Last month, I wrote here about how the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals create real opportunities for business leaders based on market opportunities in solving the world’s greatest environmental and social challenges. I followed this with a post about the new ERISA regulations regarding sustainability, and how pension fund fiduciaries can now consider material environmental, social, and governance (ESG) issues facing the companies in their investment portfolios. But what progress are we seeing in how boards of directors of public companies demonstrate leadership in sustainability?
Here, sadly, U.S. corporations are lacking. A 2014 report by Ceres, a non-profit organization advocating for sustainability leadership, found that only 32 percent of the largest 613 publicly traded U.S. companies had board oversight over sustainability. The irony is obvious here. For most companies, ESG is really ES and lower case ‘g.’ Consider for example Volkswagen, where weak corporate governance has seriously undermined the company’s “E” efforts and could ultimately jeopardize its “S” efforts. Since the board is responsible for representing the interests of the corporation, I would argue that weak corporate governance on sustainability inhibits companies’ ability to profit from sustainability. And investor desire to see companies do so in the interests of long-term profitability will also be inhibited.
A new Ceres report published last week, “View from the Top: How Corporate Boards Can Engage on Sustainability Performance,” is therefore most timely and welcome. In it, insights from dozens of interviews with senior corporate leaders and corporate governance experts can all be boiled down into two clear guidelines. Firstly, sustainability needs to be integrated into board governance systems and processes. Secondly and crucially, sustainability needs to be integrated into board actions.
First, rather than dealing with “sustainability in general”, the board should instead focus on the material ESG issues that affect the company’s financial performance. The work of the Sustainability Accounting Standards Board (SASB) shows that these issues are industry-specific and limited in number, from around five to seven. A good example here is Unilever with its Sustainable Living Plan, which is a critical part of the company’s business strategy. Second, the board should embed sustainability and longer-term thinking in strategic planning. This should be reflected in how the company communicates to the market. For example, Coca Cola, National Grid, and Unilever are moving away from providing quarterly earnings guidance. Thirdly, disclose the role of the board in prioritizing sustainability. Without a clear public statement from the board, both management and the company’s investors will doubt the board’s genuine commitment to sustainability. This is the one area unfortunately where no good examples can yet be found, but work is going on here which will be the subject of a future blog.
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