SEC’s Lee looks to boards’ role in ESG (IR Magazine)

Commissioner eyes diversity and expertise to make the most of opportunities

Boards are central to companies addressing ESG issues and should look to enhanced diversity and expertise to fulfill this role in a positive way, according to SEC member Allison Herren Lee.

Lee explained that despite some progress, evidence suggests directors have been slow to understand the need to integrate climate and other ESG issues into governance practices. She cited a 2019 report as finding that only 6 percent of US director respondents picked climate change as a focus for the coming year and that 56 percent thought investor attention on sustainability issues was overblown.

‘The world’s largest asset managers and other institutional investors have been direct and vocal in conveying that they consider ESG material to their decision-making,’ Lee said in a speech earlier this week to the Society for Corporate Governance. ‘No matter the view of regulatory involvement in climate and ESG disclosures, directors must reckon with this growing consensus and growing demand from the shareholders who elect them.’

https://www.irmagazine.com/esg/secs-lee-looks-boards-role-esg

Author: Christopher K. Merker, Ph.D., CFA

Christopher K. Merker, PhD, CFA, is a director with Private Asset Management at Robert W. Baird & Co. He holds a PhD in investment governance and fiduciary effectiveness from Marquette University, where he has taught the course “Sustainable Finance” since 2009. Executive director of Fund Governance Analytics (FGA), an ESG research partnership with Marquette University, he is a member of the CFA Institute ESG Working Group, an international committee currently exploring ESG standards, publishes the blog, Sustainable Finance, which covers current topics around governance and sustainability in investing, and is co-author of the book, The Trustee Governance Guide: The Five Imperatives of 21st Century Investing.