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Overall Assessment |
Analysis |
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None
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Bursa Malaysia’s disclosures focus extensively on sustainability governance, highlighting that "our governance structure in this area is anchored by a Sustainability Development Committee (SDC) at Board level" and that "Group Sustainability is overseen by the Director of Group Sustainability, who reports directly to the CEO." It details how the SDC and the Risk Management Committee (RMC) "drive our sustainability strategy and direction, ensuring that they are embedded in our daily operations," and that the CEO provides "monthly updates to the Board on progress and key milestones with respect to our climate aspirations and plans." However, we found no evidence of any internal mechanisms, oversight structures, monitoring processes, or accountability measures specifically governing lobbying activities—either direct engagement with policymakers or indirect engagement through trade associations—and no disclosure of any committee, individual, or formal review process tasked with ensuring alignment of lobbying efforts with the company’s sustainability or climate policy.
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E
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Overall Assessment |
Analysis |
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Limited
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Bursa Malaysia Bhd provides only limited insight into its climate-related lobbying. Its disclosures focus on developing the voluntary carbon market, the Bursa Carbon Exchange and other sustainability initiatives, but they do not name any specific pieces of climate legislation, regulations or government programmes the exchange has tried to influence. While the company refers in passing to mechanisms such as “public consultations” and “advocacy dialogues” connected to its Enhanced Sustainability Reporting Framework and carbon-market forums, it does not identify which ministries, regulators or lawmakers were approached, nor does it describe how those consultations were conducted. The objectives it presents are broad aspirations—building a “robust voluntary carbon market ecosystem”, supporting Malaysia’s net-zero goal and facilitating the energy transition—without setting out concrete policy changes or regulatory outcomes it is advocating. As a result, the disclosures reveal only that Bursa Malaysia engages stakeholders on climate-related market development, but offer little transparency about any concrete lobbying activity, its targets, or the specific results it seeks to achieve.
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D
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