ESG - VL University https://visuallease.com/vluniversity/course-category/esg/ Tue, 16 Jan 2024 17:18:07 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.3 https://visuallease.com/vluniversity/wp-content/uploads/sites/5/2021/10/cropped-VL-ONLY-onWHT-1-32x32.png ESG - VL University https://visuallease.com/vluniversity/course-category/esg/ 32 32 ESG Inputs: Energy and Emissions https://visuallease.com/vluniversity/course/esg-inputs-energy-and-emissions/ https://visuallease.com/vluniversity/course/esg-inputs-energy-and-emissions/#respond Tue, 30 May 2023 16:06:20 +0000 https://visuallease.com/vluniversity/?post_type=lp_course&p=537 The post ESG Inputs: Energy and Emissions appeared first on VL University.

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COURSE ID

8.4

COURSE DESCRIPTION

Welcome to ESG steward input training with VLU. This course is designed to give you a deeper understanding of ESG steward inputs, for Energy and Emissions standards within the Visual Lease Platform.

By the end of the course, you should be able to understand the components of ESG, how to input data for Scope 1 and Scope 2 standards within the ESG Steward, and understand the different fuel types and how to determine which input to use.

Transcription:

Course Intro

Welcome to ESG steward input training with VLU. This course is designed to give you a deeper understanding of ESG steward inputs, for Energy and Emissions standards within the Visual Lease Platform.

By the end of the course, you should be able to:
– Understand the components of ESG
– How to input data for Scope 1 and Scope 2 standards within the ESG Steward
– Understand the different fuel types and how to determine which input to use.
Please Take a moment to review the agenda. If you are looking for a specific topic, feel free to jump to the corresponding timestamp.

Topic 1: What is ESG?

In this video we will discuss what ESG is, the different groups associated with ESG, and how Visual Lease’s ESG Steward will be tied into the standards.

ESG stands for Environmental, Social, and Governance. ESG refers to a set of principles for a company’s behavior used by socially conscious investors to screen potential investments.

These new principles will help investors see a more holistic view of a company. ESG will provide company responsibility and accountability to socially conscious policies. Essentially, ESG will give investors better insight into how the company operates instead of solely based on financial outcomes.

As mentioned before, ESG is comprised of three components.

Starting with the G in ESG, we have Governance, which tends to deal with
• Executive compensation
• Shareholder Rights
• Takeover Defense
• Staggered Boards
• Independent Directors
• Board Elections and Political contributions

The S in ESG is the Social Component will track the following
• Discrimination
• Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion
• Human rights
• Community Relations
And Animal Rights
Visual Lease ESG Steward will focus on the Environmental principle as it ties very well into the rest of the Visual Lease platform.

The ESG Steward will focus on the environmental tracking and impact of an organization using GRI Standards 302-306. This means the Steward will focus on data inputs for things such as the following:

• Carbon emissions
• Energy consumption
• Waste disposal
• and Water Usage

Please note: The ESG Steward is intended to track your organization’s actual performance and impact on various environmental factors and allow you to perform analysis on the data. It is not meant to be an “all-in-one” ESG compliance tool, an aggregator reporting tool, or a forecasting tool that predicts the impact of environmental events on corporate financial statements.

Topic 2 –Energy (Scope 2)

In this video, we will discuss how to access the Scope 2 module within the ESG steward. Scope 2 deals Energy consumption, which is the amount of energy produced minus the amount of energy consumed.

When energy, or in this case, electricity is consumed (the input), an output will take place in terms of creating different greenhouse gas emissions. Both energy inputs and outputs will need to be reported on.

Before determining the output amounts, it is important to take into consideration the following input types.:
• Energy Consumed
• Amount of heating or cooling consumed
• Amount of steam consumed

It is also important to consider the following for energy inputs:
• Is the energy a renewable or non-renewable source
o Ie – solar panels that generate energy for the building vs. buying it from a utility company
• Amount of energy consumed and sold back
o Ie- solar panels generate excess electricity and its sold back to the utility company.

Total energy consumption is the sum of these inputs, plus any self-generated energy, minus energy that is sold.

Different types of energy will create different types of greenhouse gasses. In order to better streamline and report, there is a formula that calculates the different greenhouse emissions into a CO2 equivalent, which is in metric tonnes. The EPA (in the United States) determines how much CO2 is emitted per megawatt hour of electricity.

Before we get started, please note that if ESG has not been purchased for your company, the ESG windows described in this training will be unavailable.

To get started, open a lease record. For this training, we will select ESG from the main menu, then select a Record ID from the list to open it.

Once the record is open you will see there is a new tab option called ESG, located here. Below that will be your ESG options. Select Scope 2 to open the ESG Scope 2 page.

You can filter your entry results by selecting a specified date range from the drop-down or a custom date range by entering the dates, here. To reset your date filters, simply click the reset button here.

Before adding an electricity entry, you must select the energy grid the record is located in.

The USA is broken into 28 different electrical grid sections, each with a different CO2e conversion rate. For example, the Northwestern portion of the United States has many hydroelectric dams, causing a lower greenhouse gas emission vs. an area that utilizes coal-powered plants. Both of these regions will have different conversion rates.

To change your energy grid, select Manage Energy Grid, here. A pop-up window will open where you can select the new grid location from the drop-down list.

Please note: Only one energy grid can be assigned for each lease location. Changing your grid location can have an impact on your GHG Conversion Calculations.

Next, click Add Electricity Entry by clicking here.

A pop-up window will display where you will input your values. Begin with the date. Then enter the cost, the electricity value, and the value’s unit of measurement.

Here, you can upload any files pertaining to the entry, like an electric bill for example.

Next, you can enter any notes about the entry, here.

Once all data has been entered, you can click save and next, which will allow you to add an additional entry, or click save, which will bring you back to the ESG Steward page.
Once saved, your entries will display here.

The columns will include the date, electricity type, monetary amount (or cost), Input amount, Unit of Measurement (or UOM), converted Standard Amount and UOM, converted heat content (mmBTU), and one or all of the following greenhouse gas emissions depending on the GHG Output selected:

• CO2 (kg/mmBtu)
• CH4
• N20
• Or the default selection, CO2e or CO2 Equivalent

If CO2 Equivalent is selected, as you see here, you will see the greenhouse gas emissions and their unconverted outputs, located here.

Here, you will see the total CO2 equivalent for all greenhouse gas emissions for this location-based entry.

Please note: Each portion of the greenhouse gases listed in the table goes through a conversion to equal the total amount of CO2 equivalent for the entry. Because the greenhouse gases listed do not display their converted portion of the CO2e, adding these numbers together will not equal the total CO2e for the entry.

On the right of each row you will see your edit and delete icons and a kebab to display the history of actions performed for that event.

Topic 3 Emissions (Scope 1)

In this video, we will discuss how to access the Scope 1 module within the ESG steward. Scope 1 deals with GRI 305, which is Emissions. Emissions are the output of a specific type of fuel that is burned.

Before we get started, please note that if ESG Steward has not been purchased, the ESG windows described in this training will be unavailable.

To get started, open a lease record, in this training, we will select ESG from the main menu, then select a Record ID to open it.

Once the record is open, you will see there is a new tab option called ESG, located here. You platform administrator will have created a conversion chart for you to reference, which can be accessed here.

Below are your ESG options. Select the Scope 1 subtab to open the module.

You can filter your entry results by selecting a specified date range from the drop-down or a custom date range by entering the dates here. To reset your date filters, simply click the reset button here

Below the date filters, you will see sections for Natural Gas, Petroleum Products, and Mobile Fuel.

In the Natural Gas section, you will need select the GHG Output type from the list, here.

Next, you will need to add a Natural Gas entry by clicking here.

A pop-up window will display where you input your values. Begin with the date. Then enter the cost, the Natural Gas Value, and the value’s unit of measurement.

Here, you can upload any files pertaining to the entry, like a natural gas bill, for example. Once the file is uploaded, select the document type from the drop-down list, here.

Next, you can enter any notes about the entry here.

Once all data has been entered, you can click save and next, which will allow you to add an additional entry, or click save, which will bring you back to the ESG Steward page.

Once saved, your entries will display in the table, here.

The columns will include the date, petroleum product type, monetary amount (or cost), Input amount, the Unit of Measurement (or UOM), the converted standard amount and UOM, the converted Heat Content (mmbtu), and one or all of the following greenhouse gas emissions depending on the GHG Output selected:
• CO2 (kg/mmBtu)
• CH4
• N20
• Or the default selection, CO2e or CO2 Equivalent

Note that the selections made in the GHG Output will impact the table data that is displayed. For this training, we will select the default CO2e, or Carbon Dioxide equivalent. This means whatever type of greenhouse gas emissions created by the amount of consumed natural gas, will be converted into the CO2 Equivalent.

When CO2 Equivalent is selected, like you see here, you will see the greenhouse the gas emissions produced and their unconverted outputs, located here.

You will then see the total CO2 equivalent for all greenhouse gas emissions for the entry, here.

Please note: Each portion of the greenhouse gases listed in the table goes through a conversion that will equal the total amount of CO2 equivalent for the entry. Because the greenhouse gases listed do not display their converted portion of the CO2e, adding these numbers that you see in the table will not equal the total CO2 equivalent for the entry.

Next, any attachments will be shown here (such as an electricity bill), and any notes regarding the entry.

On the right of each row you will see your edit and delete icons.
Petroleum products consist of stationery products that burn a specific fuel type. For petroleum products, the burned fuel will produce a specific type of greenhouse gas emission. The conversion for the fuel type to CO2 equivalent will be different.

You can add a Petroleum Product entry by clicking here.

A pop-up window will display where you input your values. Begin by selecting the Petroleum Product type from the drop-down list. It’s important to note that the conversion rate to CO2 equivalent will differ depending on the selected product type.

Also note that fuel types between Petroleum and Mobile Fuel may be the same. For example diesel fuel may be used for a truck, but that will be reported in the mobile fuel section. The same diesel fuel used in a stationary generator, should be reported as a petroleum entry.

Next, enter the date. Then enter the Monetary Amount, the Petroleum Product type amount, and the product type’s unit of measurement.

Here, you can upload any files pertaining to the entry, like a fuel bill, for example. Once the file is uploaded, select the document type from the drop-down list, here.

Next, you can enter any notes about the entry here.

Once all data has been entered, you can click save and next, which will allow you to add an additional entry, or click save, which will bring you back to the ESG Steward page.

Once saved, your entries will display here.

The columns will include the date, petroleum product type, monetary amount (or cost), Input amount, Unit of Measurement (or UOM), the converted standard amount and the standard amount UOM, the converted Heat Content (mmbtu), and one of the following depending on the GHG Output selected:
• CO2 (kg/mmBtu)
• CH4
• N20
• Or the default selection, CO2e or CO2 Equivalent

Note that the selections made in the GHG Output will impact the table data that is displayed. For this training, we will select the default CO2e, or Carbon Dioxide equivalent. This means whatever type of greenhouse gas emissions created by the combusted Petroleum, will be converted into the CO2 Equivalent.

When CO2 Equivalent is selected, like you see here, you will see the greenhouse the gas emissions produced and their unconverted outputs, located here.

You will then see the total CO2 equivalent for all greenhouse gas emissions for the entry, here.

Please note: Each portion of the greenhouse gases listed in the table goes through a conversion that will equal the total amount of CO2 equivalent for the entry. Because the greenhouse gases listed do not display their converted portion of the CO2e, adding these numbers that you see in the table will not equal the total CO2 equivalent for the entry.

Next, any attachments will be shown here (such as an electricity bill), and any notes regarding the entry.

On the right of each row you will see your edit and delete icons.

Mobile fuels consist of fuel types for moving vehicles, cars, trucks, farm equipment, etc… In general, the fuel types consist of electric, gasoline, diesel, and biodiesel and the conversion rate to CO2 equivalent will differ depending on the selected fuel type.

To create a mobile fuel entry, click here.

A pop-up window will display where you will input your values. Begin by selecting the Mobile Fuel type from the drop-down list. It’s important to note that the conversion rate to CO2 equivalent will be different depending on the fuel type selected.

Next, enter the date. Then enter the Monetary Amount, the fuel amount, and the fuel amount’s unit of measurement. Please note the UOM values will be different for electric vehicles vs. gasoline, diesel, or biodiesel vehicles.

Here, you can upload any files pertaining to the entry, like a gasoline bill, for example. Once the file is uploaded, select the document type from the drop-down list, here.

Next, you can enter any notes about the entry here.

Once all data has been entered, you can click save and next, which will allow you to add an additional entry, or click save, which will bring you back to the ESG Steward page.

Once saved, your entries will display here.

The columns will include the date, mobile fuel type, monetary amount (or cost), Input amount, Inputted Unit of Measurement (or UOM), standard amount and UOM, the Heat Content (mmbtu), and one of the following depending on the GHG Output selected:
• CO2 (kg/mmBtu)
• CH4
• N20
• Or the default selection, CO2e or CO2 Equivalent

Note that the selections made in the GHG Output will impact the table data that is displayed. For this training, we will select the default CO2e, or Carbon Dioxide equivalent. This means whatever type of greenhouse gas emissions created by the combusted Mobile fuel, will be converted into the CO2 Equivalent.

When CO2 Equivalent is selected, like you see here, you will see the greenhouse the gas emissions produced and their unconverted outputs, located here.

You will then see the total CO2 equivalent for all greenhouse gas emissions for the entry, here.

Please note: Each portion of the greenhouse gases listed in the table goes through a conversion that will equal the total amount of CO2 equivalent for the entry. Because the greenhouse gases listed do not display their converted portion of the CO2e, adding these numbers that you see in the table will not equal the total CO2 equivalent for the entry.

Next, any attachments will be shown here (such as an gasoline bill), and any notes regarding the entry.

On the right of each row you will see your edit and delete icons.

While you can export the tables from each section on this page by clicking on export at the bottom of each section, you can also export your total CO2 Equivalent from all sections by clicking on the ESG Record list.

On this page, you will be able to set filters for your list, located here.

You will also see all the records tracked by the ESG Steward listed here. You can view the total amount of CO2 equivalent for each standard by looking at the columns, here.

If you want to know the entire amount of CO2 equivalent for all standards, that number will be located here.

If you wish to export this chart, you can do so by scrolling to the bottom and clicking on Export, which will download an excel spreadsheet with the data from this page.

Topic 4 Key Takeaways

This concludes the Energy and Emissions inputs course for the ESG Steward.
Remember…
• For Scope 2, you must determine your energy grid before adding an entry. Each grid is converted differently.
• Petroleum Products are stationary and Mobile Fuel Products combust and move.
• The displayed greenhouse gas emissions are not yet converted into CO2 equivalent when seen in their respective column.

Thank you for attending this course – any questions, suggestions or feedback can be sent to support@visuallease.com

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ESG Inputs: Water, Waste and Biodiversity https://visuallease.com/vluniversity/course/esg-inputs-water-waste-and-biodiversity/ https://visuallease.com/vluniversity/course/esg-inputs-water-waste-and-biodiversity/#respond Tue, 23 May 2023 14:38:07 +0000 https://visuallease.com/vluniversity/?post_type=lp_course&p=535 The post ESG Inputs: Water, Waste and Biodiversity appeared first on VL University.

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COURSE ID

8.3

COURSE DESCRIPTION

This course is designed to give you a deeper understanding of how to input data into the ESG Steward for Water, Waste, and Biodiversity. By the end of the course, you should be able to enter data for the Water Module in the ESG Steward, enter data for the Waste Module in the ESG Steward, and enter data for the Biodiversity Module in the ESG Steward.

Transcription:

Introduction

Welcome to ESG Input Training with VLU. This course is designed to give you a deeper understanding of how to input data into the ESG Steward for Water, Waste, and Biodiversity.

By the end of the course, you should be able to:
– Enter data for the Water Module in the ESG Steward
– Enter data for the Waste Module in the ESG Steward
– Enter data for the Biodiversity Module in the ESG Steward
Please Take a moment to review the agenda. If you are looking for a specific topic, feel free to jump to the corresponding timestamp.

Water Inputs

In this video we will discuss how to access the Water module in the ESG Steward, and how to enter data for with water withdrawn, and water discharged.

Water falls into 3 basic categories:
• Withdrawn – which is water taken out of something
• Discharged – which is water put back into something (surface, groundwater, etc..)
• And Consumed which is Withdrawn minus Discharged

Water withdrawn and water discharged is important to ESG reporting because it will subtract water withdrawn from water discharged to calculate the water consumed.

Here’s an example of the flow: Let’s take an irrigation system. The water coming INTO the irrigation system is withdrawn from the municipal water supply and discharged as groundwater. The amounts withdrawn in this example, are equal, which means no water was consumed verses a water cool, where almost all the water is consumed.

Before we get started, please note that if ESG has not been purchased for your company, the ESG windows described in this training will be unavailable.

To get started, open a lease record, in this training, we will select ESG from the main menu, then select a Record ID to open it.

Once the record is open you will see there is a new tab option called ESG, located here. Below that will be your ESG options. Select Water to open the ESG Water page.

You can filter your entry results by selecting a specified date range from the drop-down or a custom date range by entering the dates, here. To reset your date filters, simply click the reset button here.

You will see two panels, one for Withdrawn Water and another for Discharged Water. Let’s talk about how to add entries into each of these panels.

To enter a withdrawn entry, click here.

A pop-up window will display where you will select the following:

  • Withdrawn Type
    • Fresh water or other
    • Is the water coming from an area of water stress? (if identified on the biodiversity tab)
  • the date and cost
  • and the withdrawn value, and unit of measurement for the value.

Here you can upload any files pertaining to the withdrawn entry, like a water bill for example.

Finally, you can enter any notes in the box located here.

When complete click Save & Next to enter more withdrawn entries, or just Save to save this single entry and return to the Water Page.

Once saved, your entries will display here.

The columns will include the date, withdrawn type, monetary amount (or cost), Input amount , Inputted Unit of Measurement (or UOM), Standard Amount, Standard UOM, attachments (such as a water bill as shown here), and any notes regarding the entry.

On the right of each row you will see your edit and delete icons, as well as a kebab to display the history of actions performed for that event.

To enter a discharged entry, click here.

A pop-up window will display where you will select your Discharged type, the date, cost, discharged value, and select a unit of measurement for the value.

Here you can upload any files pertaining to the withdrawn entry, like a water bill for example.

Finally, you can enter any notes in the box located here.

When complete click Save & Next to enter more withdrawn entries, or just Save to save this single entry and return to the Water Page.

Once saved, your entries will display here.

The columns will include the date, discharged type, monetary amount (or cost), Input amount , Inputted Unit of Measurement (or UOM), Standard Amount, Standard UOM, attachments (such as a water bill as shown here), and any notes regarding the entry.

On the right of each row you will see your edit and delete icons, as well as a kebab to display the history of actions performed for that event.

Waste Inputs

In this video we will discuss how to access the Waste module within the ESG Steward, and how to enter data for Directed to Disposal and Diverted from Disposal.

The difference between diverted and directed waste is that diverted waste is waste that can be reused or recycled with the goal of waste reduction. Directed waste is when it is disposed of in more traditional methods, whether its taken to a landfill, burned, etc…

An important note. The GRI standards are calling for contextual information about the waste stream. This means some narrative about step taken to reduce the waste and context about the business operations that may help give meaning to the numbers being reported from the Waste Entry Screen.

Before we get started, please note that if ESG has not been purchased for your company, the ESG windows described in this training will be unavailable.

To get started, open a lease record, in this training, we will select ESG from the main menu, then select a Record ID to open it.

Once the record is open you will see there is a new tab option called ESG, located here. Below that will be your ESG options. Select Waste to open the ESG Waste page.

You can filter your entry results by selecting a specified date range from the drop-down or a custom date range by entering the dates, here. To reset your date filters, simply click the reset button, here.

You will see two panels, one for Directed To Disposal and another for Diverted From Disposal. Let’s talk about how to add entries into each of these panels.

To enter a directed entry click, here.

A pop-up window will display where you will enter your Directed information. This will include:

  • Waste Type
    • Please note: waste types are configurable and your platform administrator will set up the waste types that are applicable for your company.
  • Disposal Method
    • The method becomes important because it can be incinerated, go to a landfill
    •  If incinerated, is there going to be energy recovery? Or in other words, will the company use the heat generated to incinerate for other means, like heating or creating electricity?
  • Selecting whether onsite or off-site
    • For example, the waste is picked up and disposed off at a different location vs. being done onsite at the premises.
  • The date
  • The cost
  • Directed value and Unit of Measurement

Here you can upload any files pertaining to the waste entry, like a waste bill for example.

Finally, you can enter any notes in the box located here.

When complete click Save & Next to enter more withdrawn entries, or just Save to save this single entry and return to the Waste Page.

Once saved, your entries will display here.

The columns will display the following:

  • The date
  • Disposal type selected in the previous window
  • Disposal Method
  • Whether it was offsite or onsite
  • The monetary amount, inputted amount, and the inputted amt unit of measurement
  • The standard amount and uom.
  • Any attachments (such as a waste bill)
  • And any notes given

You will see, here, an edit and delete icon as well as a kebab to view a history of actions taken on a particular entry.

To enter a diverted entry click, here.

A pop up window will display where you will enter your Diverted information. This will include:

  • Waste Type
  • Disposal Method – Reused or Recycled
    • An example of reuse vs. recycling is the following:
      •  Imagine you own a box. You use this box to move things around the office. When you are done with the box, you put it into storage for future use. That is ‘reuse’
      • Recycling on the other hand, you put the box in a recycling bin and it is taken and is shredded to become packing filler for other boxes.
      • The difference between the two is that the original purpose of the box doesn’t change for reuse while recycling it is repurposed and used for something different (the filler).
  • Selecting whether onsite or off-site
  • The date
  • The cost
  • Diverted value and Unit of Measurement

Here you can upload any files pertaining to the withdrawn entry, like a waste bill for example.

Finally, you can enter any notes in the box located here.

When complete click Save & Next to enter more withdrawn entries, or just Save to save this single entry and return to the Waste Page.

Once saved, your entries will display here.

The columns will display the following:

  • The date
  • Disposal type selected in the previous window
  • Diverted type
  • Whether it was offsite or onsite
  • The monetary amount, inputted amount, and the inputted amt’s unit of measurement
  • The standard amount and uom
  • Any attachments
  • And any notes given

You will see, here, an edit and delete icon as well as a kebab to view a history of actions taken on a particular entry.

Biodiversity Inputs

In this video we will discuss how to access the Biodiversity module within the ESG Steward, and make selections risk zones and water-stressed areas.

Before we get started, please note that if ESG has not been purchased for your company, the ESG windows described in this training will be unavailable.

To get started, open a lease record, in this training, we will select ESG from the main menu, then select a Record ID to open it.

Once the record is open you will see there is a new tab option called ESG, located here. Below that will be your ESG options. Select Biodiversity to open the ESG Biodiversity page.

The purpose of this page is to indicate any risk zones within the environment the asset is located in. You will be presented with three options:
1. Fire Risk Area
2. Flood Risk Area
3. Water Stress zone (this will affect the Water usage reports)

These selections typically deal with real estate assets and will more than likely be a one-time selection due to the asset either being in a risk zone or not.

To make your selections, click the pencil icon and check the appropriate box. Then click save.

The information from these selections will be held for other reporting.

 

Key Takeaways

This concludes the course for Water, Waste, and Biodiversity inputs within the VL platform.

Remember….

  • Water Withdrawn is water taken from something and water discharged is water put back into something.
  • Diverted waste can be reused or recycled
  • For GRI Standards, it is important to provide context to the numbers that will be reported on.
  • Biodiversity selections will be held for other reporting needs.

Thank you for attending this course – any questions, suggestions or feedback can be sent to support@visuallease.com

The post ESG Inputs: Water, Waste and Biodiversity appeared first on VL University.

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ESG 101 https://visuallease.com/vluniversity/course/esg-101/ https://visuallease.com/vluniversity/course/esg-101/#respond Tue, 16 May 2023 12:26:05 +0000 https://visuallease.com/vluniversity/?post_type=lp_course&p=531 The post ESG 101 appeared first on VL University.

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COURSE ID

8.1

COURSE DESCRIPTION

Welcome to ESG training with VLU. This course is designed to give you a deeper understanding of ESG standards within the Visual Lease Platform. By the end of the course, you should be able to understand the components of ESG, what standards the ESG Steward will focus on within the Visual Lease Platform, and the different groups that support ESG.

Transcription:

Course Intro

Welcome to ESG 101 training with VLU. This course is designed to give you a deeper understanding of ESG standards within the Visual Lease Platform.

By the end of the course, you should be able to:

  • Understand the components of ESG
  • What standard the ESG Steward will focus on within the Visual Lease Platform.
  • And the different groups that support ESG.

Please Take a moment to review the agenda. If you are looking for a specific topic, feel free to jump to the corresponding timestamp.

Topic 1: What is ESG?

In this video we will discuss what ESG is, the different groups associated with ESG, and how Visual Lease’s ESG Steward will be tied into the standards.

ESG stands for Environmental, Social, and Governance. ESG refers to a set of principles for a company’s behavior used by socially conscious investors to screen potential investments.

These new principles will help investors see a more holistic view of a company. ESG will provide company responsibility and accountability to socially conscious policies. Essentially, ESG will give investors better insight into how the company operates instead of solely based on financial outcomes.

As mentioned before, ESG is comprised of three components.

Starting with the G in ESG, we have Governance, which tends to deal with

  • Executive compensation
  • Shareholder Rights
  • Takeover Defense
  •  Staggered Boards
  • Independent Directors
  •  Board Elections and Political contributions

The S in ESG is the Social Component that will track the following

  • Discrimination
  • Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion
  • Human rights
  • Community Relations
  • And Animal Rights

Visual Lease ESG Steward will focus on the Environmental principle as it ties very well into the rest of the Visual Lease platform.

The ESG Steward will focus on the environmental tracking and impact of an organization using GRI Standards 302-306. This means the Steward will focus on data inputs for things such as the following:

  • Carbon emissions
  • Energy consumption
  • Waste disposal
  • and Water Usage

Please note: The ESG Steward is intended to track your organization’s actual performance and impact on various environmental factors and allow you to perform analysis on the data. It is not meant to be an “all-in-one” ESG compliance tool, an aggregator reporting tool, or a forecasting tool that predicts the impact of environmental events on corporate financial statements.

Topic 2: ESG Organizations

Groups that are involved in ESG are typically going to fall into
one of three different categories. There are groups that provide guidance, groups that make the standards, and groups that establish regulations.

First, let’s discuss the Guidance Groups

  • Probably the best known of these groups is the TCFD. That’s the Task Force on Climate-Related Financial Disclosures.
    • They will drive what is needed to leverage and how to take information and put it into disclosures.
  • Another Group is CDP. The Carbon Disclosure Project. They behave more like a rating agency. Information is submitted, and they determine a score based off the data provided.
  • A third is SBTI, Science Based Target Initiative.
    • Science based targeting has been discussed throughout regulatory standards presentations across the board.

Topic 3: Groups that make the standards

GHG

  • One of the agencies that the ISSB is going to leverage very heavily is the Greenhouse Gas Protocol or GHG protocol.
  • The GHG protocol has been around for a long time, and it’s really become the standard of greenhouse gas emissions, which is the one part of all of this ESG that everyone seems to pay the most attention to.
  • What the greenhouse gas protocol has done, is they’ve come up with various emissions factors for anything combustible.

GRI

  • Global Reporting Initiative
  •  GRI establishes a number of standards, they actually give real disclosure standards.
  • For example – You must report in metric tons of CO2 equivalent. That’s a very specific standard. Tell us whether any of these components go into the calculation of a CO2 equivalent.
  • It is important to note: these only are standards. They are not regulations.
  • The GRI standards are broken down segments. Which are the basic principles to which the GRI standards apply.
  •  The GRI Standards that the ESG Steward will focus on are
    • GRI 302, which deals with energy,
    • GRI 303 which is water and affluence
    • GRI 304 is biodiversity,
    • GRI 305 is emissions, and
      GRI 306 which is for waste.

Our visual lease platform is going to focus on those five particular components

SASB

  • Is the Sustainability Accounting Standards Board, which is a European agency.
  •  Last year they merged with IIRC – International Integrated Reporting Council, to come up with standards for ESG reporting.
  • They merged again into the Value Reporting Fund, or VRF which has then since been subsumed into the ISSB, the International Sustainability Board.
  • The ISSB is really an offshoot of the IASB, which is the International Accounting Standards Board.

Topic 4 Groups that Establish Regulations

CSRD

  • The European Union has developed what they call the CSRD, which is the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive for companies that operate in the European Union.
    • Companies in the EU will have to report on their environmental impacts and other ESG issues.
    • This set up the regulator framework.
    • What EU has done, is they have outsourced to an independently chartered nongovernmental organization called EFRAG. That’s the European Financial Reporting Advisory Group.
    • A company not domiciled in the EU, but is a company that has a substantial business presence in the EU and reaches certain volumes of business, has the requirement to report under the ESRS.

ISSB

  • The ISSB is just like the IASB in that it’s an international agency. As an international agency, they don’t have any regulatory authority to require anybody to report in a certain way. But what they’ve done, is they’ve built a framework to which member nations will align.
    • They will align their regulations to the ISSB standards. So just like with IFRS 16 accounting, which is also supported in the VL Platform.
    • So we’re going to see that same sort of effect here. The ISSB will finish building its umbrella of standards, and we will start seeing individual countries tweaking or developing their individual national standards, which will have the force and effect of the law.
  • In the United States, that rule-making authority right now sits with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The SEC only has the authority to regulate the activity of SEC member companies. Companies whose securities are traded on public exchanges.
    • Those companies that are not directly regulated by the SEC, those companies may have to track and report their ESG information because their scope, one in scope 2 emissions, are a regulated companies scope 3 emissions. So this starts filtering all down through the economy and bringing in all kinds of other companies as well.

Key Takeaways

That concludes our ESG 101 Course.

Remember…
• The purpose of ESG is to give companies a set of standards for socially conscious investors to screen potential investments.
• Visual Lease will follow GRI Standards within the ESG Steward.
• ESG will have organizations like the SEC, ISSB, and EFRAG that will create regulations that member nations will align to.

Thank you for attending this course – any questions, suggestions or feedback can be sent to support@visuallease.com

 

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