JAKARTA -A growing coalition of 61 top business leaders across industries announced today their commitment to the Stakeholder Capitalism Metrics, a set of environmental, social and governance (ESG) metrics and disclosures released by the World Economic Forum and its International Business Council (IBC) in September 2020, that measure the long-term enterprise value creation for all stakeholders.

The Stakeholder Capitalism Metrics, drawn from existing voluntary standards, offer a core set of 21 universal, comparable disclosures focused on people, planet, prosperity and principles of governance that are considered most critical for business, society and the planet, and that companies can report on regardless of industry or region. They strengthen the ability of companies and investors to benchmark progress on sustainability matters, thereby improving decision-making and enhancing transparency and accountability regarding the shared and sustainable value companies create.

These leaders and their organizations, including Dow, Unilever, Nestlé, PayPal, Reliance Industries and Sony have today committed to:

• Reflect the core metrics in their reporting to investors and other stakeholders (e.g. annual report, sustainability report, proxy statements, or other materials) by reporting on the metrics most relevant to their business or briefly explaining why a different approach is more appropriate
• Publicly support this work and encourage their business partners to do so
• Promote the further convergence of existing ESG standards, frameworks and principles to support progress towards a globally accepted solution for non-financial reporting on common ESG metrics

In making these commitments, business leaders are signaling that ESG factors are increasingly critical to the success and long-term viability of all businesses. This clearly represents the intent from leading global companies to integrate sustainability into their core strategy, operations and corporate disclosures.

“Stakeholder capitalism becomes now really mainstream,” said Klaus Schwab, Founder and Executive Chairman, World Economic Forum on Tuesday (January, 26) in Geneva. “The public commitments from companies to report not only on financial matters but also their ESG impacts are an important step towards a global economy that works for progress, people and the planet.”

“We have to deliver great returns for our shareholders and help drive progress on society’s most important priorities,” said Brian Moynihan, Chairman and CEO of Bank of America, and Chairman of the International Business Council. “That is stakeholder capitalism in action. Common metrics will help all stakeholders measure the progress we are making and ensure that the resources capitalism can marshal – from companies, from investors, and others – are directed to where they can make the most difference.”

The World Economic Forum, in collaboration with Bank of America, Deloitte, EY, KPMG and PwC, curated the set of 21 core and 34 expanded metrics over the past two years with the support of over 140 stakeholders.

The metrics include non-financial disclosures centered around the four pillars: people, planet, prosperity and principles of governance. Intentionally built on existing standards, the pillars include metrics such as greenhouse gas emissions, pay equality and board diversity, among others.

By adopting and reporting on these metrics and disclosures, the business community will continue to catalyst greater cooperation and alignment among existing standards and encourage progress on the development of a systemic, globally accepted set of common standards for reporting on sustainability performance.

Meanwhile, Anderson Tanoto Director, RGE noted that there are three urgent needs to enable more sustainable business in emerging economies:

1. The protection of biodiversity and the sustainable use of resources in production must go hand-in-hand. Such models solve the funding dilemma, where production funds investment in nature-based solutions and circular innovation.

2. Collaboration at the landscape level is key to realising a production-protection compact among actors on the ground. Emerging economy governments and businesses are becoming open to new ways of investing in biodiversity protection, forest conservation and restoration, and to solve problems through partnerships with a common goal.

3. The need to demonstrate action, agility and speed. Unencumbered by legacy practices and approaches, things can happen faster in the emerging world, resulting in rapid progress and action to build momentum through to 2030. Trying something and learning by doing is better than doing nothing at all.

“We have refreshed our commitments to chart our sustainability path for the next 10 years, targeting ambitious goals for 2030. We aim to deliver a positive impact on climate, nature and people,” he said.

“We must transform our businesses as we embrace innovation and circularity. We must embed new mechanisms to ensure revenues from production activities permanently underwrite new sustainability targets of achieving net-zero carbon emissions from land use, positive measurable gains in nature including forest restoration, conservation and protection of wildlife, and eliminating extreme poverty in our communities. Most importantly, we must align the KPIs and metrics of our organizations so that environmental sustainability and business growth can be on the same side of the equation, not on opposite sides,” he added.