ESG Metrics and Reporting

Measuring good investments.

Understand how ESG data, audits, insights for smarter investing.

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Introduction ESG Metrics and Reporting 

As ESG investing becomes more mainstream, the need for accurate, consistent, and meaningful data has never been greater. 

ESG metrics and reporting help investors understand how companies manage key non-financial risks and opportunities—like climate exposure, labor practices, and ethical leadership. 

This lesson covers the most common ESG frameworks, how data is used and verified, the challenges of inconsistent reporting, and how investors integrate ESG information into smart decision-making.

Common ESG Frameworks and Standards 

Common ESG frameworks make company reports easier to compare. 

GRI supplies broad sustainability disclosures for all stakeholders. SASB (now under the ISSB) offers industry‑specific metrics aimed at investors. 

TCFD asks firms to explain how climate risks and opportunities affect finances. 

Ratings providers such as MSCI draw on these standards when scoring companies. 

Aligned frameworks improve data consistency, enable benchmarking, and give investors clearer insight into ESG performance.

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ESG Materiality Assessment 

An ESG materiality assessment helps companies identify which ESG issues matter most to their business and stakeholders. 

These priorities can vary by industry—energy firms may focus on emissions, while tech companies emphasize data privacy. 

Companies often survey employees, customers, and investors to guide this process. 

The result helps align ESG efforts with financial impact, regulatory focus, and long-term strategy, giving investors clearer insight into what truly drives performance.

Alex Analyzes ESG Scores 

Alex is comparing two tech firms—CloudNova and ByteAxis—for a potential investment. 

CloudNova receives an AA ESG rating from MSCI but only a 52 from Sustainalytics. 

ByteAxis scores 65 on Sustainalytics and a BBB from MSCI. Wondering why the scores differ, Alex examines the methodology. 

He sees that MSCI weighs governance and board independence more heavily, while Sustainalytics prioritizes environmental risk. 

This prompts him to dig deeper into each company’s actual ESG practices.

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Quantitative vs. Qualitative Data 

ESG reporting pairs hard numbers with rich explanations, giving investors a balanced view of corporate impact. 

Quantitative metrics track carbon emissions per unit of revenue, total energy use, water withdrawal, waste recycled, workforce‑diversity percentages, and injury rates—figures that can be benchmarked across industries and over time. 

Qualitative insights—leadership ethics, board values, supplier standards, employee culture, and stakeholder engagement—add context to those statistics.

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