South China Morning Post

Act as one on targets

Mark Jackson says putting more pressure on organisati­ons in Hong Kong to deliver their climate pledges is critical if city is to achieve its net-zero goals

- Mark Jackson is managing director of Reputation Works

At last month’s One Earth Summit, the Hong Kong government ratcheted up plans to require Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing-listed firms to disclose more detail on their progress against sustainabi­lity metrics. The city’s authoritie­s will join New Zealand, Australia, Singapore, the Philippine­s, Japan and now Malaysia in enacting mandatory climate-related disclosure­s based around the Internatio­nal Sustainabi­lity Standards Board disclosure framework.

It will mean more than 32,000 companies in Asia alone will need to be more transparen­t in their environmen­tal, social and governance (ESG) reporting, creating more openness around how – or perhaps if – they are meeting their climate goals.

Hong Kong has yet to finalise a start date but a working timeline of January 1, 2025, has been suggested. However, the move cannot come quickly enough. Carbon emissions in the city have largely been steady since 2020, putting Hong Kong’s ability to meet its 2050 climate obligation­s in jeopardy.

Rising levels of private car usage, mountains of plastic waste and falling biodiversi­ty are just some of the challenges facing Hong Kong. The new reporting standards will help make clear how businesses are contributi­ng to solutions or making the problems worse.

The new reporting framework will standardis­e data, allowing all stakeholde­rs to make informed decisions about which businesses they engage with. At its simplest level, the new standards will create greater accountabi­lity and allow investors to funnel money towards more sustainabl­e businesses.

There are a host of other benefits, too, including in the competitio­n for talent. A 2023 survey of more than 22,000 Gen Z and millennial­s across 44 countries found that more than half research a brand’s environmen­tal impact and policies before accepting a job. While it is still too early to tell, there is a growing sense that Gen Alpha – those born between 2010 and 2025 – will be even more fastidious with their choice of employer when the time comes for them to enter the workforce.

ESG factors also weigh on consumers’ minds. One in 10 consumers in Britain make a purchase decision based on carbon footprint informatio­n, while one in three have stopped purchasing brands or products because of sustainabi­lity concerns.

All of this shows that delivering on corporate ESG metrics should not be perceived as a business cost; it is an opportunit­y for businesses to truly connect with their employees and consumers. It is also an opportunit­y to tap into the trillions of dollars of investment funds now available across a whole swathe of sectors.

Despite political headwinds, total “responsibl­e” fund assets rose nearly 11 per cent to stand at US$2.56 trillion as of November 30 last year, compared with the previous 12 months. While still only a fraction of total global fund assets, it is still a sizeable pool of investment.

The importance of adhering to ESG practices is underscore­d by the fact that 89 per cent of investors consider ESG issues as part of their decision-making process. Nearly a third of European investors say ESG is central to their investment approach.

Herein lies the rub with the new ESG reporting regulation­s. Many firms will regard them as simply another box to be ticked. Once published, though, the reports will live online for anyone to see and analyse.

That is fine for those companies that are performing well, but imagine a scenario where environmen­tal metrics fail to improve. That is a not-unlikely situation given how few Hong Kong businesses have third party-validated net-zero goals.

A simple piece of desk research will show stakeholde­rs any problemati­c areas, presenting a significan­t reputation­al risk with the attendant costs of putting things right.

In fact, a recent survey across a range of sectors in Europe, the Asia-Pacific, North America, South America and Africa placed governance, environmen­t and social issues as three of the top five reputation risks of most concern to senior executives.

It is not only a reputation­al risk; ESG reporting also represents a significan­t business risk. Investors use ESG reports to inform their qualitativ­e and quantitati­ve decision-making about where to invest. This creates the potential for firms in Hong Kong to find capital options are squeezed or come at a price that makes investment simply too expensive.

To overcome this possibilit­y, businesses need to properly plan their ESG communicat­ions. They need to build a narrative that provides context for any stakeholde­r likely to dive into the numbers and use them to make decisions. That does not happen through a simple report but requires planning and must start well before the regulation­s require reports to be published.

It also requires the ESG team to be joined at the hip to the investor relations and communicat­ions teams. This ensures that the right informatio­n is delivered to the right audiences at the right time, rather than leaving stakeholde­rs to draw their own conclusion­s.

Putting more pressure on organisati­ons in Hong Kong to deliver on their climate pledges is critical if the city is to make good on its 2050 “net zero” goals. Using reporting standards to create greater levels of transparen­cy is a smart way to apply some of that pressure. However, it comes with real business risks that many firms will not see until it is too late.

“Never put off until tomorrow what you can do today”, as the old saying goes. The time for businesses to act is now to make sure that business risk does not follow in the wake of a simple report.

 ?? Photo: Sam Tsang ?? Spider trees in full bloom envelop a pedestrian bridge in Tai Kok Tsui.
Photo: Sam Tsang Spider trees in full bloom envelop a pedestrian bridge in Tai Kok Tsui.

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