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The role corporate boards need to play in ESG reporting

Environmental, social, and governance (ESG) reporting has become a necessary part for logistics company corporate boards to address, especially in today’s environmentally and socially conscious world.

Ever since the U.S Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) proposed rules governing climate-related disclosures from all public companies on March 21, environmental, social, and governance (ESG) reporting has become a necessary part for logistics company corporate boards to address, especially in today’s environmentally and socially conscious world.  

Whether it’s understanding how the logistics company is combatting climate change, how diverse the logistics company’s leadership is, or what the logistics company’s corporate policies are, investors, customers, and even their own employees want transparency into the ESG impacts, both good and bad, of the logistics company’s activities and their sustainability initiatives.  


However, to fully understand the standards logistics company corporate boards need to play in navigating their ESG reporting, we first need to understand what’s wrong with the current system. 

The state of ESG reporting today 

When logistics companies disclose ESG reporting in their annual reports, proxy advisory firms, such as Institutional Shareholder Services (ISS), take that information and basically put it on a rating system, where all of the logistics company’s ESG efforts are graded on an ABCD+- level. Some proxy advisors including ISS also assess companies for overall positive or negative social impact and assign them a score. For example, just by visiting ISS’s ESG Gateway1, you can see that ISS assigns United Parcel Service (UPS) a “C” ESG rating and was judged to have a +0.4 limited positive social impact. FedEx’s ESG Corporate Rating is a C- and is judged to have a –2 limited negative social impact. Proxy advisors rarely delve deep into the reasoning for companies’ ratings which poses a challenge for investors attempting to ascertain which companies are the most environmentally or socially conscious. For Board of Directors at logistics companies, this challenge is even more significant. Because proxy advisors are opaque about their standards for obtaining high ESG marks, it is very difficult to know which factors are most critical. Case in point, UPS and FedEx have relatively similar corporate diversity, pay levels, and operations however they have significantly different ESG and social impact scores from ISS.   

Because proxy advisors’ standards are so opaque, a cottage industry has formed of ESG Consultants who help companies achieve higher ESG rankings. The challenge is, proxy advisors like ISS also offer such services. Many, including the SEC, have taken issue with this business model because of the potential for conflicts of interest.  

 This resonates similarly with what happened more than 20 years ago between energy-trading company Enron Corp. and accounting firm Arthur Andersen LLP, as Enron kept debt off its balance sheet when reporting annual financial earnings, thus making them a subject of a federal investigation, and sparking the conversation for a new set of standards to maintain financial integrity.2 Today’s ESG reporting mirrors this situation, as companies may try to do anything they can to earn a better grade and impress their investors. Shareholders and stakeholders want to see credible environmental and social change through a new set of ESG standards, but the current ESG system needs to first be resolved.  

What needs to change? 

With the current ESG evaluation system seemingly more focused on ratings than bringing about change, proxy advisors issuing these ratings need to consider reforming their organizations to focus on either ESG ratings or ESG consulting, as both operations create the challenges we are seeing with companies trying to leverage the system for their own beneficial evaluations, instead of actually identifying true change throughout the logistics industry. Just like the Enron story, consulting firms were helping the company boards prop themselves with false reporting, leaving shareholders to hold the bag of worthless stocks and company valuations at the end of the day. 

Even though ISS is not the only proponent of ESG ratings, proxy advisors use their own methodologies to rank and score logistics companies, in which the reports produced are at times rife with inaccuracies and ultimately sows confusion in the markets. These inaccuracies then consume the bandwidth of logistics companies as they scramble to address misstatements that surface in these reports – taking valuable time that could be much better spent on actually improving ESG performance.3 

Basically, the people at the shareholder and stakeholder level, who actually do want to see logistics companies adhere to a set of ESG standards, are the losers in the current system. Instead of having the transparency of logistics companies who are actually responsible in terms of ESG, investors are essentially in this conflict-of-interest system where ESG ratings mean nothing, unless change is in fact taking place. 

The new ESG standards for logistics companies

When thinking of the standards logistics corporate boards need to focus on in their ESG reporting, there needs to be checkbox standards across each environmental, social and governance branch that the logistics company reports, where any investor can publicly verify that reporting themself. Without transparency, the system will continue to hurt companies that are supporting ESG goals while benefiting those willing to “game” the system. A transparent system will instead give ESG-conscious investors a leg up in understanding their investments while benefiting companies truly committed to doing the right thing.  

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