Sustainability: Difference between revisions
imported>Doug Williamson (Layout.) |
imported>Doug Williamson (Add link.) |
||
Line 33: | Line 33: | ||
* [[Carbon footprint]] | * [[Carbon footprint]] | ||
* [[Corporate social responsibility]] | * [[Corporate social responsibility]] | ||
* [[Credit rating agency]] | |||
* [[ESG investment]] | * [[ESG investment]] | ||
* [[Global Sustainable Investment Alliance]] | * [[Global Sustainable Investment Alliance]] |
Revision as of 15:43, 18 September 2019
Sustainability has two important dimensions in treasury and finance, environmental sustainability and financial sustainability.
Environmental sustainability involves making decisions and taking actions which expressly take responsibility for the impact on the environment, and avoid depleting or degrading natural resources such as soil, water, forests, and biological diversity.
Financial sustainability is achieved when an organisation is able to earn sustainable financial surpluses and generate cash in the medium and longer-term.
Financial sustainability includes the ability to pay back borrowings over time, with interest, while maintaining necessary levels of internal investment.
Historically, it was generally considered that there was a conflict between environmental sustainability and financial sustainability.
More recently though, an alternative view has arisen that it is only environmentally sustainable businesses which are fully financially sustainable.
This alternative view suggests that there need be no conflict between an organisation’s environmental and financial objectives, when a sufficiently long-term view is taken.
Sustainability is increasingly being used as a component in borrowings and credit evaluation.
Credit rating agencies are also taking sustainability principles into account.
Credit ratings and ESG
- "The European Commission’s Sustainable Finance High-Level Expert Group (HLEG) says that credit rating agencies should “systematically integrate” relevant environmental, social and governance (ESG) criteria into their credit-rating analyses, along with factors related to longer-term sustainability..."
- The Treasurer, web exclusive, June 2019.
See also
- Accounting for Sustainability (A4S)
- Business & Sustainable Development Commission
- Carbon footprint
- Corporate social responsibility
- Credit rating agency
- ESG investment
- Global Sustainable Investment Alliance
- Metaeconomics
- Natural capital
- Organic
- SRA
- SRI
- Sustainable Development Goals
- Sustainable finance
- Sustainability Accounting Standards Board
- Sustainability bond
- Sustainability Linked Loan Principles
- UK Sustainable Investment and Finance Association