ESG Risk Integration
...a key to jamaica’s business sustainability
FOR Jamaican businesses navigating an increasingly competitive global market, environmental, social, and governance considerations are no longer optional — they are strategic imperatives. Jermaine Heslop, senior manager, risk management at Sygnus Capital, believes companies that integrate ESG risk management into their core strategies will be best positioned to remain resilient, protect value, and sustain long-term growth.
“ESG is about more than compliance. It is about resilience, credibility, and business continuity,” Heslop said.
While many Jamaican businesses are familiar with ESG as a framework for measuring environmental impact, social responsibility, and governance standards, its role in safeguarding reputation and securing access to capital has become increasingly critical. Globally, ESG performance now plays a decisive role in how investors, consumers, and financial institutions evaluate companies. According to PricewaterhouseCoopers’ Global Investor ESG Survey, 79 per cent of investors consider ESG risk management important to their investment decisions, while 76 per cent of consumers say they would stop purchasing from companies that mistreat workers, communities, or the environment.
For Jamaican companies seeking international funding or trade partnerships, robust ESG practices are no longer just an advantage — they are often prerequisites. Institutional investors such as multilateral development banks, development finance institutions, and pension funds are increasingly making ESG integration and reporting mandatory. Moreover, ESG regulations have surged by 155 per cent globally over the past decade. Access to capital, blended finance, and green funding increasingly depend on credible ESG frameworks.
The urgency is particularly pronounced in the Caribbean, where climate exposure, economic openness, and highly interconnected societies amplify risk. “Reputational risk is especially acute in the region,” Heslop noted. “A single incident — whether improper waste disposal, unsafe working conditions, or governance lapses — can escalate quickly, affecting customers, investors, and even a company’s ability to attract and retain talent.”
This reality was reinforced late last year when Hurricane Melissa affected Jamaica. While the immediate recovery phase has passed, the event exposed how small island states remain vulnerable to increasingly severe weather patterns linked to climate change. The global outlook places a heavy emphasis on ESG risks. According to the World Economic Forum’s 2024 Global Risks Perception Survey, environmental and social issues dominate the global risk outlook over both the short and long term. Within two years, extreme weather events rank second among top risks, while over a 10-year horizon the top four risks are all environmental: extreme weather, biodiversity loss, critical changes to Earth systems, and natural resource shortages.
Climate resilience, Heslop argued, should be treated as both a business priority and a national strategic imperative. “ESG risk management has become essential to business continuity,” he said. “Jamaica’s competitiveness will increasingly depend on how effectively companies operationalise comprehensive and relevant ESG risk frameworks.”
Hurricane Melissa highlighted how deeply interconnected environmental risks are with financial and operational risks. The storm resulted in infrastructure damage, business interruptions, asset losses, and rising insurance costs — all of which erode profitability and threaten long-term viability. These impacts illustrate why ESG risks cannot be considered in isolation. Companies that build resilience into their operations will be the ones best positioned to survive and adapt in the post-Melissa business landscape.
Boards, Heslop emphasised, must now give ESG risk management the same level of attention as financial and operational risks. It is worth noting that companies that lead in ESG practices have experienced a 12.9 per cent average annual return compared to 8.6 per cent for lower-rated peers, underscoring the financial upside of robust ESG systems.
For companies still developing their ESG strategy, Heslop recommends a phased and practical approach, particularly for those with limited resources. He outlines three key areas of focus:
Integrate ESG Into Existing Enterprise Risk Management Frameworks
ESG risks should be integrated into existing risk management processes, not treated separately. Strong leadership and board commitment are critical, as they set the tone for culture and accountability. Clear ESG risk policies help define ownership and guide decision-making.
Prioritise Community Impact And Evaluate Business Relationships
Many Jamaican businesses already operate within strong community networks and established supplier relationships. Strategic partnerships with schools, non-governmental organisations, and community groups can strengthen social impact while enhancing reputational capital.
Communicate Transparently And Consistently
Credible ESG integration depends on clear and honest communication. Once priorities and targets are defined, companies should regularly report on progress through annual reports, sustainability disclosures, or digital platforms. Transparency builds trust and reinforces long-term credibility.
Looking ahead, Heslop believes companies must also invest in tangible resilience tools such as renewable energy solutions including solar grids, off-site data backups, hurricane-resistant construction, and improved storage and continuity practices. While these measures require upfront investment, they offer long-term competitive returns.
More broadly, Hurricane Melissa should be viewed as a pivotal moment for Jamaica to strengthen its positioning as a climate-smart business and tourism destination. A coordinated focus on ESG risk integration across the private sector can enhance investor confidence, attract sustainable capital, and support resilient economic growth.