Businesses today are expected to be good corporate citizens, mindful of the environment, social impact, and governance. Regulators, banks, and even your customers expect to see this extra-financial information in your business reports. Here is what to include and why.

Anyone looking at your financial reporting – for example banks, potential investors, customers – will want to know what you’re doing in relation to CSR (Corporate Social Responsibility) and ESG (Environmental, Social, Governance) issues and may downgrade their judgement if they don’t like what they see.

Customers could go elsewhere. New payment risks could come from more difficult access to financing for companies with higher carbon footprints. Assets could be at risk of stranding because of regulatory decisions.

Your own reporting should include an account of your company’s performance in Environmental, Social, and Governance matters that have an impact on your company’s performance.

Environmental criteria can include CO2 and greenhouse gas emissions, waste recycling, electricity consumption, environmental risk prevention, etc. For example, have you switched to a renewable energy source in your factory? It also includes evaluating environmental risks you might face and how you manage these risks
Social criteria can include the quality of social dialogue within your company, the employment of disabled people, employee working conditions and training, the percentage of your profits you donate to local communities, the relationships with your suppliers, etc. For example, are you more closely monitoring your supply chain to ensure their employment standards meet your own? In short, it looks at your business relationships.
Governance criteria can include the transparency of accounting methods and executive compensation, the fight against corruption and conflicts of interest, the number of women on boards of directors, etc. Many countries have implemented regulations governing this level of equality. Make sure you are in compliance.

But beware when presenting extra-financial information:

  • Be sure the statistics you present are accurate and believable.
  • Ensure the results linked to ESG matters can be traced back to your KPIs.
  • Make sure your own governance in practice matches what your ESG report says in theory.

In June of 2020, we became the first trade insurance company to include ESG indicators for all ESG-related issues into our rating methodology to help the companies we serve analyse and evaluate the sustainable development and long-term issues deployed in their strategy.

The rating augments our country ratings with a set of indicators related to environmental sustainability coupled with sentiment analysis drawn from social media to ascertain political risk. (Governance issues such as regulatory and legal frameworks are already part of our country ratings since 2003).

“ESG matters were not thought of before,” says Nicolas Marchenoir, Head of Energy Risk at Allianz Trade. “Now they’re key considerations, and any company that doesn’t take these into account is taking the risk to fail in the next ten years or less.”

For more tips and advice on business financial monitoring, download our ebook: Boost your financial performance analysis.