Giving Compass' Take:
- Taiwan and Asia Pacific Sustainability Reports Analysis indicated a large decrease in reporting performance from last year compared to the years before the pandemic.
- This regression may prompt companies to rethink sustainability goals and reporting. In what other ways is COVID-19 impacting CSR efforts from companies?
- Learn about revamping corporate social responsibility to fight COVID-19.
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The biggest companies in the Asia Pacific region got worse at reporting their sustainability performance in 2020, and improved in only one area — human rights — according to a report by Taipei-based consultancy CSRone.
CSRone’s report measured the sustainability reporting performance of the biggest publicly listed firms in 10 countries in the region, analysing how extensively they tracked their environmental, social and governance (ESG) performance, stuck to targets, and other factors.
The study, titled Taiwan and Asia Pacific Sustainability Reports Analysis, found that while reporting improved from 2018 and 2019, it dipped last year, with the largest regression being how corporates reported on efforts to care for their employees.
Last year’s disclosure decline was particularly marked in India, the weakest performer in the study, but also fell in Thailand, Singapore, South Korea, Hong Kong, and China.
Disruptions from the Covid-19 pandemic may have forced firms to rethink their sustainability goal-setting or reallocate resources to higher priority areas, such as taking care of employees or their communities, he told Eco-Business.
Read the full article about rethinking sustainability amid COVID-19 by Robin Hicks at Eco-Business.