A number of sustainable investing champions say it's time for the "ESG" label to be shelved and replaced by something less likely to draw
Robert Eccles, a professor who's spent the past 12 years researching sustainability at Harvard Business School and now University of Oxford's Said Business School, says the term "just doesn't have value anymore. Let's change the conversation."
"I'm happy to not use the term ESG," he said in an interview, referring to environmental, social and corporate governance issues. "People are so invested now in hating ESG for reasons that don't really have much to do with ESG."
ESG has this year become the subject of intense debate. As an acronym, it's somehow morphed into a lightning rod for conservatives in the U.S., who use it to fire up attendees at Republican rallies. Florida Governor Ron DeSantis — a potential 2024 presidential candidate — wooed voters last month
Some former sustainable-investing executives have characterized ESG as little more than a
Industry veteran Sandra Carlisle, who's head of sustainability at $58.6 billion Jupiter Asset Management, said ESG remains poorly defined and inadequately regulated, making it confusing for investors and companies to understand. It's also left investors in the dark, just when they need more clarity, says Leslie Samuelrich, who's spent a decade in sustainable investing and is president of Green Century Capital Management.
"It's time for the industry to explain what ESG means and what it doesn't mean, to maintain its credibility," she said. Samuelrich, whose Boston-based firm oversees about $1 billion, says ESG is about using relevant material factors to measure how a company handles risks. "It isn't 'sustainable,' 'green' or 'making an impact."'
Meanwhile, ESG continues to take up an ever bigger chunk of financial markets. McKinsey & Co.
ESG's defenders argue it's still a fledgling movement and point out that regulations are already kicking in to fix obvious weaknesses. Sasja Beslik, a sustainable finance
"Regulation has in one way institutionalized ESG as a core element of responsibility for the financial industry," he said. And though "there's a lot of greenwashing for the moment," it's already clear that ESG regulations have "completely changed the game," Beslik said.
ESG regulations are in many cases still being written. But once finalized, they should help fund managers and their clients identify and measure risks and opportunities — such as how a hotter planet will affect industries like farming and insurance, how
Europe will soon require close to 50,000 companies to disclose not just the ESG risks they face, but also the environmental and societal impact they have on their surroundings. Asset managers use that regulated information to shape their portfolios.
In the U.S., the Securities and Exchange Commission is responding to the reality of an overheating planet by asking corporations to report greenhouse gas emissions, including in some cases so-called Scope 3, the widest possible gauge of their carbon footprint. At a global level, there is fast emerging a standard for corporate sustainability reporting intended to make disclosures as consistent and transparent as financial reports are now, thanks to decades-old general accounting standards.
Sonali Siriwardena, partner and global head of ESG at Simmons & Simmons who advises some of the world's biggest asset managers, says ESG "has not lost its purpose."
"There are three different elements and you need to look at all three," she said. "It's about the long-term viability of the planet and the societies we live in" and ESG as an acronym "captures that."
ESG was coined in 2004 by a United Nations team led by Paul Clements-Hunt, working with financial institutions. The big idea was that using ESG factors in financial analysis would help identify material risks, and opportunities to make money, from things like climate change. Doing so would also be compatible with fund managers' fiduciary responsibilities.
Clements-Hunt, who is now a sustainability director at London law firm Mishcon de Reya, says the criticism of ESG comes from tensions created by the start of "a deeper shift in the global political economy." After accusing the finance industry of using ESG as nothing more than a
"ESG has become too deeply ingrained in the market system to be jettisoned easily for another three-letter acronym," he said. "We are at the very start of a massive adjustment, only just underway, as we steer a course toward regenerative capitalism. Whatever acronym we adopt, the critical challenges will still be there."
Oxford's Eccles, who was also the founding chairman of the Sustainability Accounting Standards Board, defends the concept of ESG, even if he thinks the label has run its course.
Instead, he says he's happy to talk about "material risk factors."
"I know it's a boring term, but it's accurate," he said. "We never have to say whether they're an E, S or G issue. We can say we're talking about carbon emissions or labor practices."
In their report on the merits of ESG, analysts at McKinsey argue that while the acronym "may have lost some of its luster, its underlying proposition remains essential at the level of principle. Names will come and go...but we believe that the importance of the underlying ideas has not peaked."