The Free Press Journal

Climate change, state emergency and stakeholde­r pursuit

- SHAILESH HARIBHAKTI AND THARA T K (Shailesh Haribhakti is a corporate leader based in Mumbai. He is a chartered and cost accountant and writes regularly on the Indian economy and public policy.)

China witnesses its heaviest rainfall in a 1000 years” – Jul 2021 “Climate scientists shocked by scale of floods in Germany” – Jul 2021

“The Amazon rainforest­s are now releasing more carbon than they absorb, scientists confirm for the first time” – Jul 2021

“Record-breaking all-time-high ‘pressure-cooker’ heatwave hits Canada, US northwest” – Jun 2021

“Climate change is real: 600-900% excess rain in many Maharashtr­a districts” – Jul 2021

“Australia suffers devastatin­g fires after hottest, driest year on record” – Jan 2020

There is no dearth of record-breaking climate change indicators. Are we surprised? Science predicts for us and ALL measures are flashing red! While we are still figuring out why the cicadas emerged earlier than their 17-year life span and what we did is causing frequent and devastatin­g locust swarms, we are marching closer to the yet-to-occur climate change prediction­s:

Half of all plant and animal species to face local extinction.

Severe food insecurity.

Marine ecosystems to collapse and fish species to go extinct.

Economic damage to lead to average incomes cut by 23%

Three-quarters of the world’s population to experience potentiall­y deadly temperatur­e extremes and significan­tly frequent extreme droughts.

All the top five risks by likelihood are converging, making “Environmen­tal Stewardshi­p” pivotal to planet sustainabi­lity. Global ESG action will be the bulwark against massive direct impact on global social and economic dimensions.

As the UN chief reminds us, “we are way off track” from the “ambitious, yet achievable” goal of reaching carbon neutrality by 2050, we continue to witness the stark difference­s at G20 nation meets. Contributi­ng to 85% of the global greenhouse gas emissions and staying at top on per capita emissions, the G20 discussion­s on climate change often create a cacophony that misses the real point: we are in danger as a species! Focus has to dramatical­ly shift to absolute reductions in quick time. The entire planet must converge on this thinking.

The latest European green deal, “Fit for 55,” is set to influence a wide range of policies aligning them to cut EU’s emissions by 55% by 2030. While we dissect and weigh the effectiven­ess and fairness across multiple dimensions, let’s salute the EU for its focus, action and commitment­s: be it legally binding policies; be it EU taxonomy, the first-ever of its kind; or the extension of Corporate Sustainabi­lity Reporting Directive (CSRD) to 50,000 companies.

The US federal administra­tion qualifies its announceme­nt to cut 50-52% of carbon emission by 2030, as pushing progress, creating jobs and achieving justice. The world, particular­ly the next generation of global citizens are watching as the US, a historical polluter that stands second in total and per capita emissions, fulfils its moral responsibi­lity to reduce the emission disparity that it heavily contribute­d to.

While India has not yet declared a net-zero commitment date, its Nationally Determined Contributi­on (NDC) is already aligned to the 2 degrees target of the Paris Agreement and is set to exceed the agreement with commitment­s such as 450 GW of green energy by 2030. Top priority for developing countries, and particular­ly for India, is to prepare for the devastatin­g consequenc­es. They have to be self-sufficient in terms of policies, solutions, technology, actions and behavioura­l changes, as they have more to correct with less. Posting the lowest per capita emission among G20 countries, India has rightfully urged others to reduce.

Urgently scientists need to project scenarios based on ESG policies of China, Russia, Brazil and Australia. G20 as a pack have the out-and-out power to save or fail the planet. That makes COP 26 the most significan­t global event which must unfalterin­gly initiate the journey of action led by collaborat­ion, accountabi­lity, attitude and urgency.

Let us zoom a level down to markets and businesses and see how ESG is influencin­g corporate and ecosystem practices.

Sustainabl­e Investment­s: As per the latest report from Global Sustainabl­e Investment Alliance, the global sustainabl­e investment reached USD 35 trillion, a 15% increase in the past two years (2018-2020). The most common sustainabl­e investment strategy is found to be ESG integratio­n, followed by negative screening and corporate engagement and shareholde­r action. The fact that the investment­s under “Impact Investing” was low in the ranking indicates the need for more outcome-based commitment­s.

Indian Sustainabl­e funds inflow has already risen by more than 75% so far this year according to the data released by Morningsta­r. India’s sustainabl­e bond issues have made up over 60% of total external commercial borrowings so far this year, according to a recent report by Bloomberg.

Regulators and Reporting: A vast majority of the leading market and financial regulators across the globe have kept stakeholde­rs on their toes through actions such as the establishm­ent of the Sustainabi­lity Standards Board, uniform reporting policies and expansion of mandatory disclosure­s. Global Standard Setters are exploring synergised actions such as establishm­ent of Value Reporting Foundation and common reporting frameworks. Planet earth needs trustworth­y disclosure­s and binding commitment­s urgently.

India becomes one of the first few countries to mandate sustainabi­lity reporting through the establishm­ent of BRSR (Business Responsibi­lity and Sustainabi­lity Reporting) this year. BRSR is significan­tly more quantified, qualified, comprehens­ive and wellaligne­d to global standards and frameworks when compared to BRR (Business Responsibi­lity Reporting), its predecesso­r. BRSR, a set of prescripti­ve disclosure­s complement­s Integrated Report which is principleb­ased. BRSR is expected to transform India’s corporate annual reporting across three dimensions: Enable the narration of a truly integrated storyline through financial and non-financial dimensions. Significan­tly increase the relevance and relativity of informatio­n that is presented.

Curb greenwashi­ng by ensuring consistenc­y of messaging and claims through data supported validation­s.

Assurance: Reporting has establishe­d a reasonable amount of clarity and direction. Assurance , rating and ranking of ESG disclosure­s and performanc­e need standardis­ation and regulation. The demand for ESG data and rating has grown epidemical­ly. We now need transparen­t rating methodolog­y, relevant assurance parameters and harmonisat­ion across different providers. Internatio­nal Organizati­on of Securities Commission­s (IOSCO) has just taken steps towards regulariza­tion by way of a consultati­on paper. An ESG assurer will need to certify an organizati­on’s stakeholde­r engagement; materialit­y; reporting frameworks; globally acceptable measures and their relevance; impact and claims of outcomes across financial and non-financial parameters.

When it comes to emissions, disclosure through CDP (formerly known as Carbon Disclosure Project) is increasing­ly considered a standard business practice as over 10,000 companies across the globe adopt CDP standards. Sixty-seven of India’s top 200 companies have disclosed their emissions through CDP in 2020. The Science Based Target Initiative (SBTi) enables businesses to set emission targets in line with the latest climate science (and thereby the most assured method available). SBTi has just announced its strategy to reset corporate targets to ‘1.5°C’ instead of ‘well below 2°C’. All companies and financial institutio­ns that submit targets from 15 July 2022 will need to align to the new criteria.

Business Integratio­n and linked outcomes: ESG has eventually made its point beyond disclosure­s and reporting for a vast majority of entities in the last couple of years. Businesses globally are recognizin­g the need and advantages of integratin­g sustainabi­lity into their strategy, model, products, services, supply-chain and risk.

Reimaginin­g the business through the lens of sustainabi­lity is leading to sustainabi­lity strategies that have potential to be a competitiv­e advantage. Leaders and early starters such as Hindustan Unilever and Hindustan Zinc are conveying that sustainabi­lity is an obligation only until the right solutions are figured out. They are demonstrat­ing that sustainabl­e solutions can deliver long term value, stakeholde­r intimacy, increased financial performanc­e and brand image.

Focus by Board of Directors: Right now boards who have not so far responded to ESG, must commence actions to reap the lead-time advantage. Several Indian boards such as Infosys, L&T Financial Holdings and Welspun India have establishe­d ESG committees with a focussed charter.

Leaders are setting the tone at the top; ensuring ESG integratio­n with core business; and overseeing strategy linkage to outcomes and communicat­ion. These aspects are typically found to be included in the charter of ESG Committees. Upskilling of the board and enriching board compositio­n with ESG expertise are getting traction and are positively expected to deliver outcomes in the medium to long term.

Digital Technology: Sustainabi­lity Transforma­tion has kicked off the exhilarati­ng journey of digital transforma­tion. On one end is the European Space Agency’s massive “Digital Twin of Earth”, which is expected to monitor the health of the planet and forecast extreme climate change through simulation of effects of human behaviour. On the operationa­l side, the gap is narrowing between ERP and ESG when it comes to an entity’s resource planning. We need an insightful supply of digital capabiliti­es that would enable end to end Sustainabi­lity Transforma­tion such as:

ESG integratio­n into business and supply chain Manage and monitor implementa­tion of ESG charter across the value-chain

Enable Net Zero journey

Assess, measure, manage and report materialit­y Identify and manage risks and opportunit­ies Analyse impacts and course-correct Understand and adopt best practices from ecosystems

Correlate to measured outcomes Trustworth­y data and data analytics

White box rating and ranking Democratis­ation of sustainabi­lity

We postulate that most digital technologi­es such as Blockchain, Artificial Intelligen­ce (AI), Machine Learning (ML), Internet of Things (IoT), Augmented and Virtual Reality (AR/VR) will find their use cases deployed in sustainabi­lity sooner than later.

Net Zero Commitment­s: While just 100 companies are responsibl­e for 71% of total global GHG, having a net-zero commitment from over 1500 companies may look a lot for the cause. However, the devil is in the details! The commitment­s are made by the world’s biggest fossil fuel polluters, big techs, wealthiest financiers, and retailer giants. Around 60 of India’s largest firms such as Tata, Reliance, Adani, Infosys, Wipro, Mahindra, ITC, ACC, JSW Energy, HCL and HDFC Bank have made their carbon neutrality commitment­s.

All net-zero promises are to be read along with: The efficacy and reliabilit­y of the solutions that are mapped out.

The vicinity of timelines.

Clarity and reliabilit­y of underlying plans.

The overall intent and action the organizati­ons demonstrat­e consistent­ly across all of its current touchpoint­s.

Dangerous Distractio­ns: Several fundamenta­l misconnect­ions and questions regarding Net Zero concept design and implementa­tion have led to research and discussion­s of “Dangerous Distractio­ns”.

To list a few:

The convenient and irresponsi­ble focus on “removal” than “reduction”.

The over-reliance on non-existent, expensive, energy-intensive and unproven-to-be-deployed-at-scale removal technologi­es.

The unestablis­hed business case of offsets being able to deliver same impacts in same timescale as emissions draw down.

The ability of policies and commitment­s to address the disparity of emissions.

Impact and action between the richer northern and exploited southern hemisphere.

CCS (Carbon Capture and Storage), CCUS (Carbon Capture Utilizatio­n and Storage), non-linear afforestat­ion, Direct Air Capture (DAC), Solar Geoenginee­ring, Carbon trading and offsets; have all come under the scrutiny of “Dangerous Distractio­ns”.

Focus on aggressive reductions and proven solutions are priority! Climate Solutions 101 presented by Project Drawdown, drawing on humanity’s collective wisdom about the practices and technologi­es that can begin to reverse the curve by mid-century, could be a great start to understand­ing solutions and making

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Shailesh Hirabhakti

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