![]() SL: What should companies that aren’t thinking about sustainability as part of their day-to-day consider? If you can plant a stake publicly, you’re essentially asking consumers, the community, and others to hold you accountable. We’re seeing increasing public interest and a more sophisticated understanding of these issues so companies should expect to be held to their commitments. It’s critical to have buy-in from senior management from the outset and to establish a governance structure. Start with simple steps and be open to a process of continual adjustment. TG: The majority of corporations recognize that sustainability is an increasingly important issue, but developing a strategy and path to implementation can be daunting. SL: When looking at a company’s sustainability performance over time, what are some of the most important things you consider? In the future, there will likely be disclosure requirements that explain how these risks were incorporated into the decision-making process. For example, suppose you have significant property holdings in coastal Florida. This will impact a range of sectors from insurance and finance to infrastructure and real estate. TG: I think we can expect increasing obligations to assess the vulnerability of assets and operations to climate impacts such as increasing temperatures, changing precipitation patterns, and more frequent extreme weather events. SL: Given your background in government, what do you feel is the most important thing for businesses to know is coming down the pike that could fundamentally change how they operate? ![]() This was an exciting opportunity to help develop the approach to measuring climate impact and demonstrating the technical feasibility, economic viability, and profitability of adaptation solutions. ![]() Lightsmith is the first private equity firm that leverages public, private, and philanthropic capital to commercially deploy the tools and technologies for climate resilience and adaptation. Without the private sector, the technological innovation necessary to transition from the current trajectory to a low-carbon, climate-resilient future will not happen. ![]() It has the potential to touch all areas of our lives, lead to food and resource scarcity, and will disproportionately impact those that are already most vulnerable. Tara Guelig: Climate change is already increasing humanitarian tragedy and economic damage globally and will continue to do so, even if we’re successful at holding global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius. International Development Finance Corporation to sustainable investment in the private equity world? Sustain.Life: What sparked your transition from the U.S. Our interview has been edited for length and clarity. She shared insight into the sustainability issues that VCs and PE firms consider and how startups can best position themselves. Development Finance Corporation and worked on the Biden-Harris Presidential Transition Team. She previously spent 15 years at the U.S. We caught up with Tara Guelig, The Lightsmith Group’s Director of Sustainability and Impact. Lightsmith partners with growth-stage companies working across technology-enabled business services and solutions in energy, water, food and agriculture, and climate resilience and helps scale their solutions globally. One example is The Lightsmith Group, a private equity firm that pursues measurable social and environmental impacts by investing in companies that address major societal needs.
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