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    ESG Summit

    The Financial Review ESG Summit investigates how to boost the credibility, transparency and effectiveness of corporate sustainability strategies, with a second day examining what lies ahead for sustainable and ethical investing.

    Featured

    Glencore chief executive Gary Nagle has been surveying major shareholders on whether the company should spin off its coal mining division.

    Glencore says ESG mood has ‘evolved’ and it will keep coal mining

    The Swiss-based commodities giant had proposed spinning off the fossil fuel into a separate company but has decided to retain the division.

    • Updated
    • Peter Ker
    Karen McWilliams, sustainability and business reform leader at Chartered Accountants Australia and New Zealand.

    Boards plead with Labor not to rush broader sustainability rules

    The warning from the Australian Institute of Company Directors came despite concerns Australia is “cherry-picking” global sustainability reporting standards.

    • Patrick Durkin
    Protestors at the Federal Court campaigning against Santos’ Barossa project.

    Damning Tiwi Island judgment makes bank CEOs wary of in-person visits

    Major lenders had promised to send bosses to meet traditional owners near Santos’ Barossa gas project. The Federal Court has made them reconsider.

    • James Eyers

    Nature the next frontier but boards lack skills

    Biodiversity is critical for maintaining a liveable planet, but a deficit of skills at the board level is proving a roadblock in accounting for its value.

    • Lucy Dean

    Australia is ‘cherry-picking’ sustainability reporting standards

    It is one of few jurisdictions that has agreed to apply new reporting standards only partially, says former super fund chief David Atkin.

    • Sally Patten
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    June

    Anthony Miller, the chief executive of business and wealth at Westpac.

    Companies undeterred by failure of the Voice referendum

    Big companies such as Westpac say the failure of the Voice referendum will not dissuade them from campaigning on social issues.

    • Sally Patten and Patrick Durkin
    Alexis Cheang is the head of investment stewardship for TCorp.

    Investors ought to show fossil fuel companies ‘understanding’: TCorp

    The journey to net zero is ‘riddled with uncertainty’ and investors need to have some sympathy for companies, ESG executive Alexis Cheang says.

    • Ronald Mizen and Joanna Mather
    HESTA chief executive Debby Blakey. says the fund Ms Blakey said the fund wants to know how food companies are thinking about antibiotics use and the risks.

    Super funds target fast food giants over antibiotic use

    Superannuation funds have opened a new ESG front by demanding companies such as McDonald’s provide more information about their use of antibiotics.

    • Ronald Mizen
    Anne Templeman-JonesAnne Templeman-Jones welcomes disclosure about the make-up of boards, but warns it could result in a tick-a-box approach.

    Proposed director disclosures may raise privacy concerns

    Leading directors question whether an ASX proposal to recommend board members disclose their sexuality, age, ethnicity and any disabilities would add value.

    • Sally Patten and Patrick Durkin
    Treasury’s Alex Heath says action, honesty and detail are key to avoiding greenwashing claims.

    Honesty and action key to limiting ‘real’ greenwashing

    The risk of regulatory crackdowns should not turn companies off making climate change commitments, provided they manage them well.

    • Hannah Wootton
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    Cleanaway CEO Mark Schubert

    The biomethane route to cutting emissions

    Renewables such as solar and wind get most of the policy attention, but businesses are experimenting with other low-carbon fuels.

    • Jennifer Hewett
    Ampol managing director Matthew Halliday.

    Climate targets ‘challenged’ as energy transition stumbles

    The energy transition is proving much more costly and difficult than anticipated.

    • Sally Patten
    CBA director Anne Templeman-Jones says small- and medium-sized businesses could win by getting ahead of sustainability reporting requirements.

    In the ESG debate, this is what’s really torching shareholder value

    For all the talk about the “E” in “ESG”, what gets CEOs sacked and costs investors money are old-fashioned social licence and governance issues.

    • Updated
    • Anthony Macdonald
    Airbus representative Stephen Forshaw at the Summit.

    Keep food scraps onshore for future aircraft fuel: industry

    Singapore is quickly developing the capacity to convert waste into aviation fuel.

    • Peter Ker

    Security and affordability over net zero: energy giant Jemena

    Rising geopolitical risks should prompt a rethink of Australia’s energy priorities so reliability of supply and affordability rank above the net zero transition.

    • Ronald Mizen
    The Energy Trilemma: rethinking the order of merit
    0:57

    The Energy Trilemma: rethinking the order of merit

    Jemena managing director David Gillespie says that in the pull between sustainability, energy security and affordability, security is the most important factor.

    • Updated

    After the Voice, October 7, should business say less?

    How should companies respond to contested social and political issues not directly related to core business?

    • Patrick Langrell

    May

    David Atkin is chief executive of the Principles for Responsible Investment, a UN-backed lobby for socially responsible investing.

    ‘Every country is worried about what’s happening in the US’

    ESG champion David Atkin runs a global organisation with 5300 signatories that manage a total of $US121 trillion – about half of global funds under management.

    • Ben Potter

    March

    Choosing where to invest isn’t always easy for ethical investors.

    Rethinking corporate responsibility

    Join the debate around the future of ESG in today’s business and financial markets at the 2024 Financial Review ESG Summit.

    February

    The Wiggins Island Coal Export Terminal under construction in Gladstone in 2018.

    Boutique adviser 333 Capital in the thick of WICET’s $3b refi

    While small parcels of WICET debt have changed hands, so far there isn’t a dominant player on track to building a big exposure.

    • Sarah Thompson, Kanika Sood and Emma Rapaport
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    June 2023

    ESG

    Keeping AGL off page one, Longo’s warning, and other tips on ESG

    AGL chairwoman Patricia McKenzie joked that one of her new KPIs is keeping the company off the front page of “The Australian Financial Review”. She was one of numerous key industry leaders at the AFR ESG Summit this week.

    Farmers protesting the construction of the VNI West transmission project in Victoria.

    Energy transition is trapped in ‘approval quicksand’

    The clean energy transmission approvals process has been so dismal that fresh thinking is needed.

    • Updated
    • Ben Potter
    Penny Barker, group head of sustainability and climate change, Ampol Australia, at The Australian Financial Review ESG Summit on Monday.

    ‘Just transition’ critical in achieving net-zero

    Supporting low-income customers as the economy shifts to net zero is the next frontier for companies implementing ESG strategies, executives say.

    • Updated
    • Ben Potter and Lucy Dean
    NSW Climate Change, Energy and Environment Minister Penny Sharpe in conversation with The Australian Financial Review’s Jacob Greber at the Summit.

    ESG reality bites on power bills, boards and the Voice

    When polarisation is a problem in many Western democracies, Australian business encouraging respect for political diversity and disagreeing civilly is a worthy ESG outcome in itself.

    • The AFR View
    Kate Pounder, Deputy Chair, St John Ambulance ACT, CEO, The Tech Council of Australia, urged tech companies to encourage more women into senior positions.

    Forced labour, mass killings and hacking: the other focus for ESG

    The cries for greater diversity are getting louder, while companies need to weigh the ethical dilemmas of a global supply chain.

    • Aaron Weinman