Industry Comparison
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Current language: English (2023)
You are viewing information about the following Industries:
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Wind Technology & Project Developers
Wind Technology & Project Developers manufacture wind turbines, blades, towers and other components of wind power systems. Entities that develop, build and manage wind energy projects also are included within this industry scope. Manufacturers also may offer post-sale maintenance and support services. Turbines may be installed onshore or offshore, which can create differences in wind-generating capacity and project development challenges for each type of installation. Most major wind technology entities operate globally. -
Consumer Finance
The Consumer Finance industry provides loans to consumers. The largest segment of the industry is comprised of revolving credit loans through credit card products. Additional loan services include auto, micro lending, and student loans. Some entities in the industry also provide consumer-to-consumer money transfers, money orders, prepaid debit cards, and bill payment services. Industry performance is determined by consumer spending, rates of unemployment, per capita GDP, income, and population growth. Recent shifts toward consumer protection and transparency have aligned and will continue to align the interests of society with those of long-term investors. Entities that effectively manage their social capital will therefore be better positioned to maximise their financial capital.
Relevant Issues for both Industries (6 of 26)
Why are some issues greyed out?
The SASB Standards vary by industry based on the different sustainability-related risks and opportunities within an industry. The issues in grey were not identified during the standard-setting process as the most likely to be useful to investors, so they are not included in the Standard. Over time, as the ISSB continues to receive market feedback, some issues may be added or removed from the Standard. Each company determines which sustainability-related risks and opportunities are relevant to its business. The Standard is designed for the typical company in an industry, but individual companies may choose to report on different sustainability-related risks and opportunities based on their unique business model.-
Environment
- GHG Emissions
- Air Quality
- Energy Management
- Water & Wastewater Management
- Waste & Hazardous Materials Management
- Ecological Impacts
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Social Capital
- Human Rights & Community Relations
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Customer Privacy
The category addresses management of risks related to the use of personally identifiable information (PII) and other customer or user data for secondary purposes including but not limited to marketing through affiliates and non-affiliates. The scope of the category includes social issues that may arise from a company’s approach to collecting data, obtaining consent (e.g., opt-in policies), managing user and customer expectations regarding how their data is used, and managing evolving regulation. It excludes social issues arising from cybersecurity risks, which are covered in a separate category. -
Data Security
The category addresses management of risks related to collection, retention, and use of sensitive, confidential, and/or proprietary customer or user data. It includes social issues that may arise from incidents such as data breaches in which personally identifiable information (PII) and other user or customer data may be exposed. It addresses a company’s strategy, policies, and practices related to IT infrastructure, staff training, record keeping, cooperation with law enforcement, and other mechanisms used to ensure security of customer or user data. - Access & Affordability
- Product Quality & Safety
- Customer Welfare
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Selling Practices & Product Labeling
The category addresses social issues that may arise from a failure to manage the transparency, accuracy, and comprehensibility of marketing statements, advertising, and labeling of products and services. It includes, but is not limited to, advertising standards and regulations, ethical and responsible marketing practices, misleading or deceptive labeling, as well as discriminatory or predatory selling and lending practices. This may include deceptive or aggressive selling practices in which incentive structures for employees could encourage the sale of products or services that are not in the best interest of customers or clients.
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Human Capital
- Labour Practices
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Employee Health & Safety
The category addresses a company’s ability to create and maintain a safe and healthy workplace environment that is free of injuries, fatalities, and illness (both chronic and acute). It is traditionally accomplished through implementing safety management plans, developing training requirements for employees and contractors, and conducting regular audits of their own practices as well as those of their subcontractors. The category further captures how companies ensure physical and mental health of workforce through technology, training, corporate culture, regulatory compliance, monitoring and testing, and personal protective equipment. - Employee Engagement, Diversity & Inclusion
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Business Model and Innovation
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Product Design & Lifecycle Management
The category addresses incorporation of environmental, social, and governance (ESG) considerations in characteristics of products and services provided or sold by the company. It includes, but is not limited to, managing the lifecycle impacts of products and services, such as those related to packaging, distribution, use-phase resource intensity, and other environmental and social externalities that may occur during their use-phase or at the end of life. The category captures a company’s ability to address customer and societal demand for more sustainable products and services as well as to meet evolving environmental and social regulation. It does not address direct environmental or social impacts of the company’s operations nor does it address health and safety risks to consumers from product use, which are covered in other categories. - Business Model Resilience
- Supply Chain Management
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Materials Sourcing & Efficiency
The category addresses issues related to the resilience of materials supply chains to impacts of climate change and other external environmental and social factors. It captures the impacts of such external factors on operational activity of suppliers, which can further affect availability and pricing of key resources. It addresses a company’s ability to manage these risks through product design, manufacturing, and end-of-life management, such as by using of recycled and renewable materials, reducing the use of key materials (dematerialization), maximizing resource efficiency in manufacturing, and making R&D investments in substitute materials. Additionally, companies can manage these issues by screening, selection, monitoring, and engagement with suppliers to ensure their resilience to external risks. It does not address issues associated with environmental and social externalities created by operational activity of individual suppliers, which is covered in a separate category. - Physical Impacts of Climate Change
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Leadership and Governance
- Business Ethics
- Competitive Behaviour
- Management of the Legal & Regulatory Environment
- Critical Incident Risk Management
- Systemic Risk Management
Disclosure Topics
What is the relationship between General Issue Category and Disclosure Topics?
The General Issue Category is an industry-agnostic version of the Disclosure Topics that appear in each SASB Standard. Disclosure topics represent the industry-specific impacts of General Issue Categories. The industry-specific Disclosure Topics ensure each SASB Standard is tailored to the industry, while the General Issue Categories enable comparability across industries. For example, Health & Nutrition is a disclosure topic in the Non-Alcoholic Beverages industry, representing an industry-specific measure of the general issue of Customer Welfare. The issue of Customer Welfare, however, manifests as the Counterfeit Drugs disclosure topic in the Biotechnology & Pharmaceuticals industry.-
Access Standard
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Customer Privacy
The category addresses management of risks related to the use of personally identifiable information (PII) and other customer or user data for secondary purposes including but not limited to marketing through affiliates and non-affiliates. The scope of the category includes social issues that may arise from a company’s approach to collecting data, obtaining consent (e.g., opt-in policies), managing user and customer expectations regarding how their data is used, and managing evolving regulation. It excludes social issues arising from cybersecurity risks, which are covered in a separate category.None -
Data Security
The category addresses management of risks related to collection, retention, and use of sensitive, confidential, and/or proprietary customer or user data. It includes social issues that may arise from incidents such as data breaches in which personally identifiable information (PII) and other user or customer data may be exposed. It addresses a company’s strategy, policies, and practices related to IT infrastructure, staff training, record keeping, cooperation with law enforcement, and other mechanisms used to ensure security of customer or user data.None -
Selling Practices & Product Labeling
The category addresses social issues that may arise from a failure to manage the transparency, accuracy, and comprehensibility of marketing statements, advertising, and labeling of products and services. It includes, but is not limited to, advertising standards and regulations, ethical and responsible marketing practices, misleading or deceptive labeling, as well as discriminatory or predatory selling and lending practices. This may include deceptive or aggressive selling practices in which incentive structures for employees could encourage the sale of products or services that are not in the best interest of customers or clients.None -
Employee Health & Safety
The category addresses a company’s ability to create and maintain a safe and healthy workplace environment that is free of injuries, fatalities, and illness (both chronic and acute). It is traditionally accomplished through implementing safety management plans, developing training requirements for employees and contractors, and conducting regular audits of their own practices as well as those of their subcontractors. The category further captures how companies ensure physical and mental health of workforce through technology, training, corporate culture, regulatory compliance, monitoring and testing, and personal protective equipment.-
Workforce Health & Safety
Many wind turbine manufacturers offer operations and maintenance (O&M) services for wind farm owners or operators together with product sales. These activities may include installation, maintenance, monitoring and repairing turbine installations. The wind farm O&M segment maintains a high safety standard because the work is inherently hazardous. Hazards include physical hazards such as falls from heights and moving mechanical parts, as well as electrical hazards. The quality of O&M services therefore is critical for the safety of wind farm operations, with the potential to affect entity reputations and demand for products and services. Operational downtime and effects on wind farm insurance costs because of accidents may add to wind farm operating costs. Wind farm owners or developers therefore may consider turbine and service provider safety records in requests for tender. Entities that improve turbine and O&M safety may reduce operating costs and extraordinary expenses.
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Product Design & Lifecycle Management
The category addresses incorporation of environmental, social, and governance (ESG) considerations in characteristics of products and services provided or sold by the company. It includes, but is not limited to, managing the lifecycle impacts of products and services, such as those related to packaging, distribution, use-phase resource intensity, and other environmental and social externalities that may occur during their use-phase or at the end of life. The category captures a company’s ability to address customer and societal demand for more sustainable products and services as well as to meet evolving environmental and social regulation. It does not address direct environmental or social impacts of the company’s operations nor does it address health and safety risks to consumers from product use, which are covered in other categories.-
Ecological Impacts of Project Development
Wind farm development involves siting, land acquisition, permitting and engagement with local stakeholders to manage environmental and community impacts. Offshore developments may affect the marine ecosystem, and both on and offshore wind farms may have adverse effects on local animal populations, some of which may be endangered. Obtaining environmental and construction permits for projects may be delayed or prevented if regulators or community members have concerns about the ecological impacts of the development. Wind project approval directly affects equipment manufacturers through demand for turbines. Although manufacturers typically do not control the project approval process, research and development investments may minimise ecological impacts, resulting in long-term benefits. These measures could facilitate project approvals and give wind technology manufacturers a competitive advantage, potentially increasing their market share over time.
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Materials Sourcing & Efficiency
The category addresses issues related to the resilience of materials supply chains to impacts of climate change and other external environmental and social factors. It captures the impacts of such external factors on operational activity of suppliers, which can further affect availability and pricing of key resources. It addresses a company’s ability to manage these risks through product design, manufacturing, and end-of-life management, such as by using of recycled and renewable materials, reducing the use of key materials (dematerialization), maximizing resource efficiency in manufacturing, and making R&D investments in substitute materials. Additionally, companies can manage these issues by screening, selection, monitoring, and engagement with suppliers to ensure their resilience to external risks. It does not address issues associated with environmental and social externalities created by operational activity of individual suppliers, which is covered in a separate category.-
Materials Sourcing
Wind technology entities source materials from global supply chains for use in turbines, including critical materials, such as neodymium and dysprosium, and critical minerals including tantalum and tungsten. Materials sourcing risks result from a low substitution ratio, the concentration of deposits in a few countries, geopolitical considerations, and competition from other industries. Direct drive turbines, which increasingly are being used for reliability, may require significantly more critical materials than more traditional drive trains. Entities may minimise negative externalities and protect themselves from related input cost volatility and supply constraints by creating transparent supply chains, sourcing materials from reliable suppliers or regions that have minimal environmental or social risks associated with them, supporting research into alternative inputs, and reducing reliance on these materials. -
Materials Efficiency
The Wind Technology & Project Developers industry’s long-term success depends on producing energy at a comparatively lower cost than other energy sources. Steel and other materials purchases are one of the largest costs of turbines, and inputs such as steel have exhibited price volatility in the past. In recent years, wind turbines have grown in size, in terms of both the tower height and the swept area of the rotor, to improve energy output and increase the potential for wind energy production in more areas. To achieve this expansion cost-effectively, entities may employ innovative methods to increase turbine output while using materials more efficiently. Increased output and efficiency could influence entities’ competitiveness and market share, costs of production, and operational risks related to the supply and price volatility of raw materials, as well as the ability of the entity to scale.
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Access Standard
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Customer Privacy
The category addresses management of risks related to the use of personally identifiable information (PII) and other customer or user data for secondary purposes including but not limited to marketing through affiliates and non-affiliates. The scope of the category includes social issues that may arise from a company’s approach to collecting data, obtaining consent (e.g., opt-in policies), managing user and customer expectations regarding how their data is used, and managing evolving regulation. It excludes social issues arising from cybersecurity risks, which are covered in a separate category.-
Customer Privacy
Entities in the Consumer Finance industry face risks and opportunities associated with using customer data for purposes other than those for which the data was originally collected (for example, targeted advertising or transfer to third parties). Ensuring the privacy of personal information and other account holders’ data is an essential responsibility of the Consumer Finance industry. To assess performance on this issue, investors may benefit from entities’ disclosure of the number of account holders whose information is used for secondary purposes, and their policies and procedures around using such information, including the nature of their opt-in policies. Investors may be encouraged and reassured by disclosures of information regarding an entity’s data usage, as well as applicable jurisdictional legal or regulatory actions related to customer protection and privacy. Entities in the Consumer Finance industry that fail to manage performance in this area may be susceptible to decreased revenues resulting from lost consumer confidence and high employee turnover, as well as financial consequences arising from increased legal risks.
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Data Security
The category addresses management of risks related to collection, retention, and use of sensitive, confidential, and/or proprietary customer or user data. It includes social issues that may arise from incidents such as data breaches in which personally identifiable information (PII) and other user or customer data may be exposed. It addresses a company’s strategy, policies, and practices related to IT infrastructure, staff training, record keeping, cooperation with law enforcement, and other mechanisms used to ensure security of customer or user data.-
Data Security
Entities in the Consumer Finance industry face risks and opportunities associated with customer data security management, in the context of external threats. Ensuring the security of customers’ personal information is an essential responsibility of the Consumer Finance industry. To assess performance on this issue, analysts may benefit from disclosure regarding safeguarding customer data against emerging and continuously evolving cybersecurity threats and technologies, security breaches compromising customers’ personal information, and credit and debit card fraud. Entities that fail to manage these threats effectively may be susceptible to reduced revenues resulting from decreased consumer confidence and high employee turnover. Furthermore, data breaches may expose entities to lengthy, costly litigation and potential monetary losses.
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Selling Practices & Product Labeling
The category addresses social issues that may arise from a failure to manage the transparency, accuracy, and comprehensibility of marketing statements, advertising, and labeling of products and services. It includes, but is not limited to, advertising standards and regulations, ethical and responsible marketing practices, misleading or deceptive labeling, as well as discriminatory or predatory selling and lending practices. This may include deceptive or aggressive selling practices in which incentive structures for employees could encourage the sale of products or services that are not in the best interest of customers or clients.-
Selling Practices
Selling practices encompasses performance in three important areas that can affect an entity’s operations and financial condition. First, entity compensation and incentive policies may unintentionally encourage the selling of products and services that are not in the clients’ best interest. Secondly, an entity may be perceived as using deceptive practices from a failure to provide transparent information to customers about primary and add-on products. And finally, depending on the characteristics of products offered, poor performance on the first two elements could result in customers holding portfolios containing high concentrations of risk. Entities in the Consumer Finance industry may face increased scrutiny as regulators encourage improved transparency and enhanced disclosure. The disclosure of important lending portfolio characteristics—including average fees from add-on products, average age of credit products, average annual percentage rate (APR) of credit products, average number of credit accounts and average annual fees for pre-paid transaction products—may permit shareholders to determine which entities can best protect long-term value, rather than relying on short-term revenue generation practices. Providing consumer finance products focused on the customers’ best interest may build trust with new and existing customers, expand market share, and ensure sustainable revenue growth.
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Employee Health & Safety
The category addresses a company’s ability to create and maintain a safe and healthy workplace environment that is free of injuries, fatalities, and illness (both chronic and acute). It is traditionally accomplished through implementing safety management plans, developing training requirements for employees and contractors, and conducting regular audits of their own practices as well as those of their subcontractors. The category further captures how companies ensure physical and mental health of workforce through technology, training, corporate culture, regulatory compliance, monitoring and testing, and personal protective equipment.None -
Product Design & Lifecycle Management
The category addresses incorporation of environmental, social, and governance (ESG) considerations in characteristics of products and services provided or sold by the company. It includes, but is not limited to, managing the lifecycle impacts of products and services, such as those related to packaging, distribution, use-phase resource intensity, and other environmental and social externalities that may occur during their use-phase or at the end of life. The category captures a company’s ability to address customer and societal demand for more sustainable products and services as well as to meet evolving environmental and social regulation. It does not address direct environmental or social impacts of the company’s operations nor does it address health and safety risks to consumers from product use, which are covered in other categories.None -
Materials Sourcing & Efficiency
The category addresses issues related to the resilience of materials supply chains to impacts of climate change and other external environmental and social factors. It captures the impacts of such external factors on operational activity of suppliers, which can further affect availability and pricing of key resources. It addresses a company’s ability to manage these risks through product design, manufacturing, and end-of-life management, such as by using of recycled and renewable materials, reducing the use of key materials (dematerialization), maximizing resource efficiency in manufacturing, and making R&D investments in substitute materials. Additionally, companies can manage these issues by screening, selection, monitoring, and engagement with suppliers to ensure their resilience to external risks. It does not address issues associated with environmental and social externalities created by operational activity of individual suppliers, which is covered in a separate category.None
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General Issue Category
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Wind Technology & Project Developers
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Consumer Finance
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Customer Privacy
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Customer Privacy
Entities in the Consumer Finance industry face risks and opportunities associated with using customer data for purposes other than those for which the data was originally collected (for example, targeted advertising or transfer to third parties). Ensuring the privacy of personal information and other account holders’ data is an essential responsibility of the Consumer Finance industry. To assess performance on this issue, investors may benefit from entities’ disclosure of the number of account holders whose information is used for secondary purposes, and their policies and procedures around using such information, including the nature of their opt-in policies. Investors may be encouraged and reassured by disclosures of information regarding an entity’s data usage, as well as applicable jurisdictional legal or regulatory actions related to customer protection and privacy. Entities in the Consumer Finance industry that fail to manage performance in this area may be susceptible to decreased revenues resulting from lost consumer confidence and high employee turnover, as well as financial consequences arising from increased legal risks.
Data Security
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Data Security
Entities in the Consumer Finance industry face risks and opportunities associated with customer data security management, in the context of external threats. Ensuring the security of customers’ personal information is an essential responsibility of the Consumer Finance industry. To assess performance on this issue, analysts may benefit from disclosure regarding safeguarding customer data against emerging and continuously evolving cybersecurity threats and technologies, security breaches compromising customers’ personal information, and credit and debit card fraud. Entities that fail to manage these threats effectively may be susceptible to reduced revenues resulting from decreased consumer confidence and high employee turnover. Furthermore, data breaches may expose entities to lengthy, costly litigation and potential monetary losses.
Selling Practices & Product Labeling
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Selling Practices
Selling practices encompasses performance in three important areas that can affect an entity’s operations and financial condition. First, entity compensation and incentive policies may unintentionally encourage the selling of products and services that are not in the clients’ best interest. Secondly, an entity may be perceived as using deceptive practices from a failure to provide transparent information to customers about primary and add-on products. And finally, depending on the characteristics of products offered, poor performance on the first two elements could result in customers holding portfolios containing high concentrations of risk. Entities in the Consumer Finance industry may face increased scrutiny as regulators encourage improved transparency and enhanced disclosure. The disclosure of important lending portfolio characteristics—including average fees from add-on products, average age of credit products, average annual percentage rate (APR) of credit products, average number of credit accounts and average annual fees for pre-paid transaction products—may permit shareholders to determine which entities can best protect long-term value, rather than relying on short-term revenue generation practices. Providing consumer finance products focused on the customers’ best interest may build trust with new and existing customers, expand market share, and ensure sustainable revenue growth.
Employee Health & Safety
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Workforce Health & Safety
Many wind turbine manufacturers offer operations and maintenance (O&M) services for wind farm owners or operators together with product sales. These activities may include installation, maintenance, monitoring and repairing turbine installations. The wind farm O&M segment maintains a high safety standard because the work is inherently hazardous. Hazards include physical hazards such as falls from heights and moving mechanical parts, as well as electrical hazards. The quality of O&M services therefore is critical for the safety of wind farm operations, with the potential to affect entity reputations and demand for products and services. Operational downtime and effects on wind farm insurance costs because of accidents may add to wind farm operating costs. Wind farm owners or developers therefore may consider turbine and service provider safety records in requests for tender. Entities that improve turbine and O&M safety may reduce operating costs and extraordinary expenses.
Product Design & Lifecycle Management
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Ecological Impacts of Project Development
Wind farm development involves siting, land acquisition, permitting and engagement with local stakeholders to manage environmental and community impacts. Offshore developments may affect the marine ecosystem, and both on and offshore wind farms may have adverse effects on local animal populations, some of which may be endangered. Obtaining environmental and construction permits for projects may be delayed or prevented if regulators or community members have concerns about the ecological impacts of the development. Wind project approval directly affects equipment manufacturers through demand for turbines. Although manufacturers typically do not control the project approval process, research and development investments may minimise ecological impacts, resulting in long-term benefits. These measures could facilitate project approvals and give wind technology manufacturers a competitive advantage, potentially increasing their market share over time.
Materials Sourcing & Efficiency
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Materials Sourcing
Wind technology entities source materials from global supply chains for use in turbines, including critical materials, such as neodymium and dysprosium, and critical minerals including tantalum and tungsten. Materials sourcing risks result from a low substitution ratio, the concentration of deposits in a few countries, geopolitical considerations, and competition from other industries. Direct drive turbines, which increasingly are being used for reliability, may require significantly more critical materials than more traditional drive trains. Entities may minimise negative externalities and protect themselves from related input cost volatility and supply constraints by creating transparent supply chains, sourcing materials from reliable suppliers or regions that have minimal environmental or social risks associated with them, supporting research into alternative inputs, and reducing reliance on these materials. -
Materials Efficiency
The Wind Technology & Project Developers industry’s long-term success depends on producing energy at a comparatively lower cost than other energy sources. Steel and other materials purchases are one of the largest costs of turbines, and inputs such as steel have exhibited price volatility in the past. In recent years, wind turbines have grown in size, in terms of both the tower height and the swept area of the rotor, to improve energy output and increase the potential for wind energy production in more areas. To achieve this expansion cost-effectively, entities may employ innovative methods to increase turbine output while using materials more efficiently. Increased output and efficiency could influence entities’ competitiveness and market share, costs of production, and operational risks related to the supply and price volatility of raw materials, as well as the ability of the entity to scale.