- What is ESG Investing?
- Key ESG Trends in 2025
- 1. Increased Scrutiny and Regulation
- 2. The Rise of Climate Tech and Decarbonization Funds
- 3. AI-Driven ESG Scoring and Analytics
- 4. Social and Governance Factors Gain Ground
- 5. Customizable ESG Portfolios
- What Does ESG Stand For?
- Environmental
- Social
- Governance
- What Are the Benefits of ESG Investing?
- 1. Long-Term Opportunities
- 2. Reduced Portfolio Risk
- 3. Potential for Higher Returns
- 4. Growing Investor and Consumer Demand
- 5. Enhanced Corporate Engagement
- What Are the Risks of ESG Investing?
- 1. No agreed upon standards
- 2. Appearances can be deceiving
- 3. ESG limits choices
- How is ESG Different Than Socially Responsible Investing (SRI)?
- Is ESG Investing Right For You?
You want to invest in companies that are going to make you money, but you also want to make a difference in the world. Well, that, in a nutshell, is what ESG investing is about — and it continues to grow in relevance in 2025.
You may have heard ESG investing can reduce profile risk, generate hefty returns, and make you feel good about where you’re putting your money. But, like any investment, you don’t want to invest in ESG companies unless you understand how ESG investing works, as well as the risks involved. So, to help you get started, here’s what you should know about ESG investing.
What is ESG Investing?
ESG investing—environmental, social, and governance—is a sustainable approach to investing in which you put your money in companies you believe will positively shape the world.
ESG investors believe that in the long run the most profitable companies will be those that proactively solve environmental and social problems. To find these companies, ESG investors rely on certain independent ratings and reports, such as the Corporate Responsibility Report, which measures how well a company treats the environment, social justice issues, and their employees.
Key ESG Trends in 2025
1. Increased Scrutiny and Regulation
In 2025, ESG funds are facing more stringent regulatory oversight in Canada, the U.S., and Europe. Regulatory bodies are pushing for greater transparency and standardized ESG disclosures to combat greenwashing and improve investor confidence.
2. The Rise of Climate Tech and Decarbonization Funds
There’s a growing shift toward ESG funds that prioritize clean energy, carbon capture, and sustainable infrastructure. These climate-focused investments are gaining traction as governments and corporations commit to aggressive net-zero targets.
3. AI-Driven ESG Scoring and Analytics
Advanced data analytics and artificial intelligence are increasingly used to assess ESG risks and opportunities. Investors in 2025 have access to more dynamic, real-time ESG ratings that go beyond traditional scoring models.
4. Social and Governance Factors Gain Ground
While environmental issues continue to dominate headlines, investors are paying closer attention to social and governance factors—like labor practices, board diversity, and data ethics—especially in the wake of global workforce shifts and AI integration.
5. Customizable ESG Portfolios
Retail and institutional investors alike now have greater access to personalized ESG investing options. Through robo-advisors and direct indexing, individuals can tailor portfolios based on specific values or exclusions, such as avoiding fossil fuels or supporting gender equity.
What Does ESG Stand For?
ESG stands for environmental, social, and governance, and any company that wants to qualify as ESG must rank high in these three areas. Here’s a closer look at each of these pillars.
Environmental
Companies have been pumping carbon into the atmosphere at dangerously high levels for a long time, and ESG investors are sick of it. The environmental pillar of ESG involves evaluating what a company is doing (and not doing) for the health of the planet, as well as what ecological footprint the company leaves.
Environmental issues aren’t just ethical. They’re long-term growth issues, too. Unmitigated climate change could cause superstorms, climate “wars,” political unrest, increased global poverty, and resource scarcity. Companies that start preparing for these risks now will do much better than companies that don’t.
Looking at a company’s environmental performance can involve looking at these factors:
- Animal rights
- Air and water pollution
- Biodiversity on land use
- Carbon output
- Climate change stance, policies, and actions
- Deforestation/reforestation
- Development of green products and technology
- Energy efficiency
- Transparency about a company’s climate goals and how it’s meeting them
- Use of fair trade suppliers or organic ingredients
- Water stewardship
- Waste management
When you’re looking at a company’s environmental impact, you’ll want to pay close attention to these factors. Of course, don’t just look at a company’ self-declared policies and call it a day. Look at sustainability reports prepared by reputable agencies, such as the Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) or the United Nations Principles for Responsible Investing (PRI) in order to get an objective understanding.
Social
The social aspect of ESG involves measuring a company’s treatment of people both inside and outside its doors. That means how a company treats its employees, partners, suppliers, community, and stakeholders.
Social issues play a vital role in a company’s long-term profitability. Not only can lawsuits, scandals, and bad press devastate a company’s revenues, but companies with disgruntled, unhappy, and burned out employees are far less productive than companies with higher levels of employee engagement. Additionally, companies that don’t treat employees well have higher turnover rates, which requires companies to spend more money recruiting, hiring, and training new employees.
When you’re evaluating the social pillar, look for these factors:
- Community service and relations
- Customer service ratings and satisfaction
- Data protection and privacy
- Diversity and inclusion, especially in hiring and promotions
- Employee engagement initiatives (or lack of them)
- Employee pay, benefits, perks, safety policies, and treatment
- Human rights and social justice stances
To find information on a company’s social conduct, you can look at the same reports as you did for environmental concerns, both the GRI and PRI. Additionally, you may also want to check out Canada’s top employers in Forbes magazine, or even read reviews on employee rating websites such as Glassdoor.
Governance
Finally, a company is only as good as its leaders, and ESG investors are keen on investing with companies with an excellent board of directors. Companies that score high in the governance pillar have a diverse board of directors who don’t let self-interest get in the way of making the right decision. Other governance factors to look at include:
- Board election and length of board member terms
- Communication, responsiveness, and transparency with shareholders, including the details and outcome around stakeholder lawsuits (if any)
- Conflicts of interest among board executives
- Corrupt practices, including using political positions to gain favorable treatment or other forms of bribery
- Diversity of management, leadership, and executives
- Executive compensation, bonuses, perks, and any large exit bonuses
Again, to find information on governance performance, you can find details in a company’s GRI or PRI. If you can’t find governance details in these reports, you can always use the SEDAR database to locate any Canadian company’s public records.
What Are the Benefits of ESG Investing?
Beyond making investors feel good about the companies in which they invest, ESG investing offers a range of strategic advantages in 2025. Environmental, Social, and Governance factors can signal resilience, long-term value, and responsible business practices. Here are several key reasons to consider adopting an ESG-focused investment approach:
1. Long-Term Opportunities
Among values-based investing strategies, ESG stands out for its future-focused mindset. It prioritizes companies that are not only viable today, but positioned to thrive decades from now. For example, a company that develops clean energy technologies or leads in sustainable agriculture is likely better aligned with global regulatory trends and consumer preferences than one relying on outdated, resource-heavy operations. As governments commit to net-zero goals and climate-related risks escalate, companies on the right side of this transition may experience durable growth while their less-adaptive competitors struggle or become obsolete.
2. Reduced Portfolio Risk
Companies with strong ESG practices tend to manage risk more effectively. Their commitment to transparency, environmental responsibility, and ethical governance reduces the likelihood of scandals, lawsuits, fines, or reputational damage. ESG screening can help investors avoid companies with poor labor conditions, corruption, environmental violations, or unsustainable business models.
Take the example of Tyson Foods. During the COVID-19 pandemic, reports emerged that the company allegedly required sick employees to continue working and failed to provide adequate protective equipment. This not only endangered lives, but also resulted in public backlash, legal scrutiny, and a significant drop in share price. In contrast, companies with robust health and safety policies may have fared better, both reputationally and financially.
3. Potential for Higher Returns
While ESG investing was once viewed as a values-driven sacrifice of returns, data in recent years suggests otherwise. ESG-integrated portfolios have often matched or outperformed their traditional counterparts, especially in turbulent markets. Companies that anticipate regulatory changes, adapt to evolving societal expectations, and mitigate environmental or social risks may enjoy greater operational efficiency and more stable growth.
In short, ESG-aligned firms are not just doing the right thing—they’re often doing the smart thing. Their ability to balance profitability with responsibility may give investors a strategic edge.
4. Growing Investor and Consumer Demand
Consumer behavior and investor capital are increasingly flowing toward companies that demonstrate purpose and integrity. Millennials and Gen Z investors, in particular, are driving demand for ESG-focused funds, and many institutional investors now require ESG reporting as part of their due diligence. This shift in market sentiment may lead to valuation premiums for ESG leaders and penalties for laggards.
5. Enhanced Corporate Engagement
By investing in ESG funds, shareholders gain the ability to influence corporate behavior through voting rights and engagement. ESG-oriented asset managers often advocate for improvements in sustainability, diversity, and ethical governance practices—making shareholder voices a tool for positive change.
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What Are the Risks of ESG Investing?
ESG investing can help investors identify companies with long-term growth potential and ethical practices. But it’s not without its risks. Here are three any prospective ESG investor should be aware of.
1. No agreed upon standards
ESG investors often lack standardized metrics for assessing companies. Most companies still self-report their ESG metrics, and though independent rating agencies exist, they often weigh ESG factors differently.
2. Appearances can be deceiving
Though Corporate Responsibility Reports and Glassdoor reviews help keep companies responsible to ESG factors, some companies will still get away with greenwashing. They’ll appear to be doing good environmentally, socially, and corporately, when in reality they’re simply giving a false appearance of goodwill.
The risk of this, of course, is that a company’s ill practices will eventually come back to haunt them financially. The public will find out where the company’s values truly lie, causing a drop in share prices.
3. ESG limits choices
ESG investors can invest in a limited pool of companies who pass ESG metrics. Right now, that pool is pretty lucrative. But if companies fall out of ESG standards, the selection of profitable companies shrinks.
How is ESG Different Than Socially Responsible Investing (SRI)?
First off, keep in mind that ESG is a part of a family of value-based investing, to which Socially Responsible Investing (SRI) also belongs. Like ESG, SRI involves investing in companies for their environmental and social impact, which is why these two investing approaches can be easily confused.
But they are different. And they differ in one significant way: rather than rely on ESG criteria that screens in companies, SRI investors screen out companies based on their personal values. SRI investors don’t want to become complicit for actions they deem morally wrong, which is why they’ll exclude certain companies from their portfolios.
For example, an SRI investor may avoid investing in tobacco companies, as they find tobacco morally corruptible, even if certain tobacco companies strive for sustainable and ethical practices, ones that make them ESG worthy.
Like SRI investors, ESG investors have moral motivations, but they also have economic incentives, too. ESG investors believe a company’s environmental, social, and governance performance will have a long-term impact on its profitability. They may hold similar convictions with SRI investors, sure, but ESG investors may not strive to balance their investments with their personal convictions.
Is ESG Investing Right For You?
ESG investing can be pretty exciting. You’re investing in companies that can significantly impact culture, society, and the planet, not to mention companies with above-market returns.
Of course, as always, you’ll want to do your homework. Read a company’s Corporate Responsibility Report and check Glassdoor or other independent rating agencies to evaluate a company’s environmental, social, and corporate impacts.
If ESG gets you exciting, you’re probably the right investor for it. Check the TSX’s most promising ESG stocks, or invest into an ESG fund, which can spread your money across multiple companies.