Quantifying sustainability – How to anchor a value-creation approach
Why CFO-grade metrics are essential to proving the business value of sustainability - and how companies can quantify ESG initiatives to drive returns.
Climate-dominant approaches to sustainability keep senior business leaders from recognizing the growing corporate exposure to interrelated climate, nature, and social risks, while causing them to miss business opportunities.
Integrated transition planning is the best way for companies to gain a complete and structured picture of material climate, nature, and social-related issues, and to create a springboard for quantifying value-protecting and value-creating opportunities. The rewards for first movers could be vast.
This short primer from WBCSD and ERM aims to translate the concept of integrated transition planning into practical steps for building a methodology and approach that delivers results. The primer outlines:
The primer draws on guidance from the transition planning taskforce (TPT), the network for greening the financial system (NGFS), the taskforce on climate-related financial disclosures (TCFD), and the world business council for sustainable development (WBCSD). It provides a practical entry point to WBCSD’s and ERM’s further work on transition planning and financial quantification.
Why CFO-grade metrics are essential to proving the business value of sustainability - and how companies can quantify ESG initiatives to drive returns.
The commercial upsides of climate-related action will only attract management attention and capital if they are robustly quantified.
A persistent disconnect between companies and investors limits capital flows into decarbonization projects. Effective climate transition planning can help close the divide.