G20 agenda: B20 gets the value chain, ESG mix right


Business feedback to G20’s current agenda has prioritised resilience of value chains and ESG. The two issues are interlinked for companies moving from just-in-time to just-in-case manufacturing. Covid was the latest in a series of shocks delivered over the past decade, some of which (weather events) are triggered by ESG concerns. This was underlined at the B20 Summit last week when B20 India Task Force chairperson Uday Kotak brought up the matter of funding sustainability goals and the formation of a Global Acceleration Fund.

The Global South is driving economic growth, and companies also need to adjust to a newer set of political risks. Interconnected production designed for efficiency is being reconfigured for transparency and resilience. B20 takes it a step forward to bring in inclusivity. This has a direct correlation with companies getting their ESG proposition right, which improves value creation. Better ESG performance is, by itself, a risk-mitigation tool by improving corporate credit metrics. The broader benefits derive from altering exposure to extreme climatic conditions that have compelled the automobile, energy and electronics industries to shock-proof supply and production lines. Technology permits businesses to question the assumption that resilience comes at the cost of efficiency. Data-processing capabilities are changing the economics of production by speeding up response times and monitoring supply networks on an unprecedented scale.

The most concentrated value chains such as energy and semiconductors are also the most traded by value and most exposed to shocks, protectionism included. Labour-intensive value chains like apparel are more geographically spread out. But weather-related events can destabilise demand as well as supply. There is also risk in country-specific value-addition clusters for sectors like pharma. As market growth moves towards the base of the pyramid, value chains need retooling with ESG fins. B20 takes sustainability to the core of business by seeking inclusion within value chains.



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