The GRI content principles –
sustainability context, materiality, stakeholder inclusiveness and completeness
– are forming a balanced set to give guidance on how to define what a ‚good’
sustainability report should cover. The focus of work pulling G4 together was
on making that balance and the process of how to get to such reporting even
more clear and crisp. While our last blogs were digging deeper into the need of
putting real teeth into step 1 – defining sustainability context better –
another principle from the report quality section, namely comparability, has
started to be discussed. The reason for that is that most communication of GRI
under the banner ‚what matters, where it matters’ zooms heavily into
materiality, and questions start to arise on what that means for the other
important reasoning for standardized reporting – producing information that can
actually be compared.
This discussion has a strong connection with our earlier
plea on getting more clarity around sustainability context and working on
micro-macro-linked indicators. The discussion around a potential lack of
comparability is making painfully clear that not having worked on these
potential indicators in the G4 development process will most likely break open
a whole plethora of uncomparable information. We have enough experience how
certain information was presented in sustainability reports so far: take SOMO’s
2013 study on energy companies disclosure, Transparency International’s 2012
study on reporting on anti-corruption indicators, or Deloitte’s 2012 study on
zero impact growth strategies that examplified dozens of ways in which
companies described their CO2 target-setting. Either information was presented
in many different absolute or relative ways, or different information than asked for was published (should we call this
pretending?), or no information was published at all, or no context was given
on what was published (how would we call that then?). Our view here is: without
micro-macro-linked indicators comparability will heavily suffer.
The loop to our sustainability context plea and the
need for ‚different’ indicators as we have them right now becomes clear when we
consider the text in the Guidelines around comparability, the core sentences
here are: „Comparisons between organizations require sensitivity to factors
such as differences in organizational size, geographic influences, and other
considerations that may affect the relative performance of an organization.
When necessary, report preparers should consider providing context that helps
report users understand the factors that may contribute to differences in
performance between organizations.“ Together with the wording of the sustainability
context principle we really doubt that consistency in reporting can be
delivered in a way that comparability will at all become realistic with the
current indicator set. In total, we think that the dilemma between focusing on
materiality on the one hand, and delivering comparable information on the other
hand, can’t be solved without micro-macro-based indicators. The existing
indicators will not cut it, we have seen this all before! Work on
micro-macro-based indicators will be necessary, the denominators of these
indicators will need to help defining comparability, not the voluntary,
company-by-company target setting (whose long-term basis is normally not
disclosed – most likely because it doesn’t exist at all?).
This status quo has several consequences and effects,
and it is interesting to look at least at some of them:
1.
The work of rating & ranking
organizations will continue to produce more confusion. As we continue to have
information about how organizations became ‚less bad’, the more than 120+ different
rankings & ratings will continue to produce ‚best-in-class’ champions, for
none of them we know what that really means, since we don’t know what is
feasibly ‚good enough’. We have seen first attempts of rating organizations to
get out of this dead-end-street, e.g. Climate Counts or Inrate who themselves
start to make the link to macro-based goals by simply setting them. As GISR
also puts sustainability context clearly into the focus of ‚good’ ratings, the
need to also consider macro-based information on global, regional and/or local
level will also continue here. More comparability will most likely be the
outcome.
2.
The lack of focus on
micro-macro-based indicators will produce competition for GRI. A whole set of
organizations already work on such indicators, first and foremost the Natural
Step-based approach on the ‚Future-Fit-Benchmark’, an approach that includes Bob
Willard and a set of sustainability reporting veterans. The Sustainability
Context Group, around 120 members strong, has several members that actively
work on other alternatives of context-based indicators, their plea to work on
them together with GRI has been noted down there, but with no outcome so far.
WBCSD has started to team up with the Stockholm Resilience Centre (and the
various other players connected to them) to see how Vision 2050 can be
supported by an Action 2020 and how ‚values-based reporting’ can be set up.
Worthwhile to mention here is that this approach also includes tooling and
accounting methods, so gets to a deeper level than to just think about
reporting indicators, but also how to create the processes. WRI, CDP and WWF
now work on ‚science-based target setting’ and has invited to several
workshops. Also here, an increase in comparable information will be a
foreseeable outcome.
3.
At this moment we also observe the
development of the Sustainable Development Goals, to be presented in 2015. It
will be interesting to see how they will develop further; as it stands right
now they seem to be more sort of ‚corridors’ of change in 16 different issue
areas, and it is not yet sure how interdependencies (nexus effects) will play
out on this variety of areas. In our view it would be much more effective to
take a step back and first develop a set of principles (based on the probably most
important ‚North Star’ question: what will really make up a succesful green
& inclusive economy?) and then define action areas with a special view on
interconnectedness of effects to define clear and actionable roadmaps or
adaptation plans on how to get there. Targets could be defined per region,
taking into account the various cultural and mindset calibrations as well as
timelines necessary to measure progress. These could be built into a
comparability approach for defining indicators of change with actionable items
where each company can define a positive impact (instead of concentrating on
the reduction of negative impact). See it a bit like the approach Unilever took
when they connected their mid-term target setting with main sustainability
issue areas. It is no wonder to us that Unilever’s approach scores extremely
well in certain ratings, e.g. the latest GlobeScan and Sustainability Leaders
Survey, published just a couple of days ago.
4.
As a side effect the lack of
comparability also creates a revival of the discussion around what was supposed
to be called ‚Beyond GDP’. First of all there is the question if GDP should be
used as a denominator in order to increase comparability in micro-macro-based
monetary and relative comparisons, but much more important there is also again
increasing discussion about the usefulness to use GDP at all as a means to
measure a valueable contribution of a single company. In our view this is a
must-have discussion that will sparkle ideas on what ‚success’ really means for
a society at large, it seemed to get stuck around the idea of happiness in the
last couple of years, which in our view is a very individual mindset and
difficult to standardize. Hence, there is a glimpse of hope, and it is good to
see that GRI is also one of the partners is one of these projects, called
‚Measure what matters’, with amongst others the Green Economy Coalition,
Accounting for Sustainability (which are the initiators of many good
developments, e.g. IIRC as well), the Stockholm Environment Institute (SEI) and
IIED.
5.
We are still amazed to see how
little companies are interested in defining what a ‚green & inclusive
economy’ or ‚resilient economy’ actually means for themselves. That is mainly
due to the lack of real comparison opportunities to give this vision real
meaning. And it will remain like that as long as we don’t define the expected
minimal and/or positive contribution per company and stakeholder. We refer to
our last blog on the ‚mindset gap’ for further depth here. Comparison and
target setting will be the most interesting pathways for competition in the
future, so again ask yourself what all that focus on materiality will help if
comparison possibilities will suffer from that in this heavily interconnected
world in which nexus effects will be part of the comparability agenda, to be
analyzed when thinking about sustainability context.
Overall, we expect that the discussion about
comparability will become as vital as the one on materiality today, simply
because more materiality will not automatically lead to more comparability of
information (we fear even less), and more comparability focus will not simply
lead to more materiality. There needs to be a balance as both are of critical
importance to understand, define and act on these urgently needed adaptation
plans towards the economic blueprint of the future, the ‚green & inclusive
economy’.
Authors: Ralph Thurm is the Founder & Managing
Director of A|HEAD|ahead, Nick de Ruiter is partner at Sustainalize.
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