
World Economic Forum Globals Risks 2026
The real governance problem is not ambition
When sustainability-related issues start to challenge strategic assumptions, many organisations struggle to place them.
Historically, sustainability has often been positioned downstream of strategy, linked to reporting, compliance, or specialist functions. That approach was workable when expectations centred on disclosure and policy alignment.
It becomes strained when sustainability-related considerations begin to shape strategic choices.
At that point, familiar governance arrangements offer limited guidance. Decisions cut across functions, time horizons, and risk categories. Responsibility is diffuse, and escalation paths are unclear.
Boards often encounter this discomfort late in the process, when options have narrowed and trade-offs have become harder to reverse. The unease that follows is frequently attributed to sustainability itself, rather than to the absence of a clear place for these decisions to sit.
Creating separate sustainability governance structures rarely resolves that tension.
More often, it fragments accountability and pushes decisions further away from existing oversight mechanisms. The challenge is integration: ensuring that sustainability-related risks, impacts, and opportunities are considered where strategic decisions are already taken, using the governance structures that already carry authority.
What changes when sustainability is treated as strategic dimension
When sustainability is recognised as part of strategy rather than as an extension of reporting, a number of shifts tend to follow.
Issues surface earlier, while options are still open and choices remain reversible. Trade-offs are addressed deliberately rather than deferred until external pressure forces a response. Responsibility becomes clearer because decisions sit with those who already have the mandate to make them.
None of this requires new committees or additional layers of oversight.
It requires clarity about when sustainability-related considerations enter strategic discussions and how they are handled once they do.
Capability, not structure, is often the limiting factor
Where organisations struggle with this shift, the obstacle is rarely conceptual; it usually is much more practical.
Recognising sustainability-related trade-offs, discussing them constructively, and acting on them within existing decision-making processes requires experience and confidence. It requires boards and executives to engage with uncertainty and accept that not every dimension of a decision can be optimised simultaneously.
This can feel uncomfortable at senior level. Long-term exposure is harder to debate than short-term performance, particularly when familiar financial metrics offer limited guidance. Organisations that build this capability do not necessarily change their governance. They change how decisions are framed, what information is treated as relevant, and how responsibility is assigned when trade-offs emerge.
What this really asks of governance
When sustainability keeps returning to the board agenda, the problem is rarely that something was missed in reporting.
More often, it is a signal that strategic decisions are being tested — without clear agreement on who decides, how sustainability considerations should weigh in, or when issues should escalate.
And if you recognise this, are you ready to let your governance reflect it?