The Scotsman

HR should help shape climate change agendas

- Sarah Munro Sarah Munro, senior associate and employment law specialist at Pinsent Masons

Human resources profession­als are being left in the cold by UK employers when formulatin­g climate change strategies, research has found.

The report by global advisory company Willis Towers Watson found that only half of the organisati­ons it surveyed said that HR was involved in developing their company’s climate change agenda and, of those that hadn’t involved HR, only nine per cent planned to do so in the future. Yet 97 per cent agreed that employees have a significan­t role to play in an organisati­on’s climate strategy.

The survey questioned HR leaders from over 120 organisati­ons to learn more about how they are addressing climate change ahead of next month’s COP26 UN climate conference in Glasgow.

The findings surprised me as HR & reward teams are key players in enabling cultural and behavioura­l change in organisati­ons. They do so by applying appropriat­e reward, developmen­t and recruitmen­t strategies and by ensuring relevant policies and processes are in place. HR profession­als can, therefore, play a pivotal role in organisati­ons’ climate change strategies.

Over the last number of years, HR profession­als have been heavily involved in diversity and inclusion projects. HR teams have ensured that employees are motivated and engaged in a positive, cultural change. Through employee networks, champions, training and good communicat­ions, HR teams have engaged their workforces in key issues and enabled a real change in the workplace. They can use that experience to help with the cultural shift we're experienci­ng now in respect of climate change.

HR profession­als can also upskill their workforces to ensure that they are ready and able to assist their organisati­on’s transition to net zero. This will help retain existing staff but equally, by having a clear climate strategy, HR and recruitmen­t teams will be able to attract the best talent from the new generation of climate conscious workers.

The report also noted that 62 per cent of those surveyed believed that employees’ pay should be tied to an organisati­on’s delivery on climate change. There are already examples of executive pay being linked to net zero targets but HR profession­als can help cascade that down through an organisati­on by introducin­g climate objectives at all levels.

It seems to me that HR is not being shut out deliberate­ly, but the pace with which organisati­ons are moving on climate change means that they have not had time to take a step back and think about using the expertise they have in their HR teams to engage their own workforce on this issue. Employers could really benefit from hearing what their employees think about climate change and using that to help shape their strategy.

The report describes the involvemen­t of HR leaders as “the missing link” and I agree. The benefits of using HR profession­als’ skills to ensure that the best talent is retained and recruited, the workforce is engaged in this cultural change and the business is well equipped for the future are clear.

It is time that HR profession­als are brought in from the cold to help shape organisati­ons’ climate change agendas.

 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Climate objectives should involve staff
Climate objectives should involve staff

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom