Over the past four years, GRI has championed the participation of companies in measuring their performance on the SDGs. As we look ahead to the Decade of Action
needed to achieve the SDGs, it is clear that further progress will be
needed, including doing more to increase private sector contributions.
Progress so far
At the end of 2020, a four-year Action Platform for Reporting on the SDGs, from GRI and UN Global Compact, concluded. This included a Corporate Action Group
(CAG) that connected business representatives in a peer learning
platform, which successfully helped companies define and improve their
SDGs reporting.
Research on CAG participants revealed:
1. Increased clarity on how to engage with the SDGs from a business perspective
2. Improvements in how they measured SDGs performance
3. Better prioritization of the most relevant SDGs
4. More integration of the SDGs into business decision-making processes
However,
the findings also indicate that many companies continue to face
challenges with understanding and disclosing their SDGs contributions,
with opportunities to make corporate reporting more relevant and
effective.
Improving data quality and addressing gaps
Reporting
on priorities at the SDG target level, within each of the overarching
Goals, and linking them to the business strategy, is often missing.
Overall, deeper connections between material topics with SDG targets and
corporate priorities are needed. We also see there are opportunities to
further explore the links between SDG priorities and the contributions
of companies in the countries and jurisdictions where they operate.
Most
importantly, corporate reporting on the SDGs often focuses on positive
contributions that companies make to the SDGs, with a lack of
transparency and accountability for negative impacts. This issue was
also highlighted by KPMG research in December.
Reporting that has impact
Identifying
SDG priorities throughout the value chain is a complex undertaking, as
is demonstrating the cause-and-effect relationship between SDG
contributions and business performance. Moreover, because of the
interconnected and interdependent nature of the SDGs, companies need to
identify and take account of synergies and trade-offs between positive
and negative impacts.
Efforts
to quantify impacts on the SDGs and contextualize them (for example,
considering the social thresholds and planetary boundaries) needs
strengthened.
That is why it is necessary to move beyond assessing activities and outputs, and focus on how to disclose outcomes and impacts.
This is crucial as it enables businesses to manage their performance and demonstrate accountability for their impacts.
Making reporting relevant to stakeholders
There
is increasing interest from a wide range of stakeholders in business
contribution to the SDGs, including how companies are aligning products,
services and business strategy with the SDGs. Policy makers, investors,
consumers, labor organizations and civil society all increasingly
demand that companies show transparency through providing quality data
and balanced reporting.
However,
different stakeholders have different expectations and data requests.
Steps business can take to provide more strategic and relevant
information include:
·
Providing aggregated or disaggregated information that allows
stakeholders to assess their performance and contribution to the SDGs
· Setting long-term SDG-related performance targets, and regularly reporting on progress
· Clearly demonstrating how the business strategy aligns with the SDGs
Proactive communications on the issues that matter most — to both the company and stakeholders — is crucial.
Not
only does provide the necessary information to assess corporate
sustainability performance and impact, it also allow stakeholders to
make decisions that contribute to the SDGs.
Driving business action through reporting
Inspired by the progress to date and the opportunities still to come, GRI is launching a Business Leadership Forum, to commence in March, on corporate reporting as a driver for achieving the SDGs.
The
initiative will offer participating companies practical insights,
focusing on how to raise the quality and strategic relevance of their
SDG reporting.
The Forum
is built around a series of online sessions that will bring together
corporate reporters and representatives from key stakeholder groups —
including the investment community, governments, regulators, members of
the supply chain, civil society and academia.
The
experiences of the past four years have shown that both businesses and
stakeholders benefit from strategic and relevant SDG-related
information. Sustainability reporting is an essential driver of the
transformational change that is required to achieve the SDGs. As we look
ahead to the Decade of Action and the pandemic recovery phase, the case
for meaningful corporate reporting on the SDGs is more compelling than
ever before.