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  • Margaret Mondlane

    Stakeholder
    December 17, 2021 at 4:24 pm

    RAZ approach to transparency and accountability revolutionizes the methodology of how entities assess, record and manage their ESG goals. The transparency exposes an entities ‘intention’ with their ESG mission, while engaging key stakeholders to work collaborativly to meet their ESG goals. This accountability is stregthened by encryption on the blockchain which provides investors due dilligence and stakeholders a peace of mind that their funders are in harmony with their ESG agenda.

  • Margaret Mondlane

    Stakeholder
    December 17, 2021 at 4:00 pm

    Thanks for sharing this insightful article it shows that even though an entity may have a high ESG score; critical review is needed of what their underlying ESG tools and metrics are being used to derive their rating. Also what ESG impacts are being ignored as some negative impacts may not fit in the KPIs of the rating system, intentionally or unintentionally. Additionally is there duplicity is taking place in the organization’s ESG impacts.

    “Scoring companies on ESG criteria is nothing like rating them for creditworthiness. Different credit rating agencies almost always give the same ratings, because their assessments are based on identical financial data and they’re all measuring exactly the same thing: the risk that a company will default on its debts. The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission regulates credit raters.

    MSCI and its competitors in ESG rating, by contrast, often disagree with one another, sometimes wildly. That’s because each ESG rating provider uses its own proprietary system, algorithms, metrics, definitions, and sources of nonfinancial information, most of which aren’t transparent and rely heavily on self-reporting by the companies they rate. No regulator examines the methodology or the results.”

Viewing 1 - 2 of 2 posts