Politicization is ‘deconstructing’ ESG—and the ‘E’ is winning, argues former presidential candidate

Good morning.

The political backlash against ESG has clearly had its effect on business sustainability efforts, at least in the U.S. New corporate commitments to climate programs have slowed substantially, and the already committed are doing less to tout their efforts. Yet I continue to be impressed by the number of companies that have rebuilt corporate strategies around the climate challenge.

I spoke Friday with John Delaney, executive chairman of Forbright Bank, a Maryland-based bank that has put decarbonization at the core of its business. Delaney founded two successful financial firms before being elected to Congress in 2012 and then running for the Democratic presidential nomination in 2020, so he has a unique perspective on the interactions of business and government. I asked him how he thought business was responding to the political backlash against ESG.

“People weren’t very disciplined about this. A lot of businesses did it for hype and didn’t really define what their objectives were. That is really the problem with ESG. It is a term we don’t use.

“The last two years of politicization have in some ways been healthy because it is forcing people to defend the positions they are taking. They are being forced to make the business case. It is forcing a deconstruction of ESG. And E to me is the clearest business case you can make.

“The energy transition is hard. It will have winners and losers. It will have starts and stops. It is not going to unfold in a linear way. It’s messy. And we are going through that messiness.”

I made a similar argument Friday morning, at a sustainable business forum at NYU Stern, saying business had moved from greenwashing to a kind of woke whispering. Tensie Whelan, who runs the NYU Stern Center for Sustainable Business, presented some interesting research that supported the notion that progress continues, showing Fortune 100 companies had built up substantial ESG expertise on their boards over the last five years. Of the 100, 89 boards had ESG committees in 2023, compared to just 22 in 2018. And 43% of directors had relevant ESG credentials, up from just 29% in 2018.

By the way, Forbright Bank this morning will announce a $250,000 donation to the National Park Foundation, to support expansion of in-park EV charging infrastructure, wetland restoration, and other climate-friendly policies. You read it first here.

Other news below.


Alan Murray
@alansmurray

alan.murray@fortune.com

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This edition of CEO Daily was curated by Nicholas Gordon. 

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