Disclosures in ESG Management
ESG disclosures are the information and reports that companies and organizations provide on their environmental, social, and governance (ESG) performance. These disclosures offer insights into how a company manages and addresses various ESG-related issues.
Disclosure requirements
- Authority document
- An authority document is a regulatory framework or standard that outlines what an organization should report in its ESG disclosures. It acts as a reference point for compliance and reporting. Examples include GRI (Global Reporting Initiative), SASB (Sustainability Accounting Standards Board), and CSRD (Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive).
- Citations
- Citations are the individual reporting requirements or metrics defined within an authority document that organizations respond to in their ESG reports, often with quantitative or qualitative data. Each authority document can have multiple citations, forming a one-to-many relationship. An example of a citation from the GRI is “Energy consumption from renewable sources” or from the SASB is “Total energy consumed (TCSI 220).”
Importance of ESG disclosures
- Transparency and accountability: ESG disclosures enhance transparency, enabling stakeholders such as investors, customers, employees, and the public to understand a company's performance in key ESG areas.
- Risk management: Companies that disclose ESG information can better identify and manage potential risks associated with environmental, social, and governance factors.
- Investor decision-making: ESG disclosures provide investors with information to assess a company's sustainability, ethical practices, and long-term viability.
- Corporate reputation: Positive ESG performance can enhance a company's reputation and brand value. Conversely, poor ESG practices can lead to reputational damage, affecting customer and investor confidence.
- Regulatory compliance: Some regions have regulatory requirements for companies to disclose ESG information. Compliance with these regulations is essential to avoid legal and financial consequences.
- Stakeholder engagement: ESG disclosures demonstrate to stakeholders a company's commitment to responsible business practices. Engaging with stakeholders on ESG issues can lead to improved relationships and collaboration.
Narrative disclosures
Narrative disclosures are created using the Microsoft 365 for ServiceNow Reporting add-in. When you create a narrative disclosure, you have the option to store the disclosure either on Microsoft SharePoint or on your local system. Microsoft SharePoint integration in narrative disclosures is available starting with ESG Management version 18.0.3 and the Zurich release.
The document that is generated when you create a narrative disclosure can be opened using Microsoft Word and the data points that are configured can be inserted in the document using the ServiceNow Reporting add-in.
If any change is made in the data that is inserted, an email is automatically sent to the owners of the disclosure data notifying them that the data has changed and that they must refresh the Microsoft Word document.
- Automatically generated documents are considered the primary document. You can also attach secondary documents as part of the disclosure process.
- Multiple collaborators can contribute to create the disclosure.
- You can define templates for each type of disclosure report. For information about report types, see Types of disclosure reports.
- Each disclosure can be approved by one or more approvers.
- To create narrative disclosures on remote storage, you must install and activate the sn_docs_onedrive plugin.
- Setup Microsoft OneDrive for Document Services
- Connecting to Microsoft Sharepoint [KB1646310] article in the Now Support Knowledge Base.