Tech imperative: Looking beyond ESG investing to reinvent the future

Tech imperative: Looking beyond ESG to reinvent the future is a report from The Economist Intelligence Unit, commissioned by E Fund.

The Hinrich Foundation Sustainable Trade Index 2020

Sustainability was gaining more traction in the years leading up to the Covid-19 pandemic. Firms stepped up commitments to corporate social responsibility (CSR) initiatives. Investors started incorporating environmental, social and governance (ESG) issues into their asset allocation decisions. And consumers voted with their wallets to support sustainable production, purchasing goods with certified claims regarding their environmental impact and use of labour.

Three strategies for building purpose-driven companies

The idea that companies should be driven by purpose and not just profit is an important consideration for business leaders. The interconnectedness of the global economy means they cannot insulate their companies from societal trends. There is pressure from shareholders, consumers and their employees to do the “right” thing in everything from environmental sustainability to social justice—despite it being impossible to reach consensus on what is “right” on many issues. No company exists in a vacuum where corporate actions are completely divorced from impacting the world. As a result, leaders are increasingly expected to take moral stances.

An Eco-wakening Measuring global awareness, engagement and action for nature

An Eco-wakening

Measuring global awareness, engagement and action for nature

An Eco-wakening: Measuring global awareness, engagement and action for nature

The natural world is under threat. Scientists warn that 1m species, out of an estimated total of 8m, face extinction—many within decades. This decline is putting the future of the planet and everyone on it at risk.

Time is running out, and action to prevent fatal nature loss is urgently needed.

Do people care?
Given the scale of the problem, it would be easy to assume that ordinary people are turning away, not only believing that biodiversity loss is not a priority, but also that nothing can be done.

Sustainable and actionable: An ESG study of climate and social challenge for Asia

Along with its wealth, Asia’s climate risks have been rising. Low-lying coastal cities are particularly vulnerable to climate change and regional population and economic centres—such as Bangkok, Ho Chi Minh City, Manila and Shanghai—sit upon that precipice. Yet in terms of green fixed income, Asia faces another risk: lack of issuance and uptake.

Data drives ESG investing—but too much data inspires greenwashing

Greenwashing—falsely attracting capital by claiming it will be used for sustainable projects—is the “fake news” of investing. The term has roots in the 1980s when it was aimed at big corporations that made symbolic “green” gestures but were nonetheless culpable for net contributions to pollution, or what we today call “climate change” (a greenwashed term itself that displaced “global warming”).

Green intelligence: Asia’s ESG investing, data integrity and technology

Climate change: it’s all about delivery

The UK Government has set a clear direction of travel through its commitment to a net zero emissions target and the ambition of its 25 Year Environment Plan. But the credibility of its climate change and environmental ambitions require a significant step up in action over the next 18 months argues Nick Molho, executive director at the Aldersgate Group.

Sustainable and actionable: A study of asset-owner priorities for ESG investing in Asia

The world’s top 100 asset owners (AOs) represent about US$19trn in assets under management. The largest, and potentially most influential, proportion is in Asia—more than a third of the total. Out of the top 20 largest funds, three out of the first five and nearly half of the total are in Asia.

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