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Governance Research Digest – June 2012

Summary

This report explores and documents the extent to which corporate ESG information tracked and managed internally by companies is consistent with analogous information sought by external parties, and in particular, by ESG investors and the research companies that serve them. To conduct analysis, authors obtained corporate data from the results of a recent “Green Metrics that Matter”, and developed ESG researcher/investor data by collecting and compiling publicly available information from company web sites and other sources.

Key Findings

  • There is general agreement about the key corporate sustainability issues, but not necessarily on the specific form and number of metrics used to measure them.
  • There is also a fundamental difference in the purpose(s) to be served by examining corporate ESG information between corporate executives and ESG researchers/investors.
  • Increasingly, corporate managers and ESG researchers/investors believe that the same ESG issues are important, but may track them at very different levels of detail.
  • Corporate ESG metrics and approaches to managing to them are based on business fundamentals (e.g., benefits/costs, importance to customers, possibility of impact).
  • Disclosure of the ESG metrics of common interest is very uneven, with some being disclosed by a great many companies and others disclosed by very few.
  • ESG researchers are concerned both with corporate accountability and with predicting the future, and their information requests and collection methods reflect the need to both receive appropriate assurances and to inform a judgment about the management quality of companies.
  • Both ESG researchers/ investors and corporate EHS managers and executives approach ESG issues from a risk mitigation perspective, not a value creation perspective.
  • Most specific indicators used by corporate EHS managers and executives and investors focus on identifying negative attributes or downside risk.
  • While the members of both groups are interested in the potential for ESG-related financial value creation, their interactions are generally devoid of information speaking directly to this crucial issue.
  • Future improvements in corporate disclosure quality and in efficient and adroit collection and use of these data in investment analysis will require improved clarity and more effective and consistent communication between companies, researchers, and the consumers of information.
  • Substantial, non-incremental progress depends on clear articulation, from both companies and ESG researchers/investors, of corporate financial value creation through advancements in managing ESG issues and their results.
  • Typical ESG metrics reporting practices and guidelines have advanced, but also have had some unintended and unfortunate consequences, including too few companies reporting, and some researchers requesting a substantial number of additional (non-GRI) metrics.
  • These adverse outcomes often reinforce one another.
  • More widespread and consistent disclosure on fewer indicators might create more utility for both corporations and investors.
  • Greater dialog and sharing of information and perspectives is essential for both sides to understand the other’s needs and constraints, and to forge communication mechanisms that are more effective and less burdensome than current practices.

Author(s)

IRRC Institute

Source

PDF report

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