JKH won two awards at the annual ACCA Sustainability Reporting Awards, for
the categories of “Diversified Group” and the “Overall Sustainability Reporting
Award 2014”
The ACCA Sri Lanka Sustainability Reporting
Awards, which reached its 10-year milestone in rewarding Sri Lanka’s most transparent
entities took place on last evening (25th February 2014) at Cinnamon Grand, under
the aegis of British High Commissioner John Rankin as Chief Guest.
Based on the
concept that businesses perform better by using sustainability reporting as a tool to
measure, monitor and report their actions and the impacts those actions have on
stakeholders, the ACCA Sri Lanka Sustainability Reporting Awards have gained immense
momentum since its inception nine years ago.
This is amply evidenced by the
number of reports submitted for the awards process reaching a record high with over a
100% increase in submissions.
This year’s awards moved away from the past years’
conventional winning categories, focusing rather on industry sectors and an overall
winner. The six sectors highlighted were in Manufacturing, Banking, Finance and
Insurance, Leisure and Services which also included non-profit organisations and the
public sector, Agriculture and Plantations, Diversified Organisations that deal with a
large product portfolio and Retail and Trading.
Each sector had a winner and
runner up and an overall winner and a runner up from all reports submitted.
In
evaluating the reports, judges used completeness, credibility and communication as the
criteria. As mentioned by the Panel of Judges, “Completeness would be judged from
ascertaining if the report enables the reader to form a complete view of the
organisation’s operations and impacts. It should comprise the CEO’s view on
sustainability, how central is this concern to the organisation and to what extent is
the management’s commitment. The manner in which the key aspects of the organisations’
environment, community and financial viability is presented will also be
assessed.”
Credibility of the information
They also
concur that credibility of the information presented becomes important including having
the right policies and contingency plans, appropriate personnel in place, compliance to
the laws of the country, information gathering systems, management systems and targets
which are designed to achieve sustainable development and accounting for sustainability
projects.
Continuity of sustainability activities and its verification and audit
of activities was also scrutinised. “The report will also be evaluated in the way it
communicates information. The judges also looked at simplicity, layout and comprehension
of data, its understandability and readability, innovativeness of the material presented
and adoption of GRI guidelines.”
The range of reports submitted by various
sectors underwent a stringent marking process derived from the Global Reporting
Initiative Guidelines and also the newer integrated reporting concept. It is a strong
belief at ACCA that sustainability reporting can prepare firms to avoid or mitigate
environmental and social risks that may have impacts on their business, helping
organisations to gain a better reputation and win shareholder and stakeholder trust, as
well as improve access to capital.
The awards were endorsed by the Ministry of
Environment and Global Compact Network Ceylon and rewards those entities who have gone
beyond the boundaries of compliance to truly ‘walk the talk’.
(Source Daily
FT)
JKH won two awards at the annual ACCA Sustainability Reporting Awards, for
the categories of “Diversified Group” and the “Overall Sustainability Reporting
Award 2014”
The ACCA Sri Lanka Sustainability Reporting
Awards, which reached its 10-year milestone in rewarding Sri Lanka’s most transparent
entities took place on last evening (25th February 2014) at Cinnamon Grand, under
the aegis of British High Commissioner John Rankin as Chief Guest.
Based on the
concept that businesses perform better by using sustainability reporting as a tool to
measure, monitor and report their actions and the impacts those actions have on
stakeholders, the ACCA Sri Lanka Sustainability Reporting Awards have gained immense
momentum since its inception nine years ago.
This is amply evidenced by the
number of reports submitted for the awards process reaching a record high with over a
100% increase in submissions.
This year’s awards moved away from the past years’
conventional winning categories, focusing rather on industry sectors and an overall
winner. The six sectors highlighted were in Manufacturing, Banking, Finance and
Insurance, Leisure and Services which also included non-profit organisations and the
public sector, Agriculture and Plantations, Diversified Organisations that deal with a
large product portfolio and Retail and Trading.
Each sector had a winner and
runner up and an overall winner and a runner up from all reports submitted.
In
evaluating the reports, judges used completeness, credibility and communication as the
criteria. As mentioned by the Panel of Judges, “Completeness would be judged from
ascertaining if the report enables the reader to form a complete view of the
organisation’s operations and impacts. It should comprise the CEO’s view on
sustainability, how central is this concern to the organisation and to what extent is
the management’s commitment. The manner in which the key aspects of the organisations’
environment, community and financial viability is presented will also be
assessed.”
Credibility of the information
They also
concur that credibility of the information presented becomes important including having
the right policies and contingency plans, appropriate personnel in place, compliance to
the laws of the country, information gathering systems, management systems and targets
which are designed to achieve sustainable development and accounting for sustainability
projects.
Continuity of sustainability activities and its verification and audit
of activities was also scrutinised. “The report will also be evaluated in the way it
communicates information. The judges also looked at simplicity, layout and comprehension
of data, its understandability and readability, innovativeness of the material presented
and adoption of GRI guidelines.”
The range of reports submitted by various
sectors underwent a stringent marking process derived from the Global Reporting
Initiative Guidelines and also the newer integrated reporting concept. It is a strong
belief at ACCA that sustainability reporting can prepare firms to avoid or mitigate
environmental and social risks that may have impacts on their business, helping
organisations to gain a better reputation and win shareholder and stakeholder trust, as
well as improve access to capital.
The awards were endorsed by the Ministry of
Environment and Global Compact Network Ceylon and rewards those entities who have gone
beyond the boundaries of compliance to truly ‘walk the talk’.
(Source Daily
FT)
31 March, 2026
25 March, 2026
25 February, 2026