Business
Standard Chartered Sri Lanka hosts first-of-its-kind Environmental & Social Risk Assessment workshop
A screenshot taken from the webinar on the ESRA Workshop conducted by the resource person and Standard Chartered PLC’s Executive Director for Environmental & Social Risk Management, Roger Charles (bottom left).
Standard Chartered Sri Lanka held a virtual workshop on the 13th of July to discuss how local financial institutions could establish a robust framework for Environment and Social Risk Assessment (ESRA), prior to proceeding with a lending decision. The webinar, conducted by Roger Charles, Executive Director for Environmental and Social Risk Management, Standard Chartered PLC, focused on the current challenges as well as the future aspects of Environment and Social Risk Management.
During the workshop, Charles shared some of the Group’s best practices for incorporating sustainability considerations into lending decisions to help local banks understand how they can evaluate their clients using ESRA criteria. He pointed out that through the integration of Environmental, Social and Governance (ESG) in financing decisions, financial institutions can help minimise the negative impact that its business activities can have on the communities as well as on the environment.
Commenting on the timeliness of the workshop was Tamani Dias, Executive Director and Head, Local & International Corporates, Standard Chartered Sri Lanka. She said,
“We recognise that our success as a bank is intrinsically linked to the health and prosperity of our market. For us, sustainability is about creating long-term value for our clients and working in partnership with our stakeholders to make a positive economic and social contribution. We hope that this workshop will encourage our local financial institutions to ‘Do No Harm’ and ‘Do More Good’ by integrating ESRA criteria in their financing decisions and also, consider Standard Chartered as their trusted ESG partner moving forward.”
Charles noted that in 2020 alone, Standard Chartered had conducted over 18,000 bank-wide client assessments against the Bank’s 7 position statements, trained over 1,600 frontline and risk staff in environmental and social risk, in addition to reviewing over 1,000 clients and transactions to ensure that all business activities have adhered to international standards on sustainability and best practice.