In our study, just 32% of UK C-suite leaders say they have a sustainability strategy that has been acted on and clearly communicated—behind the global average (43%).
Percent indicating there is a sustainability strategy in place that has been acted upon and clearly communicated
And only 25% expect to make a great deal of progress/significant progress towards embedding sustainability across business strategy in the next five years, compared to 39% globally.
Five-year outlook
The lack of perceived headway could be an indication that UK organizations hold themselves to a higher bar of success than their global counterparts. Many executives tell us that they want to get sustainability right and are spending time up-front to develop workable strategies, engaging stakeholders and securing buy-in.
Yet there is also evidence that many UK organizations are still at the early stages of their commitment to sustainability. Just 48% of UK C-suite leaders say their CEO is personally committed to advancing sustainability and organizational progress has been made.
Across the 11 markets we surveyed, UK C-suite leaders are also the most likely to say that their sustainability efforts are driven by brand-management concerns—51% say they want to be viewed as socially responsible and reputable or use sustainability for competitive differentiation. Far fewer are motivated by value creation (20%), impact reduction (20%) and risk avoidance (9%).
Jon Stanton
CEO, The Weir Group
Sustainability has emerged as a critical growth lever that will drive business success over the next decade. Organizations that perceive sustainability only as a brand issue to be managed are unlikely to embed the transformational changes that will unlock growth. Our global research shows that when value creation is the driving force behind a company’s approach to sustainability, much more progress is anticipated in fully embedding sustainability in the company’s strategy and operations.
Percent indicating great deal or significant progress
Surface-level commitments are not enough; pledges must be underpinned by credible and compelling strategies for change. If frameworks for action are missing, leaders should prepare to face greenwashing accusations. With the Competition and Markets Authority recently announcing that it would carry out a full review of misleading green claims in 2022, the reputational risks of empty promises are significant.
Action Items
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Explore the "Divides and Dividends" survey themes
UK organizations are behind the curve when it comes to embedding sustainability across business strategy.
Are UK organizations ready to meet net-zero targets, or are they at risk of greenwashing accusations?
Do leaders have the skills they need to pivot their organizations towards a more sustainable future?