Partnerships for sustainability in South Asia

Published date: 22 October 2021

GRI engaging with regional markets to increase sustainability reporting

Capital markets in South Asia have stepped up their efforts to encourage companies to be transparent about their impacts – thanks to GRI’s engagements in 2021 with stock exchanges and regulators.

In India, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh, GRI has collaborated with local exchanges – the Bombay Stock Exchange (BSE), Colombo Stock Exchange (CSE) and the Dhaka Stock Exchange (DSE) – to deliver a series of workshops and seminars. These events, which included panel discussions and peer learning on the sustainability reporting journey, introduced many first-time reporters to the value of the GRI Standards.

I have acquired important knowledge from these sessions. If we can adopt sustainability reporting practices in the company, it will benefit not only our company but also our key stakeholders.”

Shamim Kabir, Sr. Vice President, Kohinoor Chemical Co. in Bangladesh, was a participant in the GRI-DSE technical series for reporters

Speakers spoke passionately about how their company initiated sustainability reporting practices. They gave us practical guidance on how and where to start.”

Sakuni Adikaram, Investment Analyst, with Lanka Ventures PLC, reflecting on a panel discussion event, hosted by GRI and CSE

Two videos are available, to share more widely the work by the GRI South Asia Regional Hub with the CSE and DSE:

View these leaflets for more about GRI in Bangladesh and GRI in Sri Lanka.

In recent years, GRI has entered in to Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) agreements with the three stock exchanges to promote sustainability reporting practices by listed companies. The GRI MoU with BSE has just been renewed and a program of training and workshops to support businesses in India will be announced soon.

Meanwhile, the Securities and Exchange Board of India is introducing updated Business Responsibility and Sustainability Report requirements, to which GRI provided expert advice. From next fiscal year, the new rules will require the largest 1,000 listed firms in India to produce a sustainability report, with the GRI Standards explicitly referenced.

Similarly, GRI was consulted by the Bangladesh Bank on the development of their new Sustainable Finance Policy, which sets expectations for all financial institutions and banks to conduct sustainability reporting.

The economies of South Asia are fast growing, yet there remains many opportunities for organizations in the region to embrace more sustainable business practices. We are pleased to be working closely with stock exchanges and regulators, who have an important role in incentivizing listed companies to report. Through our engagements in India, Sri Lanka and Bangladesh, we are seeing that companies are becoming more receptive to the benefits of robust sustainability reporting, many for the first time, as enabled by the GRI Standards. Not only can they provide the transparency that markets, investors and other stakeholders increasingly demand, they can also adapt their operations to be sustainable and resilient in the long term.”

Aditi Haldar, Director of GRI South Asia

In May 2021, a GRI publication – Sustainability Reporting Trends in South Asia – revealed that reporting by companies has increased in India, Bangladesh and Sri Lanka, with the GRI Standards the most widely used reporting framework in all three countries.

GRI thanks Australia’s Department for Foreign Affairs & Trade (DFAT) and the Swedish International Development & Cooperation Agency (Sida) for supporting our programs in South Asia.