Home / How ‘sustainable development goals’ are framing investing

How ‘sustainable development goals’ are framing investing

The next big challenge for investors in the integration of ESG factors in their investment processes is the alignment of the 17 ‘sustainable development goals’ (SDGs) with their own investment objectives. According to index provider S&P Dow Jones, the SDGs are framing the global agenda of sustainable development.

In a paper published by S&P the researchers provide a comprehensive update on the world of ESG, as it is unfolding across the broad investment community globally.

Written by a team led by Martina Macpherson, global head of S&P’s ESG Indices, Product Management, and a lecturer at the University of Zurich, the paper says: “There is still considerable progress to be made in breaking down the 17 SDGs, 169 targets, and 232 indicators into more standardized and, therefore, meaningful metrics for companies and investors to use- underpinned by measurable data.

  • “However, cross-border alignment of multi-stakeholder initiatives has set the scene for a new paradigm, especially in the context of development finance and the Addis Ababa Action Agenda (2015) to finance the SDG Agenda,” she says.

    “New regulation, such as the EU Directive 2014/95 on “Disclosure of Non-Financial Information, stock exchanges’ ESG listing requirements, and integrated reporting frameworks are playing a pivotal role in supporting this harmonization effort.

    “Importantly, impact reporting initiatives and frameworks have started to use the SDGs as a lens-for example, the Global Impact Investing Network (GIIN, 2016), U.N. Global Compact, WBCSD, and Global Reporting Initiative (2016) have jointly released SDG-related guidance for businesses. There is also considerable work in the pipeline from the ‘Natural Capital Coalition’ related to its new protocol.

    “This alignment across sustainability frameworks is paving the way for a holistic “systems” approach and “universal agenda”, as called for in the UN’s SDG Synthesis Report (2015), to bring positive action on all of the 17 SDGs and opportunities for investors and businesses at the board level, as well as within the C-suite and middle management.

    “Last but not least, we will not achieve SDG 16 and 17 without leaders across the investment value chain. That makes leadership itself a crucial, and deeply interconnected, element of the 2030 Agenda.”

    Investor Strategy News


    Related
    Institutional investors to boost private allocations: State Street

    Private markets could be almost on par with listed assets in institutional investor portfolios before the end of this decade, according to a new State Street study.

    David Chaplin | 3rd May 2024 | More
    What poor investment governance really costs members

    A new report “from the coalface” of super fund investing has gone some way to quantifying the cost of shonky investment management, with members potentially losing out on hundreds of thousands of dollars.

    Lachlan Maddock | 2nd May 2024 | More
    Future Fund sticks to its guns while inflation sticks around

    Surging equity markets have driven the Future Fund’s return higher, but its prediction that inflation will be stickier than expected has been born out and it “remains conscious of the potential for significant deterioration”.

    Staff Writer | 1st May 2024 | More
    Popular