At present, there are several initiatives in Russia aimed at organizing, stimulating, and developing the concept of sustainable development. The principal approach is the domestically developed Standard for Sustainable Development Reporting (a draft of which the editorial board got access to), which is being created at the request of the Russian Ministry of Economic Development and Trade. Positive Changes Journal has compiled an in-depth analysis of this document, encompassing the perspectives of all interested parties. Being unaffiliated with any of these groups, yet possessing all necessary information, we can afford to examine the situation from an objective standpoint, analyze it, and propose pertinent contributions to the standard in development.
Tatiana Pechegina
Vladimir Vainer
The sustainability of the social sphere, particularly its economic constituents like social enterprises and non-governmental organization, is intrinsically linked to the position and sustainability of businesses, whether large or small. The more sustainable the business, the more effectively it bolsters the development of the entire social sector. Well-being represents a broad spectrum of factors that encompass addressing social challenges from the global scale down to the local level of individual lives and their families.
Traditionally, social initiatives rely on what is termed “corporate social responsibility”: through philanthropy and patronage, sponsorship, social investments, and innovative social entrepreneurship projects. However, in recent years, the familiar acronym “CSR” is progressively being supplanted by the abbreviation “SDG,” representing the 17 UN Sustainable Development Goals and their respective national applications.[16]
The recognition that all major businesses should embrace CSR has evolved into a strategic pursuit of sustainable development goals, subsequently forming an ESG agenda, which dictates that businesses meet developmental criteria across three domains: environmental, social, and governance. ESG serves as a financial mechanism to incentivize and quantify the SDGs. These mechanisms include preferential terms for lending, bonds and other forms of borrowing within the global financial system and national finance frameworks. In Russia, this particularly refers to the “green” and “social” taxonomies. Furthermore, the Bank of Russia has formulated recommendations for developing a methodology and assigning ESG ratings.[17]
The National ESG Alliance was also established, with a mission to “fortify the national sustainable development agenda in Russia by uniting the efforts of large-scale business and the government.”[18] In 2022, the Alliance launched the ESG Ecosystem Atlas, which features over 30 sections detailing the roles of regulators, standards and taxonomy developers, data aggregators, and professional users of non-financial data, as well as creators of services and authors involved in diverse projects in this domain. Simultaneously, it is envisaged to considerably scale up the national ESG agenda within Russia, incorporating not just prominent ESG transformation leaders but also small and medium-sized enterprises, as well as the society at large, by 2030, which is beyond the immediate horizon.
Discussing ESG indicators, it is crucial to understand the stance of the state. In 2021, the Russian President expressed his viewpoint as follows: “ESG is a comprehensive gauge of how a state envisions its progression for the near future and beyond into the medium and long term. Undoubtedly, such development must place the individual at its core, which is what it does. The Russian government fully recognizes this, not merely to keep to the trend but because our entire policy is founded around the individual. At least that’s what we are certainly striving to do.”[19]
In 2022, Vladimir Putin, after convening with members of the Business Russia organization, directed the Russian Government to “explore defining criteria for classifying investment projects in line with the standards of environmental, social, and governance responsibility (ESG), and to consider state support for such project participants.”[20]
In 2023, the Accounts Chamber of the Russian Federation conducted an evaluation of the UN SDGs ratified by Russia in its 85 regions and acknowledged positive trends in the majority of indicators.[21] Yet, the actual understanding of SDGs within the regions, as well as public awareness of the topic, remains at a modest level, with the implementation by local authorities being highly contingent upon regional specificity and the engagement of senior officials.