Top-quality environmental, social and governance (ESG) disclosure is crucial to attracting further investment into the UK’s oil and gas industry, a report from the North Sea Transition Authority (NSTA) says.
Many of the 29 licensees analyzed by the NSTA are following good practice across key areas of ESG reporting and are on the right track, though there is still plenty of room for improvement.
More than half of the companies now link executive’s variable pay with key ESG performance indicators, such as emissions reduction. This is an effective tool for hitting targets and should be adopted even more widely.
The majority (62%) are publishing ESG data in easy-to-find, central locations on their websites. The use of “data centers,” one of the key recommendations in the NSTA’s inaugural ESG Disclosure Report in 2022, promotes consistency and makes it easier to compare companies’ performance.
New regulatory standards issued by the International Sustainability Standards Board and requirements under the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive are also helping to drive up the consistency and transparency of licensees’ ESG reports.
The NSTA remains focused on helping industry by setting up a dedicated taskforce, hosting roundtables with key stakeholders, and highlighting the importance of robust and consistent ESG disclosure—all actions that have contributed to the progress seen across industry.
The new ESG Disclosure Report contains a series of recommendations to ensure progress continues, including fostering closer links between ESG teams and management and providing greater transparency on energy transition investments.
ESG experts generally agree that environmental considerations form the bedrock of the sector’s ESG reporting, with climate-change disclosure the biggest factor in determining whether a company is an industry leader or lagging behind.
While a number of companies are identifying climate-related risks, some still do not use internationally recognized frameworks—for example, those provided by the Task Force on Climate-Related Financial Disclosures and Carbon Disclosure Project—to guide their work and ensure they are sharing enough of the right information.
On social matters, licensees performed well on human-resources-related areas, such as diversity and inclusion and health and safety and training. Operators submit data about their supply chain engagements, including payment terms and local content, to the NSTA confidentially, but they would enhance the quality of their ESG disclosure if they put this information in the public domain proactively.
Disclosure was strong across well-established, governance-related themes, such as business ethics and risk management, though payments to governments and political donations could be more transparent.
Read the report here.