Ten recommendations intended to stimulate more investment in sustainable business solutions to help advance the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) were published today at the SDG Business Forum by the Global Reporting Initiative (GRI), Principles for Responsible Investment (PRI) and the United Nations Global Compact.
The recommendations focus on how corporate reporting on the SDGs can best address investors’ information needs to help mobilise sustainable finance needed for the achievement of the SDGs. The three entities represent the world’s leading organisations in the areas of sustainability reporting, corporate responsibility and responsible investing.
The 17 SDGs, adopted by 193 member states at the United Nations in 2015, provide a shared framework to address the world’s most urgent sustainability challenges. Achieving the SDGs requires commitment not only from governments and companies, but also from investors. It is estimated that by 2030, a total of US$90 trillion is needed to achieve the SDGs. Mobilising this capital will require businesses to report on their actions to advance the global goals in a way that helps investors make informed decisions, directing resources towards investments with positive real-world impacts.
“The globally agreed SDGs are an articulation of the world’s most pressing environmental, social and economic issues. As such, they act as a definitive list of the material factors that investors should consider as part of their fiduciary duty,” says Fiona Reynolds, CEO of the PRI.
There is also a strong business case for investing in opportunities aligned with the SDGs, and the benefits of meaningful sustainability disclosures are well established. The publication released today, In Focus: Addressing Investor Needs in Business Reporting on the SDGs, provides guidance to businesses on how to better ensure their SDG-related disclosures are useful for investors.
Says Tim Mohin, Chief Executive at GRI: “Investors want to see balanced reporting that showcases a company’s targets and progress against the SDGs. Companies should consider risk factors and impacts on people and the society in a focused manner and strive to put out concise, consistent, current and comparable data.”
In 2017, GRI and the UN Global Compact established a joint initiative to help businesses to measure and manage their impacts on the SDGs. This new publication on the investor angle of SDG reporting is the latest achievement of this effort.
“There is a need for bold leadership from business to realize the SDGs, an ambitious agenda which seeks to transform our world by 2030. We hope this report will support businesses in their efforts to reach investors and help mobilize the sustainable finance needed for the achievement of the SDGs, paving the path to a world where no one is left behind,” says Lise Kingo, CEO and Executive Director of the UN Global Compact.
The new report complements an earlier publication titled An Analysis of the Goals and Targets (2017). Later this year it will be followed by another report, Integrating the SDGs into Corporate Reporting: A Practical Guide. The report launched today is funded by the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency. It is available for download here.