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When we think of reporting, we often think exclusively of financial information. Yet, a quiet revolution has been taking place in the industry, and it’s been brewing for some time now. Corporate leaders and investors alike are realising that they have an important responsibility to address issues like climate change. The challenge, however, is how to measure progress in this area and hold each other accountable. Without a set of standards for reporting, this is a nearly impossible task. We recently spoke with Prof. Robert Eccles, one of the world’s foremost experts in the field of sustainability and integrated reporting, to learn about the history of non-financial reporting and important developments in this space. 

Prof. Eccles, it’s great to speak with you today. Can you tell us a bit about yourself and your background to get started? 

Sure. I went to college at MIT and got degrees in math and history. I went on to get a PhD from Harvard in sociology and in time, became a tenured professor at Harvard Business School. I retired from Harvard and I’m now a Visiting Professor of Management Practice at the Saïd Business School at Oxford. My domain is basically sustainable investing and sustainability in companies. I look at the interface between companies and investors in the capital markets, with a focus on big enterprises. I was one of the founders of The International Integrated Reporting Council. I was the Founding Chairman of the San Francisco-based Sustainability Accounting Standards Board (known as SASB), which connects businesses and investors on the financial impact of sustainability. So, I’ve been involved in the development of non-financial reporting standards for about 30 years. 

In a recent article on Forbes, “Here is How to Set Global Standards for Nonfinancial Information,” you mention there is now a window of opportunity for big players in this space, like The Impact Management Project (IMP), the World Economic Forum’s International Business Council (IBC), SASB and the Global Reporting Initiative (GRI), to work together with government parties like the EU in the development of standards. Can you talk about the context here?

Yes, so the EU is currently revising its Non-financial Reporting Directive. This directive mandates that European companies have to report on sustainability on an annual basis, but it was pretty high level and didn’t outline what the standards were. They are reviewing that and looking to come up with more concrete standards for non-financial reporting, much like you have international financial reporting standards and Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (GAAP) in the U.S. Subsequently , the Amsterdam-based Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) and SASB announced that they would collaborate on a unified set of standards. The Impact Management Project (IMP) is doing wonderful work to help create these standards by working with GRI, SASB, the International integrated Reporting Council (IIRC), other non-financial standard-setting NGOs, financial accounting standard setters, and governments. So there really is a big opportunity to collaborate internationally on this if all of these initiatives come together. 

The two main organisations that are active in the non-financial reporting space are the Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) and SASB. You were SASB’s first chairman. Can you tell us a bit more about these organisations? 

Yeah. Both are non-profit NGOs. GRI started out in the late 90s – the founders are good friends of mine. Their core focus was stakeholders, not investors. They defined materiality as an externality. SASB came along about ten years later, in 2011, and took a very different position on materiality. They define materiality in the same way that financial accounting standard setters do—something that matters to investors. We realised that materiality differs by industry. For instance, carbon emissions are material for big manufacturing companies like Dow, and safety in clinical trials or access to medicine is important for pharmaceutical companies. SASB created an 11-sector classification system of 77 industries and came up with guidance on what the material issues are. These come down to 5 or 6 material factors, on average, for each industry. 

Early this year, BlackRock, the world’s largest asset manager, came out and said they wanted all their portfolio companies to report according to SASB and TCFD, the Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures. GRI and SASB kind of butted heads for a number of years and there was a framing that was not exactly correct. People said, “Well, SASB is for the United States and GRI is for the rest of the world.” That’s not really true. Both organisations are striving for the same thing, just with a focus on different audiences, both of whom are important for sustainable development. That’s why their recently announced collaboration is so promising. 

I would like to go back to the concept of materiality and integrated reporting. You wrote an article on this topic earlier in 2020. Can you tell us a bit more about your experience with integrated reporting and why materiality is so important?

Ultimately, to advance in sustainability, what you need to get to is integrated reporting. I’ve been one of the people that’s been closely involved in promoting this. We never took a position on the standards. We never said “use GRI or SASB, or a combination.” But the gold standard is integrated reporting. Unfortunately, only a handful of companies and countries have made progress in this area. 

Last year, I published a comparative analysis on the state of integrated reporting around the world with two colleagues, Michael P. Krzus and Carlos Solano. We found that South Africa, the Netherlands, and Germany (in this order) were at the top in terms of high-quality disclosure. Integrated reporting is only mandated in South Africa, but the Netherlands is doing it pretty well too. The countries that are doing the worst in this area are Brazil, Japan. and the United States (dead last and by a lot). 

In terms of companies, Philips and SAP offer great examples of integrated reporting. This will probably shock you, but Philip Morris International (PMI), oddly enough, is another company that has one of the best integrated reports I’ve seen. There’s been a lot of talk in the media recently about their strategy to create a smoke-free future. I work closely with them and they published their first integrated report this year. They are a U.S. company and it is by far and away the best one I’ve seen in this country. PMI also published a bold “Statement of Purpose” signed by every member of their board of directors, which is where all of this has to start. I should also note that PMI is the only U.S. company to have done this. Not a single one of the 181 companies whose CEO signed their “Statement on the Purpose of a Corporation” has done so.

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Robert G. Eccles

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Robert G. Eccles of Saïd Business School, University of Oxford is the author of a number of books on integrated reporting, sustainability and the role of business in society. His focus is on sustainability from both a company and investor perspective. Professor Eccles is also involved in a variety of initiatives to embed environmental, social, and governance (ESG) issues in real world decision making. One of these is the Sustainability Accounting Standards Board (SASB), of which he was the founding chairman. In 2018, Professor Eccles was selected by Barron’s as one of the top 20 influencers on ESG investing.

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