The 5 biggest hurdles to effective ESG reporting (2024)

Discover the 5 biggest challenges to effective ESG reporting and how to overcome them.

Environment, social and governance (ESG) reporting: It’s new, it’s evolving and it’s all over the place. As it stands, comparability between ESG reports is low and the investors’ demand for consistency is high. While most current frameworks are voluntary, they won’t be for long. Reform, global standardization and mandatory disclosure is only a matter of time.

The time has come to get prepared for ESG reporting. Let’s explore the biggest obstacles to producing ESG reports so you can start addressing these challenges before they bottleneck your reporting efforts.

What are the challenges of ESG reporting?

  1. Multiple ESG frameworks
  2. Evolving ESG regulations
  3. Complex ESG data management
  4. Understanding, managing, and quantifying ESG risks
  5. Using ESG performance to improve ESG plans

1. Multiple ESG frameworks

The Global Reporting Initiative, the EU Taxonomy, the Sustainability Accounting Standards Board, the Task Force on Climate-related Disclosures — oh my! While no single, global standard for ESG reporting exists, there sure are a lot of regional or industry-specific standards to choose from.

We give a brief overview of some of the most notable ESG standards in our recent post, The ABCs of ESGs.The long and short of it is, to meet investor demand, adequately showcase your organization’s sustainability in a comparable way, and meet the criteria for ESG credit scoring, your organization will have to choose one or more frameworks to adhere too.

According to a recent study byFinancial Executives International, the mix bag of competing standards and frameworks is a big challenge for organizations because 85% of companies are using, not one, but multipleESG reporting frameworks.

ESG reporting might pander to investors instead of regulators now, but these regulations won’t be loosie goosy forever. In fact, the tide is already turning.

2. Evolving ESG regulations

The EU has instituted more stringent regulations in recent years — and the changes keep a comin’.

As of March 2021, the new Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation (SFDR) came into effect, requiring Financial Market Participants to disclose 18 mandatory indicators and another two of 46 optional indicators.

The Non-Financial Reporting Directive (NFRD) (a standard that lays down the disclosure rules for non-financial and diversity information by large companies) is also scheduled for an overhaul. An updated, strengthened version of the NFDR’s basic disclosure requirement, known as theNew Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive(CSRD) is set to launch in 2022

With these EU regulations leading the charge, standards setters are beginning to succumb to the pressures from investors, regulators, and organizations eager to harmonize competing frameworks. In the last year, we’ve seen two big moves occur.

First, in June of 2021, the Sustainability Accounting Standards Board and International Integrated Reporting Council joined forces to form theValue Reporting Foundation. Their plan is to work with other standards groups like Global Reporting Initiative (GRI), the Carbon Disclosure Project (CDP), and the Climate Disclosure Standards Board (CDSB) to get everyone on the same page.

Then, in November 2021, the International Financial Reporting Standards Foundation announced its plans to set up anInternational Sustainability StandardsBoard, which would deliver comprehensive global sustainability-related disclosure standards. The goal would be to provide investors and market stakeholders with information about sustainability-related risks to inform their decision making.

If this is any indication of the coming future of ESG reporting, two things are certain: standards are quickly changing and organizations will have to have their work cut out for them when it comes to data management and transforming that data into meaningful disclosures. Speaking of data …

3. Complex ESG data management

Data management is going to be one of the biggest, if not the biggest, challenges companies will face when creatingESG disclosures. For example,the SFDR requirespublic EU companies to disclose nine mandatory environment-related indicators and six mandatory social indicators (covering employee, human rights, anti-corruption and anti-bribery topics.) These organizations must also report on at least one of 22 optional environmental indicators and one of 24 optional social indicators.

This is just the infancy ofESG regulationand it’s already mired in complexity.

To meet regulatory requirements or even just to adhere to voluntary frameworks, many organizations are starting to get their data ducks in a row. A study by global business consulting firm,Privotifound that 68% of financial executives surveyed said that measuring and reportingESG risksand issues has become part of their finance team’s role within the last year. Another 75% said senior leaders and boards are developingESG metricsfor progress tracking.

And yet, ESG reporting is already posing challenges to companies because sustainability is inherently hard to quantify. SinceESG datais often divided in siloes across the business or manually logged in spreadsheets, a global, integrated picture of ESG gains and impacts is hard to paint. In addition, the connection between ESG results and financial performance isn’t often well understood because businesses have no clear way to see how sustainable activities impacted the bottom line. Without a centralized source of financial and sustainability data, it’s impossible to draw a through line between ESG action and financial outcome.

4. Understanding, managing, and quantifying ESG risks

Sustainability is so broad and covers so many facets — sustainable production, supply chain equity, responsible HR, data governance, governance, to name a few. But you don’t know what you don’t know.

Barbara Porco, director for the Center of Professional Accounting Practices at Fordham Business School,said it best: “All elements of ESG reporting are really based on proper risk management. You cannot manage your risk if you don't know what your risk is. It's the risks that you don't know about that will be the problem, and you cannot do that without a data-driven and tech-enabled risk management approach.”

ESG risks are especially challenging to monitor because many aren’t quantifiable. They can’t be defined in terms of dollars and cents. And in fact, the most impactful sustainability initiatives might in themselves pose a risk to an enterprise because they may negatively impact the bottom line in the short term. Sustainability can be expensive.

Deloitte reminds usthat, “ESG impact can be wide-ranging, for example:

  • Regulation can affect costs or require capital expenditure, or lead to impairment or stranded assets
  • Moving to new sustainable solutions may require increased capital expenditure
  • Crises or failures in production or supply chains, including natural disasters, can increase costs and undermine supply and demand
  • Failings identified in governance, performance or culture can lead to:

-Lost revenue
-Exposure to litigation or regulatory fines
-Damage to reputation
-Loss of a company’s social license to operate

Even though organizations have discussions about ESG risk, not all have formally identified KPIs and come up with systems to monitor them. Implementing an enterprise risk management strategy that monitors ESG risks specific to the organization is critical for, not only ESG reporting, but sustainability planning. And it goes without saying, the more impactful and comprehensive your sustainability planning, the more effective your ESG reports will be in attracting investors.

5. Using ESG performance to improve ESG plans

ESG performanceis useful beyond attracting investors or improving an ESG score. With the right data management tools, you can use ESG data to improve the impact and outcomes of ESG plans and activities. The key words here: with the right data management tools.

As we already mentioned, for many organizations, ESG data is walled in department or LoB siloes, which makes the line of impact from ESG activity to financial outcome hard to draw.

Without ESG data existing in the same software as budgeting, planning, close and consolidation data, you won’t be to play out scenarios to see an ESG activity’s potential impact on the balance sheet, P&L or cash flow to better refine the strategy. In other words, without tethering ESG reporting to ESG planning, you’re essentially going by gut.

You can have positive ESG performance, while identifying ways to reduce your costs. You can wow investors with ESG activities, while improving revenue and being profit-minded. You can have your cake and eat it too. You just need a platform that centralizes all corporate financial and non-financial data, including ESG data, and allows you to integrate your ESG strategy into all your financial processes, including budgeting, planning, close, reporting and disclosure. Then, by using tools like, scenario planning and what-if analysis, you can see the ripple effect of ESG decisions on financial performance, and use that insight to improve financial results.

Closing thoughts

ESG reporting is seems challenging because it’s new, elusive, impacts every financial process, and because the stakes, for the sustainability motivated investor, are very high.

But really, it’s no different than, say, sales and marketing data. How can you quantify the impact of word of mouth, after all? Both marketing and ESG impacts can be elusive, yet they have an incredible influence on the bottom line. The key is including ESG data into your corporate performance management platform so that:

  • You can be agile in the face of new and changing regulations
  • You can automate disclosure requirements
  • You can control, validate and report accurate ESG data
  • You can monitor and measure ESG KPIs
  • You can see the impact of ESG activities on other financial and operational plans, and use those insights to improve ESG planning

Learn howCCH Tagetik can help you streamline your ESG reportingwhile improving your ESG plans.

The 5 biggest hurdles to effective ESG reporting (2024)

FAQs

The 5 biggest hurdles to effective ESG reporting? ›

Tracking and collecting data across these diverse dimensions can be complex and resource-intensive. In addition, relevant ESG data might be hard to come by: it may be proprietary, confidential, or difficult to access, particularly when it comes to supply chain information or indirect environmental and social impacts.

What are the challenges facing ESG reporting? ›

Tracking and collecting data across these diverse dimensions can be complex and resource-intensive. In addition, relevant ESG data might be hard to come by: it may be proprietary, confidential, or difficult to access, particularly when it comes to supply chain information or indirect environmental and social impacts.

What are the barriers to ESG? ›

Other top barriers mentioned were lack of reporting standards and regulations/complexity, lack of attention or support from leadership, and volatility of regulatory requirements.

What is the biggest problem with ESG? ›

Limited resources: Implementing ESG initiatives often require significant investments in time, money, and human capital, which can be challenging for companies with limited resources.

What are the criticisms of ESG reporting? ›

One of the biggest criticisms of ESG is that it perpetuates what it was partly designed to stop – greenwashing.

What is one of the major challenges in sustainability reporting? ›

1. Insufficient Data Collection and Reporting. One of the fundamental pillars of robust sustainability reporting is the accurate and comprehensive collection of data. However, companies often encounter challenges in this initial phase, leading to incomplete or inaccurate reporting.

What is the disadvantage of ESG reporting? ›

Limited Disclosure:

One of the main disadvantages of ESG criteria is that companies are not required to disclose all information related to their sustainability practices. This can make it difficult for investors to evaluate the sustainability and ethical impact of investments.

What is the challenge in implementing ESG? ›

Some of the challenges include finding the right framework, measuring and tracking performance, accessing governance data and insights, tracking stakeholder sentiment and organizational reputation, visualizing and controlling risk mitigation, lack of standardized metrics for evaluating companies' ESG performance, ...

What are the factors affecting ESG? ›

Key ESG Factors
  • Environmental. Conservation of the natural world. - Climate change and carbon emissions. - Air and water pollution. ...
  • Social. Consideration of people & relationships. - Customer satisfaction. - Data protection and privacy. ...
  • Governance. Standards for running a company. - Board composition. - Audit committee structure.

What are the 4 environmental barriers? ›

Examples of environmental barriers include a lack of family support, architectural barriers, a negative attitude from society towards individuals with disabilities, and public policy.

What is the controversy with ESG? ›

Critics say ESG investments allocate money based on political agendas, such as a drive against climate change, rather than on earning the best returns for savers.

Why are people against ESG? ›

“They may also argue that considering ESG factors could conflict with a fiduciary's duty to act in the best financial interests of plan participants. Some opponents also believe that ESG investing is politically motivated and could lead to biased investment decisions.”

What's controversial about ESG? ›

The SEC's recently proposed climate disclosure rules fail to satisfy these requirements. Instead, the proposed climate rules create controversy by imposing a political viewpoint, by advancing an interest group agenda at the expense of investors generally, and by redefining concepts at the core of securities regulation.

Why did ESG fail? ›

Ironically, viewing sustainability through an Environmental, social, and governance (ESG) risk and financial materiality lens still systematically underestimates future financial risks and fails to identify emerging opportunities. Data and information being used to make decisions is not decision useful.

Why is ESG a challenge? ›

Other organizations often lack awareness of ESG and the positive impact these standards could have on business development or face difficulties in introducing non-financial reporting. Moreover, the lack of comprehensive information about strategies and tools hinders acceptance of ESG as a standard business practice.

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