What is ESG?
For the uninitiated, ESG stands for environmental, social and governance. Increasingly, a company’s impact on the environment and whether its business model contributes to sustainable development matter to its stakeholders and investors. The ESG criteria include how the company manages its waste, the kind of energy sources it uses, the kind of suppliers it works with, how it handles pollution, its attitude to climate change, transparency in accounting and their choice of board members.
Why Should We Care About ESG?
Recently, my powerbank made by a well-known company in China became faulty. When I returned to the authorised distributor to enquire whether they had a recycling program for their old powerbanks, I was told they did not. This is sad as while many people are aware that recycling is important, they do not practise it as they find it costly or inconvenient. The inconvenience factor can be overcome if companies do their part to provide collection points, especially if it is their own products.
Dadacai OP : Here’s the link to ESG Stock Ratings for Singapore stocks listed on SGX: https://www.sgx.com/esg/stock-ratings?cid=YJZ7YNGSROZ5414&cid=YJZ7YNGSROZ5414
Dadacai OP : A listing of some global providers of ESG ratings and their methodologies: https://corpgov.law.harvard.edu/2017/07/27/esg-reports-and-ratings-what-they-are-why-they-matter/
Dadacai OP : For those who use Yahoo Finance, it has a sustainability category using data from Sustainalytics (Morningstar). The higher the score, the higher the ESG risk. https://connect.sustainalytics.com/hubfs/SFS/Sustainalytics%20ESG%20Risk%20Rating%20-%20FAQs%20for%20Corporations.pdf
carririlin : ESG is an investment strategy. I changed my investment orientation and waited for some projects to be implemented.
Dadacai OP carririlin :