UTAR Centre for Entrepreneurial Sustainability
(CENTS) in collaboration with Apex Securities Berhad and UTAR Faculty of
Accountancy and Management (FAM), organised a talk titled “Introduction to
ESG” on 14 September 2022 at UTAR Sungai Long Campus.
The talk aimed at understanding Environmental, Social
and Governance (ESG) and ways to embrace it. The speaker for the talk was
Research Manager of Apex Securities Berhad Lee Cherng Wee. Also, in
attendance at the talk were Chairperson of CENTS Assoc Prof Dr Mohammad
Falahat Nejadmahani, and FAM lecturers Assoc Prof David Ng Ching Yat and
Raymond Ling Leh Bin.
After a short souvenir presentation session, Lee
moved on to discuss several topics. One of the topics included the
definition of ESG. He explained, “ESG stands for Environmental, Social and
Governance. Environmental factors refer to the impacts that a company can
have on living and non-living things, while social factors are those that
can affect individuals, groups or societies. Lastly, governance factors
refer to the organisation’s governance structure, composition, knowledge,
roles and remuneration.”
Dr Falahat (left) presenting a
souvenir to Lee
Lee also spoke on the reasons why ESG is currently
trending, factoring it to higher awareness and demand from inventors, the
ever-growing interest in ESG by millennials, and the rise of regulatory
standards on ESG disclosure. He also shared the impacts of ESG, with some
examples being product recall, corruption, environmental harm, and unfair
treatment of staff. Lee then listed a few ESG products, including Individual
Stocks, Exchange Traded Funds (ETF), Mutual Funds, and Green Bonds.
Lee explaining the challenges of ESG
Explaining the challenges in ESG, Lee finally said,
“One of the main challenges of ESG is called Greenwashing, where the company
provides false or misleading information about the environmental impact
brought about by them or their products.” He added, “Another ESG challenge
is small companies have to incur high costs and resources in order to
implement ESG, which can really affect them. Not only that, the data and
information about the company’s ESG activities may not be accurate. This is
due to a couple of reasons, such as different scores provided by different
rating agencies, the lack of assessment of certain companies by the rating
agencies, and the fact that these ratings are based on public data such as
annual reports, which are unverified and can be manipulated by the company
itself.”
The talk ended with a short Q&A session, a group
photography session, and a speech by Apex Securities Berhad Executive
Director and Head of Dealings Kong Ming Ming, and two UTAR alumni who are
currently working at Apex Securities Berhad.
Front row, third from left: Raymond
Ling, Dr Falahat, Kong, Lee and David Ng
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