Sustainability Now

MSCI ESG Research LLC
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Jun 11, 2021 • 18min

The ESG Weekly: Mines Need Biodiversity and HSBC's Legal Carbon Reduction Requirement

Biodiversity has finally become mainstreamed, and the world is better understanding what its destruction means for our ongoing concern as a species. Many industries play a significant role in global biodiversity loss, and the mining industry is one of the big ones. We look at how mining is impacting biodiversity and where mining is impacting biodiversity. Then we provide you with another proxy season update with the bombshell resolution at HSBC that commits the bank to phasing out coal-fired power and thermal coal mining financing by 2040 that passed at 99%. And that makes it legally binding.
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Jun 3, 2021 • 15min

The ESG Weekly: No Change for Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion

After the murder of George Floyd, protest and unrest rocked the world as people gathered to express outrage at systemic inequality. In the corporate world, many companies made big promises in the name of advancing racial equality in the workplace. A year later, we revisit those promises and see if there have been any advances in the disclosure of workplace racial and ethnic diversity. And discuss why better transparency about inequality in the workplace is so important.
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May 28, 2021 • 19min

The ESG Weekly: ExxonMobil Loses Two Board Seats

There has been a paradigm shift in the oil industry. An activist investor campaigns against Exxon's preparedness for climate change and wins two board seats because of it; A Dutch court orders Royal Dutch Shell to cut its emissions; and shareholders for Chevron and ConocoPhillips vote to have to the companies report on their scope 3 emissions. We discuss what this all means for the future of the energy industry.
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May 21, 2021 • 19min

The ESG Weekly: Telecoms in Myanmar and Powerships in South Africa

A military coup in Myanmar has left Telenor with a complex stakeholder balancing act. Meanwhile Eskom looks for its deus ex machina in the form of five floating powerstations.
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May 14, 2021 • 23min

The ESG Weekly: Modern Slavery and Native Americans & Mining

More regulations have been enacted to try and stop the use of modern slavery and coerced labor in the global supply chains. We discuss what companies are affected by these regulations and what they say about companies' responsibility to prevent its use in their supply chains. And then we discuss how mining needed for renewable energy is encroaching on Native American Nations.
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May 5, 2021 • 27min

The ESG Weekly: SPECIAL Proxy Season Episode

This week’s episode is a special five-person roundtable on this year’s proxy season! It’s a long one but full of good knowledge about the current proxy season highlights and emerging trends. We go through how companies are reacting to the current environmental and social issues, and how investors are trying to keep them accountable.
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Apr 30, 2021 • 21min

The ESG Weekly: India's COVID‐19 Maelstrom and the Fine Print of NDCs

As a vicious second wave hits India, we talk to Ravi Sankar about the conditions on the ground in Mumbai and Pune and the resilience of our colleagues based there. Then we rifle through the contents of the US' recent climate pledge and confront the devil lurking in the details of carbon budgets
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Apr 27, 2021 • 21min

The ESG Weekly BONUS: Still waiting for ESG to strut its stuff at the earnings call? 2021 may be a turning point

Joined by the CECP's Brian Tomlinson and our own Sam Sue Ping, we look at how companies are taking a firmer step onto the ESG stage. Executives and directors are starting to talk a serious game. But can they do it where it matters ‐ in the haloed earnings call? For more, check out Brian’s paper here: https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3607921
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Apr 23, 2021 • 21min

The ESG Weekly: Earth Day For the Capital Markets and China

Earth Day was this Thursday and in its spirit, companies and countries have announced net‐zero plans as a climate summit began in the US. We explore a new tool we are using to track the progress the global economy is making toward a low‐carbon future. An important player in lowering our collective carbon emissions is China. And we explore what China is trying to do to limit its carbon footprint.
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Apr 16, 2021 • 18min

The ESG Weekly: A Union at Amazon and France Bans Flights

Amazon workers have voted down a union drive at the company's Alabama warehouse. The victory was decisive, and it the loss signals a change in the corporate labor market. We discuss what that paradigm shift is, as well as some good old discussion about Amazon as an economic force. Then we discuss the move by the French government to try and ban short‐haul flights in order to cut the country's carbon footprint.

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