Assessing how economic activities impact the multiple dimensions of sustainability is a central challenge of the twenty-first century. In this paper, the authors present evidence-based indications of sector-level impacts on Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), which can guide equity investors in identifying general impacts typically expected by companies who belong in the same sector.
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Aligning investments with Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) has been a longstanding ambition for many private investors. The assessment of corporate impact on the SDGs is not a trivial task, and most present-day attempts often overlook SDG interactions, and lack scientific anchoring and transparency. The authors present an evidence-based review approach for investors to assess sector-level impacts on individual SDGs, and score these using a traffic-light system. Their initial review documents impacts of 81 economic sectors on SDGs 1-16. Results show that environmental SDGs are impacted negatively by most economic sectors, and that primary sector activities negatively impact the highest number of SDGs. Using the agricultural sector as a case, the authors draw on Causal Loop methodology to illustrate spillovers resulting from SDG interactions. Their findings point to three key considerations of relevance for sustainable investment strategies; the necessity to capture ‘impact shadows’, spillovers across SDGs, and the hierarchical nature of the SDGs.
