14-06-2021 · Insight

Engaging with countries to promote the SDGs

A team from Robeco has published a framework that can help investors engage with countries to tackle sustainability challenges.

    Authors

  • Jan Anton van Zanten - SDG Strategist

    Jan Anton van Zanten

    SDG Strategist

  • Peter van der Werf - Head of Engagement

    Peter van der Werf

    Head of Engagement

  • Rikkert Scholten - Strategist

    Rikkert Scholten

    Strategist

The framework, published in a journal article on 2 June, maps out methods for the relatively new but complex process of engaging with governments to advance the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

Governments also have good reasons to work with the investors who buy their sovereign bonds as it means they can get better access to finance and to sustainability expertise. Sovereign bond values are partly determined by the sustainability credentials of a country – including for example its record on deforestation – making it in the country’s interest to raise its score.

One of the first countries to do so was Brazil, whose vice president met with a group of 34 investors in July 2020 to discuss concerns about deforestation in the Amazon rainforest. A follow-up meeting was held in January 2021. Engagement work has now begun with Indonesia, focused on unsustainable palm oil.

Academic paper

As such sovereign engagement is new, no clear methods for how to proceed with it have been defined so far. To bridge this gap, three Robeco sustainability experts have now co-authored a Sovereign SDG Engagement Framework. It is detailed in their article, ‘Sustainability integration for sovereign debt investors: engaging with countries on the SDGs,’ published in the Journal of Sustainable Finance and Investment.

The framework introduced in the paper seeks to answer three key questions: who to engage with, what to engage about, and how to conduct the engagement itself.

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First, relevant countries are prioritized based on relevance in the investment universe and portfolios and the country’s progress on the SDGs. Countries with significant investment exposure and high sustainability challenges are relevant candidates for engagement – since these are the countries where an investor can make a difference.

Second, SDG targets facing slow progress within that country are identified as priorities to engage on. Third, a detailed roadmap is provided that offers a systematic process for conducting the engagement itself, including goal setting, finding partnerships in the process, reporting and monitoring progress.

This sovereign SDG engagement framework was created to help investors navigate the process of engaging with governments on their countries’ SDG performance. How this works in practice, along with the impact it can make in furthering the SDGs, is explained in detail in the article.