Post by sweetpea33 on Jan 23, 2024 22:21:56 GMT -5
Central America we have an abundance of hydroelectric potential, in addition to wind and solar. In the Caribbean, it is mainly solar power with moderate wind potential. Moreover, with the development of new technologies, especially battery storage, we see many more opportunities. The above Q&A is an edited excerpt from the Bard MBA’s Sept. 4 The Impact Report podcast. The Impact Report brings together students and faculty in Bard’s MBA in Sustainability program with leaders in business, sustainability and social entrepreneurship.
The rise of social metrics in ESG reporting For years, companies have struggled to report on their social impact in a financially meaningful way. That's changing. By Aman Singh March 11, 2021 Social metrics Shutterstock Reprinted from GreenFin Weekly, a free weekly newsletter. Subscribe here. For years, companies have focused voluntary Email List social reporting on metrics that are, let’s say, comfortable: government-mandated data, such as occupational health and safety or certain hiring metrics, that has been measured and managed for years.
Add a few more nuanced data points, such as the results of an annual employee engagement survey or number of volunteer hours, and you get a bit more of a company’s approach to internal and community engagement. However, these data points — splintered and unwieldy — rarely have given investors the metrics needed to confidently evaluate risk and impact. Now, as we make our way slowly past the worst of the pandemic and face a consistent and ongoing call to action for racial justice and equity, things finally might be shifting. For years, companies have struggled to report on their social impact in a financially meaningful way — and taken solace in reporting efforts vs.
The rise of social metrics in ESG reporting For years, companies have struggled to report on their social impact in a financially meaningful way. That's changing. By Aman Singh March 11, 2021 Social metrics Shutterstock Reprinted from GreenFin Weekly, a free weekly newsletter. Subscribe here. For years, companies have focused voluntary Email List social reporting on metrics that are, let’s say, comfortable: government-mandated data, such as occupational health and safety or certain hiring metrics, that has been measured and managed for years.
Add a few more nuanced data points, such as the results of an annual employee engagement survey or number of volunteer hours, and you get a bit more of a company’s approach to internal and community engagement. However, these data points — splintered and unwieldy — rarely have given investors the metrics needed to confidently evaluate risk and impact. Now, as we make our way slowly past the worst of the pandemic and face a consistent and ongoing call to action for racial justice and equity, things finally might be shifting. For years, companies have struggled to report on their social impact in a financially meaningful way — and taken solace in reporting efforts vs.