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22 January 2021 | Press Release
Major corporations notably increased their sustainability disclosures in key areas last year, including climate-risk reporting, human rights, and water stress exposure, according to a new report by The Conference Board.
Sustainability Practices: 2020 Edition examines corporate disclosure and performance data across North America, Europe, and Asia-Pacific. The report shows that even as the COVID-19 pandemic caused a disclosure decline across subject areas reflecting delays in data-gathering and reporting, large increases in certain other areas (especially those included in financial reports) portend a movement toward greater disclosure of ever-evolving sustainability practices.
More companies, for example, are disclosing climate risks in their annual reports, with the number of UK companies doing so more than doubling in 2020. These increases are the result of both mandatory and voluntary climate-focused regulatory initiatives. The EU’s new Taxonomy Regulation, for example, requires financial institutions to make climate-related disclosures by the end of 2021. And in the private sector, large institutional investors such as BlackRock have called on companies to address climate change risks in their reporting.
Water-risk exposure is a growing concern for investors and a disclosure topic for companies. Companies in certain industries, particularly in the materials and energy sectors, are making such disclosures, and others should consider doing so as well. Water insecurity can have a significant impact on companies’ financial stability, reputation, license to operate, and the security of their supply chains. The share of companies in the materials sector disclosing their water-stress exposure, for example, increased from 7 percent in 2019 to 33 percent in 2020.
“The trend toward greater disclosures reflects a combination of factors: pressure from investors and the impact of regulations and reporting frameworks,” said Thomas Singer, Principal Researcher at The Conference Board Governance & Sustainability Center and the report’s lead author. “Major investors are explicitly calling on companies to address climate and other risks in their annual reports, and more regulatory efforts, particularly outside the U.S., are having an impact.”
The Conference Board analyzed sustainability disclosure data on 92 environmental and social practices for more than 6,000 companies across North America, Europe, and Asia-Pacific as well as for companies in the S&P Global 1200 index. The report analyzes the data, identifying key emerging trends.
The report also identifies these additional insights from the data:
Gender diversity efforts on corporate boards are gaining traction in many countries.
The COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted the connect between environmental health and public health.
Regulatory activity related to human rights risks is picking up across jurisdictions.
Companies should consider how they reward and incentivize sustainability performance.
“In the coming years, companies can expect to see greater consistency, if not uniformity, in sustainability reporting,” Singer said. “At the same time, companies are focusing on ensuring that their sustainability disclosures are relevant to their business and not just satisfying reporting frameworks.”
The Sustainability Practices Dashboard, a comprehensive database and online benchmarking tool, complements the report. It enables users to segment data by region, country, sector, revenue groups, and index (including the S&P Global 1200, S&P 500 and Russell 3000).
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