Fri, 17 Jul 2026 · LIVE
Updated Jul 17, 2026 · 16:25
India News Updated Jul 17, 2026

ESG Key to India's Economic Competitiveness by 2047, Says MCA

The Ministry of Corporate Affairs has stated that Environmental, Social and Governance-led responsible business conduct must become a key driver of India's economic competitiveness as the country aims to become a developed nation by 2047. Nitin Gupta, Chairperson of NFRA, emphasized the need for sustainability disclosures to be relevant, comparable, and verifiable, with the same rigor as financial reporting. IICA Director General Gyaneshwar Kumar Singh highlighted India's transition from "ESG 1.0" to "ESG 2.0," where ESG becomes a strategic driver of enterprise value. The conference also discussed integrating sustainability into board-level decisions and leveraging technology to improve data transparency.

ESG-led responsible business conduct key to India's economic competitiveness: MCA

New Delhi, July 17

Environmental, Social and Governance-led responsible business conduct must evolve into a key driver of India's economic competitiveness as the country moves towards its vision of becoming a developed nation by 2047, the Ministry of Corporate Affairs said on Friday.

Addressing the inaugural session of the fourth edition of the National Conference on Responsible Business Conduct (NCRBC) 2026, Nitin Gupta, Chairperson, National Financial Reporting Authority (NFRA) said India has made significant progress in sustainability disclosures and should now focus on improving their quality, reliability and usefulness for decision-making.

"Responsible Business Conduct is integral to the vision of Viksit Bharat and to fostering competitive enterprises, trusted markets, inclusive growth and environmental sustainability," Gupta said.

He said sustainability information should be relevant, comparable, evidence-based and verifiable, supported by robust methodologies, reliable source systems and effective internal controls.

He added that sustainability reporting should be subject to the same discipline and rigour as financial reporting and auditing, with documentation, traceability, evidence retention and independent examination strengthening the credibility of disclosures.

Gupta also called for a proportionate and pragmatic approach to sustainability reporting while leveraging technology and strengthening institutional capacities, particularly across value chains and among micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs).

Speaking at the conference, IICA Director General and Chief Executive Officer Gyaneshwar Kumar Singh said India's aspiration to become a USD 30 trillion economy by 2047 requires ESG principles to move beyond regulatory compliance and become an integral part of the country's economic development model.

He described India's sustainability journey as a transition from "ESG 1.0" to "ESG 2.0", where ESG is emerging as a strategic driver of long-term enterprise value, business resilience and risk management.

Singh said the next phase should focus on integrating sustainability into board-level decision-making, strengthening legal and regulatory frameworks for sustainability data assurance and leveraging emerging technologies, including artificial intelligence, to improve the quality, traceability and transparency of sustainability data across value chains.

The conference also featured discussions on ESG governance, board-level disclosures and responsible business practices. The second day will focus on sector-specific ESG integration, responsible value chains, mainstreaming ESG among MSMEs and strengthening sustainability reporting frameworks to support India's long-term growth objectives.

— ANI

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