Originally published in Carroll Capital, the print publication of the Carroll School of Management at md传媒国产剧 College. .
鈥淎nd what about McDonald鈥檚?鈥 Professor Mary Ellen Carter asked as she gestured toward a screen in the corner of the classroom after clicking on a new slide. Carter was asking a particular question about the world鈥檚 largest fast-food chain, because she was teaching a particular kind of accounting class鈥攐ffered for the first time this past academic year and titled 鈥淓SG Reporting and Analysis: Accounting for a Changing World."
On that November morning in Fulton 110, the class was scrutinizing ratings of how companies perform on environmental, social, and governance (ESG) issues. Hands across the room went up when Carter asked about McDonald鈥檚. A young man sporting a hooded gray sweatshirt answered, 鈥淭hey got an upgrade.鈥 The student had deciphered from the data that the loftier rating for McDonald鈥檚 came about because two foreign countries abounding with golden arches ramped up their recycling requirements. The company merely complied.
Trillions of dollars are rolling into ESG investment funds, also known as 鈥渟ustainable鈥 funds. Naturally, accountants and finance professionals are in the thick of it. They鈥檙e doing things like preparing disclosures mandated by the Securities and Exchange Commission, including reports on such ESG-related issues as risks associated with climate change. Hence the new course that exposes students to the 鈥渓andscape of corporate sustainability reporting,鈥 as Carter puts it, and to this 鈥渃hanging world鈥 declared in the course title.
鈥淭here are lots of players in this space鈥攃onsultants, software developers, raters, and even ratings of raters. There鈥檚 just a lot of movement taking place,鈥 the professor said during class, herself an object in motion as she dashed from blackboard to screen with clicker in hand. Since shareholders are central players, Carter, who is the Carroll School鈥檚 Joseph L. Sweeney Chair, invited Leslie Samuelrich, MCAS 鈥85, to speak at another class meeting. She is president of Green Century Capital Management, a family of mutual funds using ESG criteria to invest in companies. Green Century monitors and prods corporations on matters such as reducing the use of plastics and protecting tropical forests.
“ESG isn鈥檛 about how well companies are doing to protect the environment and serve society. It鈥檚 about measuring the risks that companies face, and how well they鈥檙e responding to those risks.”
Samuelrich tossed up what seemed like a softball: 鈥淲hat do you think is ESG investing?鈥 A student in the back row said something about making a positive impact on the world, to which Samuelrich replied with a gentle 鈥渘o.鈥 She said ESG is about risk assessment鈥攆or instance, whether a supply chain is exposed to climate hazards including extreme storms and coastal flooding. 鈥淓SG isn鈥檛 about how well companies are doing to protect the environment and serve society,鈥 she continued. 鈥淚t鈥檚 about measuring the risks that companies face, and how well they鈥檙e responding to those risks. Most people don鈥檛 realize this.鈥 Her point applies to both ESG听enthusiasts and detractors at a time when social investing is facing a political backlash from those who see it as 鈥渨oke.鈥
Samuelrich offered a window on the typically adversarial process of advocating change with companies, often leading to showdowns between activist shareholders and corporate officers at annual spring meetings. She left her fellow Eagles with thoughts of a career in ESG, giving her email address and suggesting they follow her on social media. 鈥淲e could be friends,鈥 she said to chuckles and applause.
These and other students had another networking opportunity courtesy of Carter, Professor Tara Pisani Gareau, who directs md传媒国产剧 College鈥檚 Environmental Studies Program, and Kevin O鈥機onnell, MBA 鈥96, who leads PwC鈥檚 ESG practice. They collaborated on a daylong October event in Fulton where members of O'Connell's staff helped 50 students unpack a carbon-emissions case study, before presenting an afternoon panel on ESG careers. Three years ago, O鈥機onnell had 12 staffers; now there are over 300, and he expects that number to more than triple in the next couple of years.
A few weeks later, Carter鈥檚 class was discussing how companies get different ESG scores from different raters. One factor is methodology, like how much weight the rating firm gives to one issue as distinct from another (say, livable wages versus zero emissions). Another factor is less palatable: Some raters offer consulting services and might go easy on a company they鈥檙e currying favor with. 鈥淪o, there鈥檚 corruption in the ratings,鈥 one student surmised. The professor smiled鈥斺淲e like to call it conflict of interest.鈥
The probes continue in fall 鈥24 with two sections of Carter鈥檚 ESG class. So does the collaboration: She and Gareau, a biologist, are teaming up to teach a course in md传媒国产剧 College鈥檚 undergraduate core curriculum titled 鈥淐limate Change and Corporate America.