Environment, Social and Governance
From the net zero transition and sustainable finance, to human rights issues in supply chains and understanding corporate purpose, it is crucial to grasp the broad ESG landscape and direction of travel. For businesses of all types the challenge is how to integrate ESG considerations into business as usual and transform aspirations and targets into robust, realisable action plans – certainly no small task.
Good governance is critical for successfully delivering climate transition strategies, integrating ESG into all aspects of business, and navigating challenges along the way. To manage ESG risks and impacts and take advantage of net zero transition opportunities, organisations need a clear purpose, aligned with their values, strategy and culture, as well as effective decision-making frameworks informed through robust stakeholder engagement. Good governance and a healthy corporate culture (with accountable leadership) are the ‘glue’ that holds the ‘E’ and the ‘S’ in ESG together.
To find out more about our work in this area, see:
Focus on the ‘S’ in ESG is set to increase sharply. Issues range from linking executive pay to ESG targets and stakeholder experience, workplace culture, the importance of diversity and inclusion, the heightened awareness of workplace rights, human rights issues in supply chains, workplace activism and employee relations more generally. The pandemic and societal movements including MeToo and Black Lives Matter have helped to propel social issues up the business agenda. ‘S’ issues are increasingly becoming part of regulatory and governance frameworks as structural and disclosure obligations continue to evolve; and the importance of ensuring that any climate transition is a just one is now clear.
To find out more about our work in this area, see:
One of the key obstacles to better integration of ESG in business decision-making is the lack of good quality data that is relevant, reliable and comparable. Regulators globally are looking to enhance disclosure and reporting regimes for issues such as climate change, sustainability, and diversity & inclusion with significant implications for businesses. Significant change will occur as corporates and firms are required to source data on their own activities and across their business relationships.
To find out more about this area, see:
The transition to a net zero and more environmentally and socially sustainable economy requires the mobilisation of vast amounts of capital. Sustainable finance is attracting unprecedented levels of investment. Policy initiatives designed to rewire the economy through imposing consistent disclosure requirements (among others) are presenting businesses with new challenges as well as significant opportunities for those who are already transitioning.
To find out more about our work in this area, see:
Competition law can be a barrier to companies collaborating on bona fide climate and wider sustainability initiatives. We have seen a marked increase in the number of clients talking to us about competition law and sustainability. From a desire to co-operate to achieve green objectives, to environmental factors that are driving a deal, these issues are coming up again and again. We provide practical guidance for companies who are grappling with the many tricky questions around competitor collaborations, M&A and merger control, State aid, and consumer law issues (such as regulatory scrutiny of greenwashing claims).
To find out more about this area, see Competition and sustainability series.
Regulator, investor and consumer scrutiny of the way companies manage their business relationships and supply chains is ratcheting up. Companies are now looking beyond more traditional methods of supply chain management, which have tended to focus on the commercial aspects of procurement and on supply contingency planning. Companies with emissions reduction targets are extending these down to suppliers. One of the key emerging themes is mandatory due diligence of human rights and environmental issues in supply chains, which will need to be managed alongside unprecedent disruption to global supply chains caused by the Covid-19 pandemic, energy crisis and other geo-political factors.
To find out more about this area, see Managing supply chain risks: reporting and diligence.
Commitment to net zero emissions by 2050 will only be achieved with significant new investment and a rapid change in the sourcing and use of some of our most fundamental commodities, energy and water. The technological revolution combined with ESG pressure is propelling the global economy towards the energy transition, decarbonisation and adaptation. The response will be one of the most transformative business drivers of the next few decades.
To find out more about our work in this area, see:
Heightened scrutiny of ESG issues is having a marked impact on transactions, in particular climate-related issues. The ripples are being felt across a wide spectrum of transaction types including demergers, disposals, acquisitions, JVs and IPOs. Increasing numbers of transactions are being driven by ESG considerations, and businesses are having to work out how best to integrate ESG into the existing transactional ecosystem (including how GHG emissions and other ESG factors are allocated, accounted for and managed).
To find out more about our work in this area, see Corporate/Mergers and Acquisitions.
Climate and other ESG litigation is on the rise, often as a tool to push organisations to engage with the net zero transition with greater ambition, and to improve their ESG performance (e.g. in relation to human rights). Regulators are also starting to take action, particularly where ‘greenwashing’ is concerned. Focus on corporate disclosures and product claims is only likely to increase as requirements tighten.
To find out more about our work in this area, see:
"ESG" in the broadest sense covers environmental, social and governance issues but consensus on details of the meaning can vary and public perceptions are changing rapidly.
Our ESG team has a robust understanding of the regulatory and policy drivers of the market and experience across a wide range of sectors and contexts. We take a holistic approach, covering a wide range of areas - from climate change and resource efficiency, human rights and community engagement, antibribery and corruption, transparency and disclosure, product governance, and risk management more generally.
1 May 2023
Welcome to the Linklaters ESG Newsletter and ESG Disputes Bulletin. Each issue of the ESG Newsletter will cover key developments on the full range of ESG topics and our ESG Disputes Bulletin will focus on key developments in contentious ESG matters.
11 May 2023
In this podcast series, we explore different aspects of the EU’s Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) – including who the regime applies to and when, an explanation of “double materiality” and the ESRS reporting standards. The CSRD will apply to both EU companies and certain non-EU companies and will require in-scope entities to make extensive sustainability disclosures in their annual reports. Each week, we will be releasing a new podcast covering a different aspect of the CSRD.
7 March 2023
Our global and regional ESG legal outlooks are now available The general direction of travel for ESG in 2023 in many jurisdictions across the globe seems to be one of increased regulation, scrutiny and litigation, which will have a significant impact on how businesses plan, operate and report. Increased transparency and accountability, as well as ongoing concerns over greenwashing and litigation risk, are likely to rank high on the ESG agenda this year.
2 March 2023
One place for all the legal, regulatory and industry sources you need when navigating the fast-moving and ever-developing sustainable finance landscape.
3 August 2022
In this soundbites series we explore a number of different climate change and sustainability disclosure frameworks across the globe that businesses need to be aware of, including in the EU, UK, US and the global TCFD and ISSB frameworks.
22 March 2023
Boards face many challenges as they steer their companies through times of economic, geopolitical and technological change. Often the answer to dealing with these challenges will involve some basic principles of governance. Each year, in our Issues for Boards publication, we offer practical pointers to boards and general counsel on topical questions and actions boards should take. In 2023’s edition, we look at how boards of listed companies should prepare to handle an activist investor. We discuss how to draw up a good climate transition plan, the merits of involving investors in “say on climate” and the increasing dangers of being accused of greenwashing.