Article Beginner 8 min read

Introduction to ESG for Guyanese Businesses

A plain-language introduction to Environmental, Social, and Governance principles and why they matter for businesses operating in Guyana.

What is ESG?

Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) is a framework that helps businesses measure and communicate how they manage risk, create value, and operate responsibly — beyond financial performance alone.

For businesses in Guyana, ESG is no longer optional. International investors, development banks, and large corporations increasingly require their suppliers, partners, and borrowers to demonstrate ESG compliance before entering contracts or approving financing.


The Three Pillars of ESG

Environmental (E)

Environmental factors measure how your business interacts with the natural world:

  • Energy and water use
  • Waste management and pollution control
  • Carbon emissions and climate risk
  • Compliance with environmental regulations

For Guyana's context: With one of the world's highest forest coverage rates and a rapidly growing oil and gas sector, environmental responsibility is particularly critical. Businesses supplying the energy sector face specific reporting requirements under the Guyana Local Content Act and international lender standards.

Social (S)

Social factors measure how your business manages relationships with employees, suppliers, customers, and communities:

  • Fair wages and labour conditions
  • Health and safety standards
  • Community engagement
  • Human rights and non-discrimination policies

For SMEs: Social compliance doesn't require large budgets. Simple written policies on workplace safety, fair pay, and grievance procedures are often enough to demonstrate commitment.

Governance (G)

Governance factors measure how your business is led and controlled:

  • Ownership transparency (beneficial ownership)
  • Financial record-keeping and reporting
  • Anti-corruption and ethics policies
  • Management oversight and accountability

Key requirement: Guyana's Beneficial Ownership Transparency (BOT) Register requires companies in certain sectors to disclose their beneficial owners — direct governance compliance.


Why ESG Matters for Your Business

Access to Finance

Development banks (IDB, CDB, World Bank) and international lenders increasingly require ESG assessments before approving loans or grants. Strong ESG performance opens doors to better financing terms and new funding sources unavailable to non-compliant businesses.

Qualifying for the Oil & Gas Supply Chain

ExxonMobil, SLB, and other operators in Guyana's energy sector require suppliers to meet IFC Performance Standards and local content requirements. ESG compliance is a prerequisite for entering — and staying in — this supply chain.

Competitive Advantage

Businesses with documented ESG practices are preferred partners for international companies entering Guyana and for government procurement. In a competitive tender process, ESG credentials can be the deciding factor.

Risk Management

Good ESG practices reduce operational risks: fewer workplace accidents, better community relations, and stronger financial controls all protect your business and your reputation.


The 2026 Compliance Deadline

Guyana's local content regulations and international financing standards are converging on 2026 as a key compliance milestone. Businesses that begin their ESG journey now have time to build genuine, verifiable practices rather than rushing into last-minute box-ticking.


Where to Start

  1. Assess your current position — What environmental, social, and governance practices do you already have in place?
  2. Identify gaps — What policies, records, or disclosures are missing?
  3. Prioritise — Start with the pillar most relevant to your sector and financing goals
  4. Document everything — Written policies, records, and reports are the evidence that matters
  5. Seek support — The BSD's Business Advisory Services can help you build a personalised ESG readiness plan

Download the IFC Performance Standards below — the global ESG framework used by development banks to assess the businesses they finance.

Related Document Ifc Performance Standards 2012
Download PDF
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