Companies that invest heavily in sustainable business practices boast a
superior long-term financial performance compared to those that neglect
environmental issues.
That is the key finding of a major new report from investment firm
Sustainable Asset
Management (SAM) and auditors
PricewaterhouseCoopers, which affirmed that
there is a "positive strategically significant correlation between corporate
sustainability and financial performance".
Writing in the foreword of the report, SAM asset management CEO Reto Ringger
and PricewaterhouseCoopers CEO Samuel A DiPiazza Jr said that the the research
clearly "indicates that sustainability considerations are an integral part of
corporate financial performance".
The
Sustainability
Yearbook 2008 is the result of SAM's analysis of 57 sectors and 367
firms originally chosen from a universe of the 2,500 largest companies in the
Dow Jones Global Index. A best-in-class approach was used to target the top
seven companies in each sector, expected to create above average shareholder
value.
SAM then used a raft of metrics to assess their environmental and financial
performance and found that sustainability strategies had a significant impact on
"the cost of external financing, return on invested capital, sales growth and
the fade-rate of a firm's competitive advantage".
Consequently, the report argued that the presence of sophisticated corporate
sustainability strategies is a good indication of a company's financial
prospects. "Firms that adhere to sustainability principles should outperform
those that do not, because they prioritise long-term investment opportunities,"
it explained.
It also warned that failure to address green concerns could reduce an
investor's confidence in a stock, potentially reducing the share price.
The research found that growing numbers of companies have shifted from a
defensive to proactive attitude towards the environment in the past year as they
have realised arguments that sustainability diminishes a firm's financial
resources are outdated. This realisation has been driven by concerns that
regulators will increasingly impose taxes and fines on unsustainable companies
as well as the recognition of potential savings for green businesses through
energy conservation, the report said.
The report also urged firms to take a bolder approach to their sustainability
strategies, arguing that while simple initiatives such as reducing packaging and
encouraging recycling are important, "the true winners will be those who think
outside the box about the business models required to develop new products and
services for society’s evolving needs".
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