In this week’s Sustainability/ESG bulletin, read about Ireland’s new offshore wind industrial energy strategy, natural capital accounting and updates on sustainable travel in Ireland. Also covered is a call for evidence on Northern Ireland Climate Change Adaptation Programme, and climate risk in separate reports from The Scottish Fiscal Commission, the European Commission, and the Inevitable Policy Response, as well as the usual articles and upcoming events.
IRELAND
Institute shortlisted for Business & Finance ESG Award
Chartered Accountants Ireland is delighted to have been shortlisted for a Business & Finance ESG Award in the Company Award (SME) category. Now in their third year, these Awards shortlist across 18 categories reflecting the evolving ESG landscape and showcasing the successes of ESG initiatives and examples of best practice. The Institute was proud to share details in our submission of the measures we have taken so far to embed sustainability in the Institute, both in Dublin and Belfast.
New offshore wind industrial energy strategy introduced
Last week Ireland launched a new offshore wind industrial strategy that aims to build a successful, vibrant, and impactful new offshore wind energy (OWE) sector in Ireland with significant value and creating up to 5000 jobs by 2030. The overarching objective of Powering Prosperity – Ireland’s Offshore Wind Industrial Strategy is to maximise the industrial development opportunity arising from OWE production in Ireland so as to create clean, green, renewable industries of the future. The strategy has 40 actions for implementation in 2024 and 2025 and was developed in collaboration with other government departments and agencies. Some of the key actions to be advanced in this initial iteration include exploring the concept of Green Energy Industrial Parks, establishing an OffShore Wind Centre of Excellence, driving scale in the offshore wind supply chain and building on international strategic partnerships.
Right to request remote/flexible working arrangements introduced
The right to request remote working arrangements for all employees and the right to request flexible working arrangements for parents and carers was brought into operation last week. Following a public consultation, which the Institute fed into (you can read our submission here) the Code of Practice for Employers and Employees Right to Request Flexible Working and Right to Request Remote Working was also approved and published. The code is available on the WRC’s website
Sustainable Finance
The Department of Finance has published an update to the Ireland for Finance strategy, which looks to further establish Ireland as the recognised global location of choice for specialist international financial services. The 2024 Action Plan, published last week, details various key measures to realise this ambition, in collaboration with public and private sector stakeholders, including Chartered Accountants Ireland, where it highlights the Institute’s embedding of certain pillars of sustainable finance, for example, regulation, reporting and assurance, within its student and continuing professional education programmes, as well as outreach programmes.
Separately, the Central Bank of Ireland recently published its Regulatory and Supervisory Outlook 2024 (RSO). One such risk identified is Climate and other environmental-related risks, i.e. physical climate risk, transition risk and litigation risk, which it describes as “no longer simply emerging risks but reflect[ing] present day realities that are getting more severe and impactful and unpredictable as time goes by”. On sustainable finance, the report notes that “[t]o support the transition to net zero, it is imperative that investors are fully informed, and in no way misled, regarding the stated sustainability credentials of financial products”, and identifies as particular areas of risk ‘ESG disclosures’ and ‘poor ESG data quality’.
The Impacts of Electric Vehicles Uptake and Heat Pump Installation on the Irish Economy - December 2021
The Department of Finance has published a link to a paper examining the economic and environmental impacts of the adoption path of electric vehicles (EVs) and home retrofitting in the form of heat pumps (HPs) projected in the recent Climate Action Plan for Ireland. The paper’s results show that an increase in the carbon tax has substantial impacts on emission reduction. It also finds that EV adoption and HP installations can further reduce emissions but to a lesser degree than the carbon tax increase. The results prove the importance of simultaneous use of carbon taxation and electrification of transport and home heating, where carbon taxation increases the benefits of adopting low carbon technologies and adoption reduces the costs of carbon taxation.
‘What Can Natural Capital Accounting Do For Us?’
The National Economic and Social Council (NESC) held an event this week to discuss the potential of natural capital accounting in Ireland, examining the fundamental question: What Can Natural Capital Accounting Do For Us? Natural Capital Accounting (NCA) involves including environmental data in the national economic accounts and valuing the many benefits nature provides, like clean air, water and biodiversity. The event followed the recent publication of the NESC report “Natural Capital Accounting: A Guide for Action.”
Research updates on travel in Ireland published
Figures released by the Central Statistics Office (CSO) this week show a continued growth in the number of electric and plug-in hybrid vehicles licensed in Ireland. The number of new electric cars licensed increased by 7 percent from 4,583 in the first two months of 2023 to 4,896 in the first two months of 2024.
Research released separately by the National Transport Authority (NTA) suggests that walking and cycling take 680,000 cars off the road each day in Ireland’s five largest cities (Dublin, Cork, Galway, Limerick/Shannon and Waterford). The figures were from NTA’s largest-ever survey of walking, wheeling and cycling in Ireland, which also found that the annual economic benefit from walking, wheeling and cycling in the five metropolitan areas each year is over €3bn.
The above coincides with the opening of a public consultation from 12 March until 3 May on the development of Shared Mobility Hubs, where a range of shared travel options – including, for example, shared bikes, electric bikes or e-cars – come together and can be accessed in one place by people who need them.
NORTHERN IRELAND & UK
Call for evidence on Northern Ireland Climate Change Adaptation Programme
Climate NI, on behalf of the Department of Agriculture, Environment and Rural Affairs (DAERA), are asking for a contribution to the next Northern Ireland Climate Change Adaptation Programme (NICCAP3). Information is being sought for planned or ongoing projects during the period 2024-2029 which will address the impacts of climate change in Northern Ireland.
Adaptation action can take many forms, and the UK Climate Change Committee has grouped the risks into 13 different systems where action is required (e.g. water supply, buildings, nature, business etc.). Relevant projects should relate to one or more of these systems, be ongoing or planned during the period 2024-29, and reduce vulnerability to climate change in NI by protecting or enhancing an asset, area or group from the impacts of climate change; filling an evidence gap to improve understanding or decision-making; or improving governance, policies and procedures to enable either of the first two options. The call for evidence will close on Friday 12 April 2024.
Climate risk and the cost of net zero – Scotland
The Scottish Fiscal Commission has analysed the implications for the Scottish public finances of meeting Scotland's statutory emissions target to reach net zero by 2045, adapting to climate change and handling the damage it will cause. In its publication Fiscal Sustainability Perspectives: Climate Change, the Commission reported that unmitigated climate change (i.e. climate change that is allowed continue without any efforts being made to stop it) would have catastrophic impacts on individuals, businesses and the public finances. In line with the Paris Agreement, both the Scottish and UK Governments are committed to help limit global warming through their own emissions targets, but these actions will impose costs on the public sector, as will the need to adapt to and deal with damage from climate change.
EUROPE
- A report released this week shows that the EU’s objectives under the European Green Deal are attainable if the actions planned are fully implemented.The 8th Environment Action Programme (EAP) mid-term review also points to the positive economic and social impacts of achieving the goals, for example, in terms of improving wellbeing, health, resilience, or security of supply. Many planned actions, such as legislative changes have been delivered, but it is too early to assess their impact on the environment as they are yet to be implemented on the ground.
- Europe is the fastest warming continent in the world, and climate risks are threatening its energy and food security, ecosystems, infrastructure, water resources, financial stability, and people’s health. According to the first European Climate Risk Assessment (EUCRA) on behalf of the European Environment Agency’s (EEA), many of these risks have already reached critical levels and could become catastrophic without urgent and decisive action. Responding to the publication of the report, the European Commission published a Communication on managing climate risks in Europe, which sets out how the EU and its Member States can better anticipate, understand, and address growing climate risks. It further presents how they can prepare and implement policies that save lives, cut costs, and protect prosperity across the EU.
- The European Parliament has adopted measures to reduce road transport emissions from passenger cars, vans, buses, trucks and trailers. Vehicles will need to comply with the new standards for longer, ensuring they remain cleaner throughout their lifetime. An Environmental Vehicle Passport will be made available for each vehicle and contain information on its environmental performance at the moment of registration (such as pollutant emission limits, CO2 emissions, fuel and electric energy consumption, electric range, battery durability).
- The European Court of Auditors is assessing whether European Union and member state policy frameworks and funding for climate adaptation address the effects of climate change effectively. Auditors are looking at the EU Strategy for Adaptation to Climate Change and EU-funded projects on climate change adaptation. Their findings and recommendations are expected in autumn.
GLOBAL
Unprepared investors at risk as national policies to halt nature loss and deforestation accelerate
The policy forecasting body Inevitable Policy Response (IPR) has forecast that progress on nature and land use will ultimately make or break efforts to achieve net zero. The forecast, which was commissioned by the Principles for Responsible Investment (PRI), analysed the trajectory of national environmental policies and their impacts on companies and investors. It forecasts that half of global emission reductions by 2035 are set to come from the land use sector through a combination of policies to end deforestation, lower agricultural emissions, reduce food waste, restore degraded natural ecosystems, and scale nature-based solutions.
Calling our members in the Energy Sector
Business For Biodiversity Ireland is building on its successful multi-sector Community of Practice (CoP) of businesses coming together to share, evolve and drive change toward a Nature Positive future. The national platform is now convening sector-specific CoPs for 2024 - starting with the Energy Sector. If you are an energy provider, regulator, renewable energy organisation / expert, community group, NGO or SME specialising in the area of energy and carbon emissions, you can get involved by finding out more here: https://businessforbiodiversity.ie/energy-sscop/
Articles
- ‘The Batmans of this sustainability reporting saga’ Sustainability reporting revolution: UK & EU lead the charge (Acountancy Age)
- How to make your accountancy practice more sustainable (Accountancy Today)
- “Nature positive is not a destination – it’s a mindset, a way of working, a cultural shift” (The Currency)
Upcoming Events
- CAANZ, Sustainability Seminar 2024 AU
The Sustainability Seminar 2024 is designed to elevate your knowledge and confidence in tackling the sustainability challenges faced by accounting, business and finance professionals every day. With sessions designed to enhance your understanding of developments and future trends, we’re shifting the conversation from discussions around conceptual climate risk to embedding sustainable business practices at every level, making sustainability part of business as usual. Tuesday 19 March 2024, 10:00am to 2:00pm AEDT, Virtual (Zoom)
- CAANZ,Climate Disclosures Seminar 2024
This two-day seminar will assist delegates to understand the complex landscape of climate disclosures. In 2026, Group 2 organisations will commence reporting on their climate metrics, so finance professionals and executives need to understand now what will be required, and where to begin.
Wednesday-Thursday, 20-21 March 2024, Virtual
-
Sustainable Energy Authority of Ireland, The Energy Show 2024
Join SEAI for a host of informative seminars and industry talks as well as over 100 exhibitors from the sustainable and renewable energy sector. Of note: SEAI’s grants and supports for business - The SME Business Grant Briefing on Wednesday at 2-2:45pm at the Energy Theatre
20-21 March, In person. RDS, Dublin
- A4S Sustainability In Action Webinar: Capitals Accounting
An interactive webinar exploring various aspects of capitals accounting and how it is being applied in practice. The discussion will explore the information needed to tackle a range of impacts.
28 March, 08:00
- Accountancy Europe and others How can company boards lead the sustainability transition? The event will also draw on the recent Accountancy Europe, ecoDa and ECIIA publication ESG Governance: questions boards should ask to lead the sustainability transition which sets out practical questions that boards should consider in their efforts on ESG, sustainability transition planning, delivery on sustainability objectives and limiting greenwashing risks.
10 April, 10:30-12:00 CET, Virtual
-
ICAS Sustainability Summit
This event, hosted in association with Accounting for Sustainability (A4S), will bring together sustainability experts and forward-thinking business leaders to explore how we can accelerate the vital business changes needed to save our planet. A specialist line-up of speakers and panellists will delve into the future of sustainable business, the role of technology in the climate transition and the evolving sustainability reporting landscape. The summit also marks the launch of ICAS’ sustainability business network – a collaborative community where professionals can share and benefit from sustainability-related insights.
In person, Edinburgh, 25 April 2024.
Network for Chartered Accountants working on ESG projects
Are you a Chartered Accountant working in ESG or working on ESG-related projects? Would you like an opportunity to engage with other Chartered Accountants working in this space to share insights, challenges and opportunities?
Chartered Accountants Ireland now has a network to allow members working in sustainability/ESG to meet and discuss all matters of interest re ESG and accounting.
- Next: Wednesday, 27 March, 14:00-15.30
- Teams
If you would like to attend, please email sustainability@charteredaccountants.ie
You can find information, guidance and supports to understand sustainability and meet the challenges it presents in our online Sustainability Centre.