By Vassilia Orfanou, PhD, Post Doc
Writes for the Headline Diplomat eMagazine, LUDCI.eu
Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) and Social Corporate Responsibility (CSR) are methods that businesses can use to show their commitment to sustainable business practices. While ESG is quantitative and externally regulated, CSR is qualitative and self-regulated.
Catalyzing Change: Unlocking the Power and Overcoming Obstacles of ESG and CSR Initiatives
ESG and CSR are important to companies as they reassure investors who are interested in the business in the long term. They are also more about the company image, and they make financial sense.
Benefits of ESG include assisting businesses to attract investors, enhance financial performance, create customer loyalty, and make operations sustainable. While the benefits of CSR to businesses include improved public trust, increased brand recognition, better company reputation, and improved customer loyalty.
ESG and CSR may be good for businesses, but they’re also facing several challenges. Some of the main challenges include pressure from all stakeholders, scrutiny by the government, meeting the demand for transparency, and driving profit with CSR initiatives.
Most of these challenges happen because of lack of resources, high regulatory standards, low willingness to pay for such initiatives, lack of strategic vision, and of a concrete measurement system in place.
Unveiling Triumphs: Inspiring Success Stories of Industry Leaders
As the push for companies and businesses to prioritize the social and environmental impact of their actions takes center stage, several companies have embraced ESG and CSR and are doing great. Here is what different companies are doing:
- Microsoft is a leader in sustainable technology.
In 2020, Microsoft committed to becoming carbon negative, water positive, and zero waste by 2030 all while protecting ecosystems and building a planetary computer.
- Costco is creating a sustainable supply chain.
Costco is planning to improve its refrigeration, which makes up around 24% of its 2021 emissions, and it will reduce that figure by 30% by 2030. Furthermore, the aim is to buy 80% green electricity by 2030, which entails buying renewable energy credits that guarantee the production of clean power.
- Mattel is building a better future for children.
Mattel not only inspires to create wonderful toys, but it targets to create products that provide an intrinsic value that inspires, entertains, and develops children through play.
- Ely Lily, a pharmaceutical company commits to sustainability via its “Corporate Responsibility Strategy” program.
Ely Lily has set targets to use 100% renewable energy, zero waste to landfills from routine operations, and 100% of plastic waste for beneficial use, with at least 90% recycled or reused by 2030.
Leading companies are incorporating ESG and CSR’s in their programs as their way of showing commitment to sustainable business practices.
Sustainable Growth: Realizing Comprehensive Benefits from ESG and CSR Initiatives
Both practices have a lot of financial advantages. For instance, ESG helps investors to identify companies that are more sustainable and better placed for long-term success. What’s more, it helps investors to keep away from potential financial risks linked to a poor environment.
On the contrary, CSR also offers several financial gains, such as increased sales and customer loyalty, improved financial performance, and operational cost savings.
Even with the financial advantages that ESG and CSR offer, not all companies are embracing these practices. This is because most businesses lack the necessary tools to measure social impact, which hinders them from creating successful initiatives. Moreover, it reduces accountability in scenarios where CSR efforts make matters worse or are ineffective.
Nurturing Prosperity: Maximizing ESG and CSR Impact Through Stakeholder Engagement
Businesses can benefit more when they engage stakeholders before incorporating ESG and CSR. ESG and CSR Stakeholder engagement is how a business exchanges information and dialogues on matters that impact the business, its employees, investors, customers, suppliers, regulators, trade groups, public health & welfare, non-governmental organizations, and the planet.
Engaging stakeholders about sustainable programs helps to raise their awareness, make them responsible, and engage them in the company’s collaborative and inclusive approach. Besides, for the business to succeed in any ESG or CSR initiative, it must have a clear vision derived from a strong strategic planning procedure, and an effective strategic plan or marketing plan can only come from stakeholder engagement.
Championing Sustainable Stewardship: A New Era of Environmental Accountability
Environmental responsibility is the ethical commitment businesses and companies must protect natural resources, avoid pollution, and reduce other types of environmental destruction. Businesses are required to create a comprehensive plan that includes different sustainability initiatives. Some of the initiatives include participating in green programs, reducing energy consumption, using eco-friendly production processes, and promoting recycling efforts,
CSR needs businesses to create a comprehensive plan that features one of the above initiatives. It is important for business to be environmentally responsible as we cannot proceed to utilize and abuse our world without regard to its sustainability.
Empowering Change: Catalysts for Social Impact and Human Rights
Social impacts are the improvements that confronts or solves inequalities and injustices in a community. On the other hand, social impact companies are organizations that prioritize doing work that consciously, systematically, and sustainably serves or tries to solve a local or global community need.
Social impact in business is vital as it positively addresses a pressing injustice or issue, such as climate change, education gap, or even human rights.
The social aspect of ESG measures a business’s impact on society, including diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) initiatives; grantmaking; donations; volunteering; and much more. These are much the same initiatives that constitute a business’s CSR plan, which, again, the business defines internally.
Besides, the ‘S’ in ESG and CSR covers several factors: including human rights, corporate security, modern slavery, relations, diversity, supply chain sustainability, personal data protection, and consumer relations.
Navigating the Compliance Frontier: Evolving Regulations and Reporting Standards
The regulatory landscape is the company’s external environment in which legal and political forces act to change regulations that may affect the marketing effort; regulation changes can present opportunities or pose threats to a business.
As businesses embrace ESG and CSR, it is also crucial to be aware of the regulatory landscape and reporting standards. This allows the business to know and align with all the laws and regulations relevant to its business and industry.
Internationally, the most widely accepted reporting standards are the International Financial Reporting Standards. Nonetheless, the European Union’s Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) came into practice in January 2023, forming new environmental, social, and governance reporting standards for some 50,000 companies beginning in 2025.
Furthermore, in early 2022, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) suggested a more limited climate risk disclosure rule that, if approved, will lead to new ESG reporting and compliance requirements for publicly traded companies.
Guardians of Hope: CSR Initiatives Battling Child Trafficking
Corporate Social Responsibility enables small and large businesses to enact a positive change in society. However, different CSR initiatives target different areas. This is crucial as it helps different companies to specialize in different initiatives and make a positive change. Besides, companies can build a better future, but at the same time improve their image among customers, employees, and the community.
Nonetheless, some of the CSR initiatives that are against child trafficking are improving labor practices and socially and environmentally conscious investments. Most such initiatives should be based on ethical responsibility. Ethical responsibility is concerned with ensuring that the company is operating in an ethical way. What’s more, ethical responsibility in a business means a concrete commitment to operate in an ethical way that upholds human rights principles.
For instance, the Dutch confectionery company Tony’s Chocolonely specializes in delicious, fair-trade chocolate treats. They also specialize in advocating for a slave-free global chocolate supply chain and farmers’ rights.
Other companies that have committed to fighting child trafficking as part of their CSR are Amazon, IKEA, ALDI Nord Group, REWE Group, Mekong Timber Plantations, and much more.
Uncovering Connections: Environmental Degradation, Displacement, and the Nexus to Child Trafficking Vulnerability
Studies have shown that child trafficking has increased in the aftermath of natural disasters, such as earthquakes, cyclones, tsunamis, and flooding. As extreme weather conditions occur, vulnerable people and not kids alone could find themselves at risk of forced labor or sexual exploitation.
Without proper ESG and CSR practices, things like greenhouse gas emissions will become worse, meaning the environment will get worse and disasters may happen that will lead to migration of population and increase in human trafficking cases.
As a result, companies practicing ESG and CSR practices are likely to get community support and customer loyalty. Depending on the CSR initiative that the company takes, it can make a positive impact on local and global communities.
For instance, research shows that 87% of American consumers are more likely to purchase a product from a company that advocates for an issue they care about, such as child trafficking or environmental degradation. On the contrary, 76% of customers would decline to buy a product if they discovered a company supported an issue contrary to their beliefs.
Unmasking Shadows: Child Labor, Forced Labor, and Child Trafficking in Global Supply Chains
According to ILO, Proof shows that child forced labor, and human trafficking in the global supply chain can be tracked down to the interplay of three vital dimensions: socio-economic pressure facing individuals and workers; gaps in statutory legislation, enforcement, and access to justice that create space for non-compliance; and business conduct and overall business environment.
These basic labor rights must be comprehended as structural phenomena that need comprehensive policy responses.
Tech-Driven Transformation: Emerging Trends for Enhanced ESG and CSR Innovation
From consumers to employees, more people are picking companies that prioritize environmental, social, and governance concerns. Here are some of the emerging trends that businesses should take note of; green economy, social innovation, digital transformation, multi-stakeholder partnerships, and nature-based solutions.
What’s more, there is a rise in CSR as the UK saw a 74% increase in CSR-related roles in 2021. Some of the factors driving the rise in CSR are millennials & Generation Z holding more purchasing power; companies quickly realizing they have to respond how they support people, communities, and the environment; and governments are making bold commitments to get rid of carbon emissions and end world hunger.
Bottom line
Both ESG and CSR relate to the social responsibilities of businesses. While corporate social responsibility (CSR) holds businesses accountable for their social commitments qualitatively, the environmental, social, and governance (ESG) helps to quantify such social efforts in a business. Every company or business should engage in an ESG and CSR initiative as it gives the company a good image and several benefits.
Even though some companies may find it hard to implement CSR initiatives, it is possible with the right tools and support. And with the emerging trends, it is crucial for businesses to have ESG and CSR initiatives if they intend to thrive in the future.
References:
Corporate Governance Institute
YouTube
YouTube
Forbes
Science Direct
Emerald.com
Papers.ssrn.com
Amazon.com
Skimresources
Featured Photo: Mayumi Maciel: https://www.pexels.com/el-gr/photo/18013781/