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Markkula Center for Applied Ethics

All ESG Environment Resources

 

Environmental reporting standards, environmentally friendly investing options, achieving zero carbon emissions and responsibly sourced supply chains are all part of the sustainability scorecards companies need. Browse a selection of resources, events, articles, cases, and commentary from Ethics Center faculty, staff, and students.

All ESG Environment Resources
San Francisco Chronicle Logo

Irina Raicu, director of the Internet Ethics Program at the Markkula Center for Applied Ethics, published by San Francisco Chronicle.

A hand holding a clear sphere with a leaf on it.

Can ESG move past ingrained notions of property and capitalism and aid in the movement toward a more equitable, ethical, and sustainable future?

Pollution in a city.

ESG provides businesses with an opportunity to emphasize accountability and shift from a shareholder to a stakeholder model of business ownership.

A structure with solar panels in the city.

Ten important steps for companies pursuing ESG and a sustainable approach to business.

A yacht sitting at a pier.

Resource consumption is a major environmental and humanitarian issue, and one that ESG evaluation standards should take into account when making recommendations.

A generic bar graph featuring a trendline and a magnifying glass focused on one section

Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG)-focused companies performed better than others through the market volatility so common during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Cartoon Man Carrying the Earth

Business leaders can drive positive affect to climate change through their organizations.