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Supply Chain Risk

ESG backlash unlikely to derail SEC climate risk rule

CFOs at companies ranging from candy makers to missile manufacturers have tried for years to attract equity capital by adopting environmental, social and governance (ESG) best practices.

By one measure their efforts have paid off — worldwide investment in so-called sustainable mutual funds and exchange-traded funds has more than tripled since 2018 to $2.47 trillion, according to Morningstar.

ESG now faces a hostile rebranding. Critics call it “woke capitalism,” foisted on U.S. companies by a “climate cartel” of shareholder activists, asset managers and politicians.

“ESG is a pernicious strategy, because it allows the left to accomplish what it could never hope to achieve at the ballot box or through competition in the free market,” former Vice President Mike Pence said in May, joining opponents as varied as Berkshire Hathaway Vice Chair Charles Munger and Tesla CEO Elon Musk.

CFOs should not expect the backlash to halt a proposed Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) rule that would bring securities laws in closer alignment with climate activism and a corporate movement toward ESG disclosure, according to attorneys and former regulators.

Already, 92% of Standard & Poor’s 500 companies publish ESG reports, the Governance and Accountability Institute said. In response to investor pressure, thousands of companies worldwide have pledged to report on greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions.

“The biggest institutions have made their commitments and they’re not going to back down,” according to Elizabeth Saunders, a partner at Clermont Partners. “That ship has already sailed.”

 

CFO Dive, data from Morningstar Direct

 

The SEC before January will likely publish a rule requiring publicly traded companies to provide detailed disclosures on carbon emissions and climate risk, the attorneys and former regulators said.

The SEC is poring over 14,000 public comments on the proposed rule, but any revision to its 490-page draft will probably retain the most exacting — and costly — requirements for measuring and reporting on climate risks, the attorneys and former regulators said.

“If I were the CFO of a public company, I would fully expect that these rules will go into effect,” said Kai Liekefett, a partner and co-chair of the shareholder activism practice at Sidley Austin. “You need to prepare — you can’t count on Santa Claus to deliver you a present.”

The SEC currently does not require companies to report on climate risk or describe how they must do so. Instead, the agency — based on “interpretive guidance” released in 2010 — suggests how companies disclose the impact from climate change in light of existing or new legislation, regulation and global agreements.  

Under a new climate risk rule, the SEC aims to mandate that companies describe on Form 10-K their strategy toward climate risk, including plans to achieve any targets they have set for curbing such risk.

Companies would also need to disclose data on their GHG emissions, either from their facilities or through their energy purchases, and obtain independent attestation of their data.

Clear, uniform disclosures on the costs from climate change will benefit both businesses and investors, according to SEC Chair Gary Gensler. Businesses will gain detailed insights into potential costs and opportunities, while investors will be able to better gauge risks at specific companies and compare risk levels across industries. 

“If it’s consistent and comparable, it helps both issuers and investors and can lower the cost of the risk premium, and risk premium is part of the cost of capital,” Gensler told a Harvard University forum on Sept 15.

Measurement muddle

Currently, a grab-bag of methods for gauging a company’s adherence to ESG principles stirs confusion among investors as well as some CFOs and their C-suite colleagues, the attorneys and former regulators said.

“It’s a dog’s breakfast,” Liekefett said in an interview, adding that ESG ratings companies need a few more years to find a consensus on uniform measurement.

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