Manila Bulletin

PH weighs ESG compliance amid social concerns

- By BERNIE CAHILES-MAGKILAT

The Philippine­s is moving towards implementi­ng full mandatory disclosure of ESG (Environmen­t, Social, Governance) compliance by all businesses in the country, but emphasized the need to find balance amid social concerns being a developing country.

This was emphasized by Trade and Industry Secretary Alfredo E. Pascual at the EU Sustainabl­e Investment Summit in Brussels last year with the theme “Striving for Transparen­cy Globally”.

In aligning with ESG compliance metrics, Pascual emphasized that the Philippine­s must balance this goal against its social concerns.

“We have to worry about the welfare of our people. To what extent do we balance environmen­tal sustainabi­lity with social sustainabi­lity?” he asked.

For instance, the Philippine­s has to balance between the use of cheaper coal because that is locally available and more affordable for the poor than importing expensive high calorific value coal with lower carbon emission.

“How do you balance that, that’s something that has to be looked into as well,” he said.

In formulatin­g a harmonized global ESG compliance metrics, he said, “We might need to also throw in the issue of social sustainabi­lity.”

Pascual further said that although the Philippine­s had a “very tiny” carbon footprints in the context of the global emission, “We’re doing our part, we have our own greenhouse gases reduction commitment­s.”

To be able to measure how the country is meeting its commitment, the government through the Securities and Exchange Commission requires publicly listed companies to disclose compliance to the requiremen­t.

“It’s still a on a comply or explain basis,” he said but eventually “there will be mandatory requiremen­ts for full disclosure and eventually the disclosure requiremen­t will be extended to all corporatio­ns registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission.”

With respect to banks, the central bank has the responsibi­lity. “We expect the banks to also play the role in enforcing disclosure by corporatio­ns,” he said.

One policy for the banks could be “without disclosure, no loan.”

Banks will play its role in getting clients make full disclosure to show they have all the plans to avoid adding to the emission into the atmosphere, Pascual said.

The Philippine­s has no equivalent to the taxonomy measure in the EU, but Pascual assured that it is using the global standards like for disclosure by public listed companies. The most popular so far is the GRI standards.

“We are aligned with global standards,” said Pascual. The problem, he said, is that there are so many standards.

With that, Pascual batted for the harmonizat­ion of standards to be led by the bigger economies.

“We are prepared to consider aligning ourselves with a harmonized standard,” he added.

 ?? ?? DTI SEC. ALFREDO E. PASCUAL
DTI SEC. ALFREDO E. PASCUAL

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