GRI: Lobbying, influence and accountability
15 June 2022
Transparency on lobbying can ensure companies uphold their sustainability commitments...From net-zero emissions to fair pay, climate change mitigation to diversity, commitments to sustainability by organizations are on the rise.
Yet what is the role of lobbying, in influencing the policies and
rules that ultimately ensure whether such pledges are met?
Issue seven of The GRI Perspective, the regular series on topical themes in the world of sustainability reporting, takes a deep dive on this issue. Scrutiny on the man in the middle – lobbying explores what lobbying is all about and how it influences sustainability targets and legislation, including:
- The positive and negative role of lobbying activities, in the
development and implementation of progressive sustainability policies.
- The importance of reporting on public policy lobbying and
stakeholder engagement, as supported by the GRI Standards, and whether
new global disclosures on lobbying are required.
- The momentum towards more responsible climate lobbying, such as investor-led pressure to increase accountability.
Peter Paul van de Wijs, GRI’s Chief External Affairs Officer, said:
“Ensuring organizations demonstrate
transparency and accountability for their impacts is central to GRI’s
mission. This is achieved through dialogue with stakeholders that is
based on facts and not perceptions. The decisions this leads to, and any
influence on that process, must be clearly communicated.
While responsible lobbying has the
potential to positively influence the sustainability agenda, the reality
is that efforts are too often skewed towards undermining outcomes. This
can lead to ambitious green pledges by companies being quietly set to
one side – and most significantly, is a barrier to global sustainable
development.
Instead, political capital needs to be
deployed in ways that support the sustainability commitments companies
make, so they raise their aspirations rather than scale back. This is
not ‘woke’ but simply an essential part of fostering good governance and
responsible business.”
GRI’s Public Policy Standard (GRI 415)
sets expectations for organizations to disclose their lobbying
activities, including any financial or in-kind political contributions,
and the significant issues that are the focus of their public policy
lobbying. Consideration is currently being given to how this Standard
may be updated, to reflect growing demands for greater transparency on
corporate lobbying activities.
GRI
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