs
Create a list of high-priority data gaps.
- List of high-priority data gaps
Summarize high-level implementation considerations.
- Summary of high-level implementation considerations
Module 4: Consider Software and Tooling Options
The Purpose
Select software and tooling options and develop implementation plan.
Key Benefits Achieved
Complete your roadmap and internal communication document.
Activities
Outputs
Review tooling and technology options.
- Selected tooling and technology
Prepare ESG reporting implementation plan.
- ESG reporting implementation plan
Prepare the ESG reporting program presentation.
- ESG reporting strategy presentation
Establish a Sustainable ESG Reporting Program
Strengthen corporate performance by implementing a holistic and proactive reporting approach.
Analyst Perspective
The shift toward stakeholder capitalism cannot be pinned on one thing; rather, it is a convergence of forces that has reshaped attitudes toward the corporation. Investor attention on responsible investing has pushed corporations to give greater weight to the achievement of corporate goals beyond financial performance.
Reacting to the new investor paradigm and to the wider systemic risk to the financial system of climate change, global regulators have rapidly mobilized toward mandatory climate-related disclosure.
IT will be instrumental in meeting the immediate regulatory mandate, but their role is much more far-reaching. IT has a role to play at the leadership table shaping strategy and assisting the organization to deliver on purpose-driven goals.
Delivering high-quality, relevant, and consistent disclosure is the key to unlocking and driving sustainable corporate performance. IT leaders should not underestimate the influence they have in selecting the right technology and data model to support ESG reporting and ultimately support top-line growth.
Yaz Palanichamy
Senior Research Analyst
Info-Tech Research Group
Donna Bales
Principal Research Director
Info-Tech Research Group
Executive Summary
Your ChallengeYour organization needs to define a ESG reporting strategy that is driven by corporate purpose. Climate-related disclosure mandates are imminent; you need to prepare for them by building a sustainable reporting program now. There are many technologies available to support your ESG program plans. How do you choose the one that is right for your organization? |
Common ObstaclesKnowing how to narrow down ESG efforts to material ESG issues for your organization. Understanding the key steps to build a sustainable ESG reporting program. Assessing and solving for data gaps and data quality issues. Being aware of the tools and best practices available to support regulatory and performance reporting. |
Info-Tech’s ApproachLearn best-practice approaches to develop and adopt an ESG reporting program approach to suit your organization’s unique needs. Understand the key features, tooling options, and vendors in the ESG software market. Learn through analyst insights, case studies, and software reviews on best-practice approaches and tool options. |
Info-Tech Insight
Implementing a robust reporting program takes time. Start early, remain focused, and plan to continually improve data quality and collection and performance metrics
Putting “E,” “S,” and “G” in context
Corporate sustainability depends on managing ESG factors well
Environmental, social, and governance are the components of a sustainability framework that is used to understand and measure how an organization impacts or is affected by society as a whole.
Human activities, particularly fossil fuel burning since the middle of the twentieth century, have increased greenhouse gas concentration, resulting in observable changes to the atmosphere, ocean, cryosphere, and biosphere. The “E” in ESG relates to the positive and negative impacts an organization may have on the environment, such as the energy it takes in and the waste it discharges.
The “S” in ESG is the most ambiguous component in the framework, as social impact relates not only to risks but also to prosocial behavior. It’s the most difficult to measure but can have significant financial and reputational impact on corporations if material and poorly managed.
The “G” in ESG is foundational to the realization of “S” and “E.” It encompasses how well an organization integrates these considerations into the business and how well the organization engages with key stakeholders, receives feedback, and is transparent with its intentions.
The impact of ESG factors on investment decisions
Alleviate Investment Risk
Organizational Reputation: Seventy-four percent of those surveyed were concerned that failing to improve their corporate ESG performance would negatively impact their organization’s branding and overall reputation in the market (Intelex, 2022).
Ethical Business Compliance: Adherence to well-defined codes of business conduct and implementation of anti-corruption and anti-bribery practices is a great way to distinguish between organizations with good/poor governance intentions.
Shifting Consumer Preferences: ESG metrics can also largely influence consumer preferences in buying behavior intentions. Research from McKinsey shows that “upward of 70 percent” of consumers surveyed on purchases in multiple industries said they would pay an additional 5 percent for a green product if it met the same performance standards as a nongreen alternative (McKinsey, 2019).
Responsible Supply Chain Management: The successful alignment of ESG criteria with supply chain operations can lead to several benefits (e.g. producing more sustainable product offerings, maintaining constructive relationships with more sustainability-focused suppliers).
Environmental Stewardship: The growing climate crisis has forced companies of all sizes to rethink how they plan their corporate environmental sustainability practices.
Compliance With Regulatory Guidelines: An increasing emphasis on regulations surrounding ESG disclosure rates may result in some institutional investors taking a more proactive stance toward ESG-related initiatives.
Sustaining Competitive Advantage: Given today’s globalized economy, many businesses are constantly confronted with environmental issues (e.g. water scarcity, air pollution) as well as social problems (e.g. workplace wellness issues). Thus, investment in ESG factors is simply a part of maintaining competitive advantage.
Leaders increasingly see ESG as a competitive differentiator
The perceived importance of ESG has dramatically increased from 2020 to 2023
In a survey commissioned by Schneider Electric, researchers categorized the relative importance of ESG planning initiatives for global IT business leaders. ESG was largely identified as a critical factor in sustaining competitive advantage against competitors and maintaining positive investor/public relations.
Source: S&P Market Intelligence, 2020; N=825 IT decision makers
“74% of finance leaders say investors increasingly use nonfinancial information in their decision-making.”
Source: EY, 2020
Regulatory pressure to report on carbon emission is building globally
The Evolving Regulatory Landscape
Canada
- Canadian Securities Administrators (CSA) NI 51-107 Disclosure of Climate-related Matters
United States
- Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) 33-11042 – The Enhancement and Standardization of Climate-Related Disclosures for Investors
- SEC 33-11038 Cybersecurity Risk Management, Strategy, Governance, and Incident Disclosure
- Nasdaq Board Diversity Rule (5605(f))
Europe
- European Commission Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation (SFDR)
- European Commission EU Supply Chain Act
- The German Supply Chain Act (GSCA)
- Financial Conduct Authority UK Proposal (DP 21/4) Sustainability Disclosure Requirements and investment labels
- UK Modern Slavery Act, 2015
New Zealand
- The Financial Sector (Climate-related Disclosures and Other Matters) Amendment Act 2021
Accurate ESG reporting will be critical to meet regulatory requirements
ESG reporting is the disclosure of environmental, social, and governance (ESG) data via qualitative and quantitative reports.
It is how organizations make their sustainability commitments and strategies transparent to stakeholders.
For investors it provides visibility into a company's ESG activities, enabling them to align investments to their values and avoid companies that cause damage to the environment or are offside on social and governance issues.
Despite the growing practice of ESG reporting, reporting standards and frameworks are still evolving and the regulatory approach for climate-related disclosure is inconsistent across jurisdictions, making it challenging for organizations to develop a robust reporting program.
“Environmental, social and governance (ESG) commitments are at the core a data problem.” Source: EY, 2022 |
However, organizations will struggle to meet reporting requirements
Despite the commitment to support an ESG Initiative, less than a quarter of IT professionals say their organization can accurately report on the impact of its ESG initiatives, and 44% say their reporting on impacts is not accurate.
Reporting accuracy was even worse for reporting on carbon footprint with 46% saying their organization could not report on its carbon footprint accurately. This despite most IT professionals saying they are working to support environmental mandates.
Global sustainability rankings based on ESG dimensions
Global Country Sustainability Ranking Map
Country Sustainability Scores (CSR) as of October 2021
Scores range from 1 (poor) to 10 (best)
Source: Robeco, 2021
ESG Performance Rankings From Select Countries
Top ESG and sustainability performer
Finland has ranked consistently as a leading sustainability performer in recent years. Finland's strongest ESG pillar is the environment, and its environmental ranking of 9.63/10 is the highest out of all 150 countries.
Significant score deteriorations
Brazil, France, and India are among the countries whose ESG score rankings have deteriorated significantly in the past three years.
Increasing political tensions and risks as well as aftershock effects of the COVID-19 pandemic (e.g. high inequality and insufficient access to healthcare and education) have severely impacted Brazil’s performance across the governance and social pillars of the ESG framework, ultimately causing its overall ESG score to drop to a CSR value of 5.31.
Largest gains and losses in ESG scores
Canada has received worse scores for corruption, political risk, income inequality, and poverty over the past three years.
Taiwan has seen its rankings improve in terms of overall ESG scores. Government effectiveness, innovation, a strong semiconductor manufacturing market presence, and stronger governance initiatives have been sufficient to compensate for a setback in income and economic inequality.
Source: Robeco, 2021
Establish a Sustainable Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) Reporting Program
Blueprint benefits
Business Benefits
- Clarity on technical and organizational gaps in the organization’s ability to deliver ESG reporting strategy.
- Transparency on the breadth of the change program, internal capabilities needed, and accountable owners.
- Reduced likelihood of liability.
- Improved corporate performance and top-line growth.
- Confidence that the organization is delivering high-quality, comprehensive ESG disclosure.
IT Benefits
- Understanding of IT’s role as strategic enabler for delivering high-quality ESG disclosure and sustainable corporate performance.
- Transparency on primary data gaps and technology and tools needed to support the ESG reporting strategy.
- Clear direction of material ESG risks and how to prioritize implementation efforts.
- Awareness of tool selection options.
Blueprint deliverables
Each step of this blueprint is accompanied by supporting deliverables to help you accomplish your goals:
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Key deliverable: Executive PresentationLeverage this presentation deck to improve corporate performance by implementing a holistic and proactive ESG reporting program. |
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WorkbookAs you work through the activities, use this workbook to document decisions and rationale and to sketch your materiality map. |
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Implementation PlanUse this implementation plan to address organizational, technology, and tooling gaps. |
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RFP TemplateLeverage Info-Tech’s RFP Template to source vendors to fill technology gaps. |
Info-Tech offers various levels of support to best suit your needs
DIY Toolkit
"Our team has already made this critical project a priority, and we have the time and capability, but some guidance along the way would be helpful."
Guided Implementation
"Our team knows that we need to fix a process, but we need assistance to determine where to focus. Some check-ins along the way would help keep us on track."
Workshop
"We need to hit the ground running and get this project kicked off immediately. Our team has the ability to take this over once we get a framework and strategy in place."
Consulting
"Our team does not have the time or the knowledge to take this project on. We need assistance through the entirety of this project."
Diagnostics and consistent frameworks are used throughout all four options.
Guided Implementation
A Guided Implementation (GI) is a series of calls with an Info-Tech analyst to help implement our best practices in your organization.
A typical GI is 8 to 12 calls over the course of 4 to 6 months.
What does a typical GI on this topic look like?
Workshop Overview
Day 1 |
Day 2 |
Day 3 |
Day 4 |
Day 5 |
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Activities |
Determine Material ESG Factors 1.1 Review ESG drivers. |
Define Performance and Reporting Metrics 2.1 Understand common program metrics for each ESG component. |
Assess Data and Implementation Gaps 3.1 Assess magnitude and prioritize data gaps. |
Software and Tooling Options 4.1 Review technology options. |
Next Steps and Wrap-Up (offsite) 5.1 Complete in-progress deliverables from previous four days. |
Deliverables |
1. Customized list of key stakeholders and material ESG risks
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1. SMART metrics
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1. High-priority data gaps
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1. Technology and tooling opportunities
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1. ESG Reporting Workbook
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Contact your account representative for more information.
workshops@infotech.com
1-888-670-8889
Phase 1
Explore ESG Reporting
This phase will walk you through the following:
- Define key stakeholders and material ESG factors.
- Identify material ESG issues.
- Develop SMART program metrics.
- List reporting obligations.
- Surface high-level data gaps.
- Record high-level implementation considerations.
This phase involves the following participants: CIO, CCO, CSO, business leaders, legal, marketing and communications, head of ESG reporting, and any dedicated ESG team members
Practical steps for ESG disclosure
Measuring and tracking incremental change among dimensions such as carbon emissions reporting, governance, and diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) requires organizations to acquire, analyze, and synthesize data from beyond their internal organizational ecosystems
1.1 Ensure your reporting requirements are comprehensive
This section will walk you through some key considerations for establishing your ESG reporting strategy. The first step in this process is to identify the scope of your reporting program.
Defining the scope of your reporting program
- Stakeholder requirements: When developing a reporting program consider all your stakeholder needs as well as how they want to consume the information.
- Materiality assessment: Conduct a materiality assessment to identify the material ESG issues most critical to your organization. Organizations will need to report material risks to internal and external stakeholders.
- Purpose-driven goals: Your ESG reporting must include metrics to measure performance against your purpose-driven strategy.
- Regulatory requirements & industry: Work with your compliance and legal teams to understand which reporting requirements apply. Don’t forget requirements under the “S” and “G” components. Some jurisdictions require DEI reporting, and the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) in the US recently announced cybersecurity disclosure of board expertise and management oversight practices.
Factor 1: Stakeholder requirements
Work with key stakeholders to determine what to report
Evaluate your stakeholder landscape
Consider each of these areas of the ESG Stakeholder Wheel and identify your stakeholders. Once stakeholders are identified, consider how the ESG factors might be perceived by delving into the ESG factors that matter to each stakeholder and what drives their behavior.
Determine ESG impact on stakeholders
Review materiality assessment frameworks for your industry to surface ESG factors for your segment and stakeholder group(s).
Perform research and analysis of the competition and stakeholder trends, patterns, and behavior
Support your findings with stakeholder interviews.