Elements of Operational Sustainability Management (formerly ESG Management)
Summarize
Summary of Elements of Operational Sustainability Management (formerly ESG Management)
The Operational Sustainability Management application provides a framework for organizations to manage their sustainability initiatives effectively. Key components include material topics, goals, targets, emission activities, and disclosures. Understanding these elements is essential for tracking and reporting sustainability progress.
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Key Features
- Material Topics: Themes representing significant impacts on the economy, environment, and society, identified through materiality assessments. Examples include E-waste management and volunteering.
- Goals: Objectives linked to material topics aimed at making a positive impact. Goals can include specific metrics, such as using renewable energy by 2035 or increasing workplace diversity by 50%.
- Targets: Quantifiable measures to track progress toward goals. For instance, to achieve a diversity goal, a target might be to hire 30% diverse workforce by Q1 2035.
- Emission Activities and Factors: Activities leading to emissions, with emission factors used to estimate greenhouse gas emissions based on specific activities.
- Disclosures: Public reports on performance across sustainability issues, showcasing progress on material topics.
Key Outcomes
By utilizing the Operational Sustainability Management application, organizations can systematically address sustainability challenges, set measurable objectives, and transparently report their progress. Integration with other products like Project Portfolio Management and Integrated Risk Management enhances capability by allowing tracking of projects and risks associated with sustainability goals.
Before you start your sustainability initiatives, familiarize yourself with the key elements such as material topics, metrics, and disclosures that make up the Operational Sustainability Management application.
- Material topics: Themes that you want to work on.
- Goals: Objectives that you want to reach based on your topics.
- Targets: Set targets to track and measure the progress of the goals.
- Emission activities and factors: Activities that lead to emissions.
- Disclosures: Reports generated to show the company's progress on the chosen material topic.
Material topics
Material topics are topics that represent an organization's most significant impacts on the economy, environment, and people. Companies identify these material topics by performing materiality assessments. These topics reflect the organization’s most significant impacts on the society, environment, and people, including impacts on human rights. Some examples of material topics are E-waste management, giving and volunteering, and so on. To learn about the states of the material topic, refer to Material topic workflow and states.
Goals
- Using renewable energy by the end of the year 2035.
- Increase diversity in the workplace by 50 percent.
A goal can also have subgoals. You can also associate different entities to the goal so that you can track who is responsible for fulfilling the goal.
- If you integrate with Project Portfolio Management, you can add programs and projects to capture the work being done to meet your goal.
- If you integrate with Integrated Risk Management, you can add risks, risk statements, policies, control objectives, and issues to your goals and build a governance framework.
For more information on integrations, see Integrating Operational Sustainability Management (formerly ESG) with other applications.
Targets
Targets help you to measure your goal. For example, to meet the goal of increasing diversity in the workplace by 50 percent, the target can be to hire 30 percent diverse workforce by the first quarter of 2035.
Disclosures
An operational sustainability disclosure is a form of public reporting by an organization about its performance across various sustainability issues.
Emission activities and factors
An emission activity refers to any activity that is associated with the release of pollutants such as Greenhouse gases (GHG).
The release of GHG into the atmosphere depends mainly on the activity and the product that emits the gases. To estimate GHG emissions per unit of available activity, you must use a factor called an emission factor. An emission factor is a coefficient which allows to convert activity data into GHG emissions. It is the average emission rate of a given source, relative to units of an activity or processes. As an ESG program manager, you must set up your library of emission activities and factors.