Global Mining Symposium: Companies that don鈥檛 apply ESG will have trouble accessing capital

Companies in the mining industry need to move away from the mindset that environmental, social, and governance disclosure is primarily a compliance issue to a mindset that embeds ESG awareness and permeates it throughout the entire organization.
That鈥檚 the key takeaway from a discussion at the recent Global Mining Symposium, which explored how investors and other stakeholders can better track the ESG performance of mining companies.
鈥淚f you think of the heart of ESG, it’s actually just common sense,鈥 Jamie Strauss, founder, president and CEO of Digbee ESG, an ESG disclosure platform for the mining industry that is currently in development. 鈥淭he problem, however, is how do companies practically disclose ESG performance when there are over 40 different ESG standards, which is well beyond the resources available for most explorers, developers, and producers to properly and accurately assess and disclose their ESG performance.鈥
The lack of standardization means there is no meaningful way for fund managers, investors, and stakeholders to assess and compare a company’s ESG performance. 鈥淐onsequently, the benefits for those companies that properly apply sound ESG principles are lost, leading to a credibility gap for companies that are tracking and reporting on ESG.鈥
Digbee, Strauss said, provides the 鈥渟ilver bullet鈥 that the industry has been looking for and will have 鈥渁 positive impact on the sector as a whole鈥 in terms of local stakeholders, society, and the environment.
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