ESG (Environmental, Social, & Governance) cock-ups

I often drive to a petrol station to pump my tyres only to see a car (often a taxi or PHV) parked there with the driver nowhere in sight. There are just many clueless and inconsiderate drivers in S'pore.
 
The sustainability movement is dying.

In 2024, mandatory climate reporting was imposed across Singapore Exchange-listed companies in certain sectors, including finance, agriculture, food and forest products, energy, materials and buildings, and transportation.


In 2024, mandatory climate reporting was imposed across Singapore Exchange-listed companies in certain sectors, including finance, agriculture, food and forest products, energy, materials and buildings, and transportation. PHOTO: ST FILE

Sue-Ann Tan
Jan 03, 2025

SINGAPORE – Ramped-up rules on sustainability reporting might be burdensome for companies large and small, but they will pay off in the long run by attracting more “eco-conscious” investors, experts said.

A critical point in this process came in 2024 with the imposition of mandatory climate reporting across listed companies in certain sectors, including finance, agriculture, food and forest products, energy, materials and buildings, and transportation.

Climate reporting continues to be on a “comply or explain” basis for other listed firms for now.


There will be more compliance requirements in the 2025 financial year, when listed firms will have to report using climate-related disclosures aligned to the International Sustainability Standards Board.

This will apply especially to direct and indirect greenhouse gas emissions from a company’s use of electricity, heat or steam.

More rules land in the 2027 financial year, when large non-listed companies will also be required to make sustainability disclosures.

Meeting such requirements certainly creates more costs for companies, experts said.

However, this should eventually reap benefits, particularly as global sustainability standards rise and companies will have to comply with international expectations.

Professor Lawrence Loh, director of the NUS Centre for Governance and Sustainability, said: “Compliance requirements for sustainability naturally come at a cost to companies, especially at the onset of reporting.

“But these have to be weighed against business benefits in the long term, including the lowering of risks such as changes in consumer and investor expectations, as well as in regulations and standards.”

While companies have done well so far in their sustainability reporting, the challenge is to extend this performance to listed firms of all sizes, Prof Loh said.

He added that there is a clear “size effect” when it comes to the quality of sustainability reporting across listed companies.

“We cannot just take the commendable status of sustainability reporting amongst the large companies and apply them to the small and medium-sized companies.”

NTU associate professor of accounting Kelvin Law said that money spent today will help firms create value in the long run, because they can see where they are being inefficient in their energy use or supply chains, and rectify it.

“Firms should stop viewing sustainability reporting as a ‘cost centre’. I see it as a core business strategy integrated with other corporate strategies like finance and marketing,” he said.

Prof Law said that companies can also think of sustainability reporting as an early warning radar, allowing firms to spot problems with their supply chain and regulatory compliance, as well as changing customer demands, before these issues start to affect profits.

“Think of sustainability reporting as an airplane’s black box; airlines do not make money directly from having one, but the data helps prevent disasters and improve operations,” he added.

Companies that track their sustainability metrics will also gain a competitive advantage as more countries implement regulations around disclosures. They will be prepared for this shift, Prof Law said.

“Some investors cannot invest in firms without clear environmental, social and governance (ESG) metrics.

“Mandatory reporting should improve liquidity as investors can benchmark a firm’s ESG performance more easily,” he added.

Impact investment funds or sovereign wealth funds with ESG criteria could also be drawn to the Singapore Exchange (SGX) if it complies with global best practices in sustainability.

SMU assistant professor of finance Aurobindo Ghosh said this could also expand the amount of funds available to all companies listed here.

But a potential short-term consequence of mandatory reporting could be that potential issuers get discouraged from listing on the SGX. It might also make it a less conducive environment for initial public offerings.

“This, however, would be mitigated as more global and regional exchanges adopt these best practices, while different investment sources, including sovereign wealth funds and impact investment funds, pivot towards these new sustainability reporting standards,” Prof Ghosh said.

“Pushing for more credible and sustainable reporting standards would provide a more sustainable future for listings on the SGX.”
 
Stricter rules on sustainability reporting is not only a burden for businesses large and small, but will scare away investors. Almost all businessmen look at the returns on investments. How many are “eco-conscious” investors? I hardly know of any consumers willing to pay more for environmentally-friendly products.
 

DEI comes and goes but profits are forever​


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Many companies are muting their commitments to programmes embracing diversity, equity and inclusion.

Jeff Sommer

Feb 28, 2025​


A prominent group of chief executives said almost six years ago that making profits for shareholders was only part of their business – and not necessarily the main part.

Speaking collectively as the Business Roundtable, CEOs from companies like Johnson & Johnson, FedEx, Wells Fargo and Amazon said that, really, they were devoted to serving employees and customers, protecting the environment and treating suppliers ethically.

“Thank you,” I wrote in a column back then. “And may I sell you a bridge?”


Now that many firms are muting their commitments to programmes embracing diversity, equity and inclusion (DEI), and to environmental sustainability, I can’t say I’m shocked.

The Trump administration has declared DEI to be “illegal” and “immoral”.

It has derided efforts to ensure “sustainability” and stave off climate change as misguided undertakings that are only weakening America. Faced with the administration’s threats of litigation and investigation, corporate America is, to a large extent, bending with the political wind. My colleagues, at The New York Times and other news organisations, have been documenting the retreat on these issues by countless companies, including Target, Meta, Google, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley, BlackRock and Vanguard.

The spectacle of corporations changing their posture in waves, like groves of saplings in a storm, may seem startling.

But corporations have always done this. What we’re seeing now is an accelerated version. In fact, it’s what Nobel laureate economist Milton Friedman, a high priest of conservative, free-market ideology, said they should do.

Social responsibility​

The late Mr Friedman chose to explain his views in The New York Times Magazine to a broad swathe of Americans, including many who were not entirely comfortable with right-wing political beliefs.

His article, published on Sept 13, 1970, carried a provocative headline: “A Friedman Doctrine – The Social Responsibility of Business Is to Increase Its Profits”. In it, he acknowledged that many leading companies in those days – as in the recent past, before Mr Donald Trump’s victory – openly advocated a broad sense of corporate responsibility.


This was a grave mistake, he contended. “The businessmen believe that they are defending free enterprise when they declaim that business is not concerned ‘merely’ with profit but also with promoting desirable ‘social’ ends; that business has a ‘social conscience’ and takes seriously its responsibilities for providing employment, eliminating discrimination, avoiding pollution and whatever else may be the catchwords of the contemporary crop of reformers.”

This kind of talk was naive, vacuous and worse, said the apostle of unfettered capitalism. If anyone took corporate social responsibility seriously, it would lead the US on the road to socialism. Instead, what companies should do was stick to their essential function: using resources efficiently to maximise profits, Mr Friedman wrote.

Businesses needed to abide by government rules and regulations, he said. Furthermore, he allowed that sometimes executives had to speak as if they believed corporations had a responsibility to do more than simply make money.

“If our institutions, and the attitudes of the public make it in their self-interest to cloak their actions in this way, I cannot summon much indignation to denounce them,” he wrote. But he did so anyway, calling them “incredibly short sighted and muddle-headed” as well as “socialist” and “collectivist”.


One motivation for writing this full-throated defence of pure profits was clear in his piece: He was troubled by the rise of shareholder proxy campaigns, in which shareholder votes push corporations to act in a progressive manner. Mr Friedman referred specifically to the “GM crusade”, a pioneering shareholder rights campaign begun earlier that year and spearheaded by activist Ralph Nader.

Radicals and pragmatists​

Mr Friedman died in 2006. Mr Nader remains active, and this past week, I called him for his perspective on shifting corporate views of DEI and sustainability since the 1960s.


He said that in the General Motors campaign, “we had three goals: to get GM to produce safer cars, less polluting cars and more fuel-efficient cars”. The effort centred on a proxy fight – ostensibly, an electoral battle for a plurality of shareholder votes.

But, Mr Nader said, there was never a serious hope of winning a proxy vote contest because the organisers owned only a handful of shares, while wealthier and more conservative investors had vastly more resources. Instead, the GM campaign was a battle for the nation’s hearts and minds.

Mr Nader’s tactics were inspired by a proxy battle at Eastman Kodak, begun a few years earlier by community organiser Saul Alinsky. Mr Alinsky, who died in 1972, said he took on Kodak because it was the most powerful institution in its home base, Rochester, New York. The point of the campaign was to persuade the company to use its clout to get Rochester to build decent housing for poor people of colour.

In his classic book, Rules For Radicals: A Pragmatic Primer For Realistic Radicals, Mr Alinsky wrote: “There was never any thought, then or now, of using proxies to gain economic power inside the corporation or to elect directors to the board.”

He added: “Boards of directors are only rubber stamps of management.”

Similarly, Mr Nader said he knew at the outset of the GM campaign in 1970 that it would be impossible to “win” a shareholder voting contest outright. But the campaign succeeded in putting pressure on the company for a while, he said. “Kicking and screaming, they started producing safer cars, more fuel-efficient cars and less polluting cars,” he said.

But obviously, he said, “when you look back, it’s clear that they didn’t do nearly enough”. And, he added, proxy campaigns and corporate commitments can only go so far.

That shouldn’t be surprising, he said, because corporate executives and board members “just put their fingers in the wind and when the wind changes, they just back off. It’s a rhetorical cycle, but it doesn’t much change how they actually behave one way or another”.

However, Mr Nader said, most corporate executives are pragmatists who understand that having a diverse workforce and making efficient use of energy “is in their companies’ own interest”.

If the political cycle shifts again, expect to hear much more from corporate America about the need for social responsibility, Mr Nader said. NYTIMES
 

Forum: Make it cheaper to charge EVs at HDB carparks​

Jul 29, 2025

As electric vehicles (EVs) gain popularity in Singapore, many HDB residents rely heavily on slow-charging stations at public carparks to charge their vehicles overnight. Yet the current slow-charging tariffs at these HDB charging points are excessively high and unjustifiable, especially when compared with the much lower electricity costs enjoyed by those in landed properties who can charge their vehicles at home.

For example, slow charging at HDB carparks currently costs around 66 cents per kWh, more than double the prevailing home electricity rate of approximately 30 cents per kWh. This stark price disparity unfairly burdens EV owners living in HDB flats who often lack private parking and home charging options.

Furthermore, slow charging at HDB carparks typically occurs at night during off-peak hours when electricity demand on the grid is minimal. This should naturally result in lower energy costs, yet EV users are still charged premium rates that cannot be justified by supply costs or grid demand.


Such pricing policies are also counterproductive to Singapore’s climate goals, as they discourage wider EV adoption.

The high fees at HDB carparks must be urgently reviewed and adjusted to reflect actual costs and off-peak usage patterns.

Making slow charging affordable and equitable for all residents – not just those with private chargers – will be a crucial step in ensuring that Singapore’s green mobility ambitions are inclusive and effective.

Chia Wai Mun
 
The stupid PAP government so kan cheong to implement ESG disclosures when SG companies are just not ready.

Singapore delays full climate disclosures for small and mid-sized listed companies​

Singapore’s regulators said that the extended timelines will support companies in developing reporting capabilities. They also took into account the uncertain global economic landscape.

These changes are part of a three-tier structure that the regulators have adopted to phase in reporting obligations based on market capitalisation.

Aug 26, 2025

SINGAPORE – The Accounting and Corporate Regulatory Authority (Acra) and Singapore Exchange Regulation (SGX RegCo) have pushed back most climate reporting requirements for small and mid-sized listed companies by five years.

While all listed companies were supposed to make climate-related disclosures aligned with standards by the International Sustainability Standards Board (ISSB) for financial years starting from January 2025, listed companies that are not constituents of the Straits Times Index (STI) and with a market capitalisation below $1 billion need to do so only from FY2030.

The extension follows a recommendation put forth in June by the Singapore Business Federation. The umbrella association of businesses had asked for a one to two-year delay in compliance by listed small and mid-sized companies, citing feedback that a majority were not confident in meeting the original timeline.

Non-STI constituents with a market capitalisation of $1 billion and above will have to comply from FY2028, said a joint media release on Aug 25 by Acra and SGX RegCo.

All listed companies, irrespective of their market size or whether they are an STI constituent, will still have to report their operation emissions (Scope 1) and those arising from their use of electricity (Scope 2) from this financial year.

Scope 1 and Scope 2 reporting remains mandatory as these are key information in tracking companies’ decarbonisation progress, said the media release.

Reporting requirements for STI constituents remains unchanged. They have to continue disclosing their Scope 1 and 2 emissions, as well as other climate-related requirements relating to governance, risk and strategy aligned with ISSB standards from FY2025.

Singapore regulators also confirmed on Aug 25 that STI constituents will have to report their indirect emissions resulting from their supply chain – known as Scope 3 emissions – from FY2026. Scope 3 reporting requirements remains voluntary for the rest of the listed companies.

SGX RegCo said in September 2024 that it was reviewing reporting requirements for Scope 3 emissions, given that there was feedback on the challenges of measuring and reporting them, but added that it intended to prioritise “larger issuers” to report these indirect emissions from FY2026.


The regulators said that STI constituents will continue to lead efforts to implement other ISSB-aligned climate disclosures.

While reporting requirements for STI constituents remain the same, external limited assurance for Scope 1 and 2 emissions has been deferred by two years to FY2029. This also applies to other listed companies.

External limited assurance refers to having an independent third-party evaluating the data published in companies’ sustainability reports.

Sweeping changes​

These sweeping changes are part of a three-tier structure that the regulators have adopted to phase in reporting obligations based on market capitalisation.

Singapore’s regulators said that the extended timelines will support companies in developing reporting capabilities. They also took into account the uncertain global economic landscape, as well as feedback to take into greater consideration the varying levels of resources and readiness in climate reporting.

“With the updated requirements, companies will be better able to balance compliance costs with developing climate reporting capabilities, which are required for the longer term to maintain their place in global supply chains. Companies should also continue to align their trajectory with Singapore’s net-zero target by 2050,” said the media release.


However, the pushback in reporting timelines puts Singapore’s climate reporting regime behind Malaysia.

Malaysia has mandated that large companies listed on its main market to start reporting ISSB-aligned disclosures from 2025, while other listed companies will have to do so from 2026. Smaller listed companies on its ACE market – which is similar to SGX’s Catalist board – are required to disclose from 2027.

Non-listed companies​

There will also be a three-year delay in mandating ISSB-aligned climate reporting for large non-listed companies.

Instead of the original timeline of FY2027, non-listed companies with an annual revenue of at least $1 billion and total assets of at least $500 million will have to make these disclosures only from FY2030.

Scope 3 emissions reporting remains voluntary until further notice, while external limited assurance for Scope 1 and 2 emissions has been pushed back to FY2032 from FY2029 previously.
 
Socially-conscious enterprise hawker centres (SEHCs) add to the cost of stall rental and the cost of the food sold.

Timbre Group defends app discount, gross turnover rental model and hawker centre management practices​

Timbre said Yishun Park Hawker Centre operates under a gross turnover rental model where payable rent varies according to hawker earnings.


Timbre said Yishun Park Hawker Centre operates under a gross turnover rental model where payable rent varies according to hawker earnings.

Aug 27, 2025

SINGAPORE – Timbre Group says the 10 per cent discount offered to customers who pay via its app encourages repeat customers to Yishun Park Hawker Centre, which eventually helps hawkers generate more business.

The operator, which runs two socially-conscious enterprise hawker centres (SEHCs) – One Punggol Hawker Centre and Yishun Park Hawker Centre – responded to recent criticism of its hawker centre management by food critic K.F. Seetoh in a press statement on Aug 26.

Last week, The Straits Times reported that hawkers in some SEHCs, including those run by Timbre Group and FairPrice Group, had to absorb the 10 per cent discount offered to diners paying via operator apps.

Timbre initially declined to comment, but said in its statement that the 10 per cent loyalty discount for app payments has been in place since 2017. The full cost of developing and maintaining the app is borne by the company, its spokesperson added.

It also addressed other claims made by Mr Seetoh in an Aug 23 Facebook post. The food industry veteran charged that Timbre takes “15 per cent of total sales from successful hawkers, otherwise they pay basic rents and all sorts of fees”, attaching a photo of a contract as evidence.

In response, Timbre’s spokesperson said the 43-stall Yishun Park Hawker Centre operates under a gross turnover rental model where payable rent varies according to hawker earnings.

Hawkers are charged either the base rent of $1,750 a month or 15 per cent of gross sales calculated monthly, whichever is higher.

How it works in practice: If 15 per cent of sales works out to $1,800, which is higher than the base rent of $1,750, the rent payable is $1,800. But if 15 per cent falls below the base rent, the tenant pays $1,750.

“This better shares the risks and rewards between the operator and the hawker. When earnings are low, a hawker pays lower rent. When earnings are good, the rent payable is higher,” Timbre said, adding that the maximum payable rent is capped at $2,550 a month.

“For some of our popular stalls, the effective rent relative to their turnover is therefore significantly lower than 15 per cent of their revenue.”

In a written parliamentary reply in February, the Ministry of Sustainability and the Environment said the median stall rent of the 12 SEHCs in operation was $1,700. For non-subsidised cooked food stalls in hawker centres managed by the National Environment Agency (NEA), the median rent has remained relatively stable at around $1,250 between 2015 and 2023.

When asked to comment on Timbre’s clarification on Aug 27, Mr Seetoh said: “No one should apply a commercial foodcourt operation model to our hawker centres – that is, the gross turnover model. Our hawker centres are built for community and affordability, like food community centres. There must be a big rethink of our operator guidelines.”

According to Timbre, the rent goes towards the operating revenue of the centre, and 50 per cent of the centre’s operating surplus is used to support stallholders through regular community programmes, as well as marketing campaigns aimed at boosting footfall.

Mr Seetoh also questioned why Timbre did not use a cheaper gas provider, despite suggestions from hawkers.

In 2024, all but two stallholders signed a Nov 25 open letter to the management, expressing “deep concerns regarding the exorbitant gas prices we have been burdened with for the past seven years”.

“At $14-15 per unit (cubic metre), these costs have been unreasonably high and unsustainable for small businesses like ours,” they wrote.

They claimed that despite multiple requests to introduce alternative gas suppliers with more economical rates below $10 a unit, which would have saved them 33 per cent in gas costs, “no actionable progress” was made.

Earlier in 2025, Timbre extended a $1 a cubic metre discount to all hawkers. It maintains that Yishun Park Hawker Centre’s gas supply is “provided centrally and secured through competitive procurement”.

Stallholders currently pay $14 a cubic metre for gas at the hawker centre.

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Hawkers at Yishun Park Hawker Centre have called for lower gas prices.

PHOTO: LIANHE ZAOBAO

In addition, Mr Seetoh claimed that Timbre installs CCTV cameras in “every stall to monitor sales” to “ensure no one cheats”. This move, he said, invades stallholders’ privacy, as the cameras “have listening capabilities”.

Timbre says the cameras were installed in August 2024, following repeated feedback from residents living nearby on noise levels late at night.

“While we had reminded all hawkers to minimise noise during these hours, the feedback had continued. The CCTVs enable us to identify the potential sources of noise, so that we can better address residents’ feedback,” its spokesman said.

It adds that the CCTVs are useful for safety and security, resolving occasional customer disputes and verifying situations where a few hawkers were “observed not to conduct their transactions using the point-of-sales”, making it hard to determine the rent payable.

In a Facebook post on Aug 27, Mr Seetoh pointed out that “no hawker shouts incessantly when in the stall at work” and that noise concerns were no excuse for Timbre to surveil them with CCTVs. He claimed that there are a lot of hawker centres next to residential blocks and NEA found no need to install CCTVs in each stall.

In the Aug 23 post, he also accused Timbre of imposing excessive fines on hawkers, calling its list of $100 fines “scary”. It includes non-compliance offences such as refusal to accept loyalty apps as mode of payment for purchases and placing food and/or supplies on floor.


Timbre says these non-compliance charges have been part of its tenancy agreements since inception to ensure fairness to all stallholders.

“We have clauses in our tenancy agreements to provide a clean and conducive environment for all hawkers to operate in, as well as to ensure compliance with other areas such as the personal operations of the stall and the proper hiring of additional manpower,” it adds.

“These charges are applied as a last resort to deter repeated non-compliances, after multiple verbal reminders and written notices are provided. Thus far, our regular patrons at Yishun Park Hawker Centre have acknowledged the consistently clean and comfortable dining environment they continue to enjoy.”

It also clarified that the operator-run Timbre Pizza, which Mr Seetoh saw as evidence of the operator “depriving other independent hawkers” of a chance to operate another stall, had ceased operations at One Punggol Hawker Centre on Aug 17, as part of “planned business and manpower restructuring”.
 
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