As businesses continue to improve their internal processes and ensure it adapts to the market’s current demands, one key consideration has become increasingly evident. Across Australia, businesses are no longer expected to simply comply with regulatory requirements, keep up with market demand, and deliver quality products and/or services.
Alongside this, they are also expected to be accountable for their environmental, social, and governance (ESG) impacts. In fact, stakeholders such as investors, regulators and customers have shifted to becoming conscious stakeholders – expecting transparency and credibility in how businesses commit to their sustainability efforts.
With this additional expectation, businesses turn to sustainability accounting to set up the systems, processes, and controls in place to translate organizational efforts into measurable sustainable outcomes. Without proper management and reporting, even well-intentioned ESG strategies and initiatives become business risks, resulting in inconsistent and disconnected outcomes that can harm a business’ operations, marketability, reputation, and community building efforts.
But, what is sustainability accounting in the first place?
In a nutshell, sustainability accounting is the ability of an organization or entity to identify, measure, and report their business’ environmental, social, and governance impacts alongside its financial performance. While traditional accounting and bookkeeping simply shows your financial performance, outcomes, and how it relates to your business operations, sustainability accounting incorporates all this with qualitative data to help see how the organization’s operations comply with their ESG objectives.
Commonly, sustainability accounting reports tackle the following:
Because of what sustainability accounting reports contain, they not only need financial data, but sustainability data as well – needing the cooperation of several departments to accurately assess company-wide ESG efforts. As data is collected, it is the accounting team’s responsibility to accurately and consistently analyze and structure data to be able to compare it with sustainability reporting standards.
While this process requires several accounting disciplines such as reconciliations, documentation, and governance—to be used on non-financial information — it also requires a specialization in data analytics, making sustainability accounting a niche subset of accounting at current times.
Regardless of the complexity of the role, it remains to be an essential one – especially if you want to ensure that your sustainability efforts are effective. Without proper accounting oversight, sustainability data risks become fragmented, subjective, or disconnected from strategic decision-making, often resulting in disrupted sustainability efforts.
In Australia, businesses are taking on the initiative of making their ESG efforts public, alongside with government efforts as the Australian Government released mandatory ESG reporting requirements for businesses and corporations. What was once largely voluntary is now being institutionalized, driven by regulatory developments and global alignment.
Because of this shift, Australian businesses are now adhering to the rules and regulations set about by:
These developments aim to improve consistency, comparability, and credibility in sustainability reporting, particularly around climate-related financial disclosures.
How does it affect a business’ accounting team?
As sustainability reporting becomes more closely aligned with financial reporting, accounting teams are being asked to:
This means that accounting departments in Australia are no longer just required to manage the financial operations of the company but spearhead its sustainability efforts as well – connecting accounting sustainability with the organization’s corporate governance.
With sustainability right at Australian businesses’ doorstep, organizations are faced with the fact that they are now operating in an environment and market shaped by climate risk, supply chain disruptions and hesitations, workforce expectations and increasing regulatory requirements and oversights. All this means that sustainability is now a strategic and financial concern of Australian businesses and now affects almost all aspects of management decisions.
For stakeholders, sustainability now plays a role in determining the following:
From a financial perspective, sustainability risks (such as climate exposure, regulatory penalties, or social non-compliance) can negatively impact your enterprise value – reducing trust and marketability to both your clients and potential investors. To prevent this, stakeholders require reliable and decision-useful financial reports and statements alongside business sustainability reports.
This shift has placed accounting and finance teams at the center of the business’ sustainability efforts as they become responsible for transforming ESG initiatives into structured, auditable data.
When it comes to quantifying the effectivity of a business’ sustainability efforts, sustainability reporting has become the baseline expectation for Australian businesses – especially for those looking for credibility to attract investments, government contracts, or global partnerships. Stakeholders are no longer satisfied with just high-level commitments or marketing-led disclosures.
Instead, they expect:
Inaccurate or poorly supported sustainability disclosures can expose your business to reputational damage, regulatory scrutiny, and legal risk. This has elevated sustainability reporting from a communications exercise to a core finance responsibility.
For many businesses, this shift has highlighted capability gaps within internal accounting teams -- gaps that can be addressed through outsourced accounting support for your ESG efforts.
With accounting teams now playing a central role in sustainability strategy development and execution, their responsibilities expand beyond compliance to enabling better decision-making and long-term value creation.
Key finance-led sustainability functions include:
However, these responsibilities come at a time when finance teams are already managing increased complexity in tax, compliance, and financial reporting. Without additional support, sustainability accounting can strain internal resources.
Despite growing awareness, many businesses struggle to institutionalize sustainability accounting effectively. Common challenges include:
1. Data Fragmentation
Sustainability data often sits across multiple departments, systems, and suppliers, making consolidation difficult.
2. Lack of Standardization
Inconsistent definitions and measurement methodologies undermine comparability and credibility.
3. Limited Internal Expertise
Many accounting teams lack specialized ESG knowledge, particularly in emerging reporting frameworks.
4. Resource Constraints
Sustainability reporting adds workload without necessarily adding headcounts.
5. Audit and Assurance Readiness
Poor documentation and controls make external assurance costly and time-consuming.
These challenges highlight why many businesses are turning to outsourced accounting to strengthen sustainability reporting capability.
Outsourced accounting support for ESG goes beyond transactional support. When structured correctly, it becomes a strategic extension of your business’ finance functions. This support strengthens your internal financial controls, allowing you to adapt to the sustainability demands while preserving the quality of your internal financial controls.
Key benefits include:
Outsourced providers apply accounting discipline to sustainability data, improving accuracy and audit readiness.
In ensuring effectiveness, it is important to note that your sustainability accounting efforts should not operate in isolation. Instead, it should be integrated with your business’ financial management processes as a whole.
This integration allows businesses to:
Outsourced accounting teams can support this integration by aligning sustainability data structures with existing financial systems, ensuring consistency and traceability.
Outsourced accounting support helps businesses:
This proactive approach reduces risk and supports long-term reporting maturity.
When sustainability accounting is executed well, it becomes more than a compliance requirement; it becomes a source of strategic advantage that helps your business build credibility for both its potential and current customers alongside potential investors and partners.
Reliable sustainability data allows your business to:
By investing in the right accounting infrastructure which are supported where appropriate by outsourced accounting in Australia, businesses can turn sustainability into a measurable, manageable, and value-enhancing capability.
As businesses continue to adopt sustainability strategies in order to help mitigate the detrimental effects of human activity to our environment, it is important to not only adopt an open-minded approach as a business – where all employees are ready to assess and adjust their daily workflows as needed in an effort to become more sustainable,, but to have the right controls and support in place to help support your sustainability efforts.
With outsourced accounting, your accounting team gains access to specialized support that can be tailored to your company’s specific needs.
Consider D&V Philippines. We have paperless accounting solutions for CFOs and professional services firms to help you reduce your carbon footprint, one step at a time. Contact us today or download our whitepaper, Finding the Right Talents: D&V Philippines’ Solutions to Modern Accounting Firms, for more information.