The Partner, Assurance Services at Deloitte Ghana, Dr. Kwabena Situ, has issued a strong warning to insurance companies across Ghana, urging them to adopt sustainability reporting standards or risk exposing their businesses to significant operational, reputational, and underwriting challenges.
Speaking at an Environmental, Social and Governance forum organized by the National Insurance Commission, Dr. Situ stressed that sustainability reporting has become a strategic business necessity rather than a compliance exercise.
According to him, insurers that fail to align with global sustainability disclosure standards could find themselves disadvantaged in an increasingly risk-conscious global marketplace.
Sustainability Reporting Moves to the Forefront
The forum brought together key stakeholders from Ghana’s insurance industry to discuss the growing importance of ESG principles and the adoption of the International Financial Reporting Standards Sustainability Disclosure requirements.
Dr. Situ noted that sustainability reporting under the IFRS framework provides insurance companies with a structured approach to identifying, measuring, and disclosing sustainability-related risks and opportunities. He explained that these disclosures are increasingly becoming a key requirement for investors, regulators, customers, and global business partners.
He cautioned that insurance firms that delay implementation may face challenges in underwriting, capital access, investor confidence, and market competitiveness.
According to him, sustainability issues such as climate change, governance weaknesses, environmental risks, and social impact are rapidly becoming central to insurance risk assessment models.
“Failure to adopt sustainability reporting could affect your underwriting business and many other areas of operation.”
Dr. Situ

His comments reflect the growing pressure on financial institutions worldwide to incorporate sustainability metrics into core business operations.
New IFRS Standards Raise Expectations
The workshop focused on the new sustainability disclosure standards under the IFRS Foundation, particularly IFRS S1 and IFRS S2.
These standards are designed to improve transparency and consistency in how organizations disclose sustainability-related financial information.
IFRS S1 provides a general framework for sustainability-related disclosures, while IFRS S2 focuses specifically on climate-related risks and opportunities.
Industry experts at the event explained that the standards will influence how insurers identify exposure to environmental and social risks while also shaping long-term strategic planning.
For insurers, this could mean stronger scrutiny of underwriting portfolios, investment decisions, claims exposure, and enterprise risk management systems.
Materiality Assessment Identified as Critical
A major highlight of Dr. Situ’s presentation was the importance of conducting robust materiality assessments.
He explained that materiality assessments help organizations identify the ESG issues most relevant to their business operations and stakeholders.
“Per the NIC guidelines, there is the need to do an impact materiality assessment (ESG) and not financial materiality assessment. In doing the impact assessment, you need to have an ESG vision.”
Dr. Situ
According to him, many businesses mistakenly focus only on financial reporting metrics while overlooking broader environmental and social impacts that may significantly affect long-term business sustainability.
He emphasized that insurers must engage key stakeholders, identify emerging ESG risks, prioritize material sustainability issues, and integrate findings into corporate strategy.
By doing so, companies can transform sustainability from a reporting requirement into a driver of innovation, resilience, and growth.
Governance Seen as the Foundation
Beyond reporting frameworks and assessments, Dr. Situ highlighted governance as the backbone of successful sustainability implementation.
He noted that sustainability initiatives often fail when they lack executive commitment and board-level oversight.
According to him, strong leadership is essential to embed ESG principles into organizational culture, decision-making, and strategic planning.
Without clear governance structures, sustainability reporting risks becoming a box-ticking exercise rather than a meaningful business transformation tool.
Industry participants at the workshop agreed that insurers need dedicated sustainability committees, clearer accountability systems, and measurable ESG targets to ensure effective implementation.
Ghana’s Insurance Industry Faces New Reality
The insurance industry in Ghana is increasingly facing pressure to align with international best practices as global sustainability expectations continue to evolve.
Climate risks, environmental disasters, social inequalities, and governance concerns are reshaping the way insurers assess risk and price products.
Experts believe firms that embrace sustainability reporting early could gain a competitive advantage by improving stakeholder trust, attracting responsible investment, and building stronger business resilience.
On the other hand, institutions that ignore these developments may face regulatory pressure, reduced investor confidence, and potential market disadvantages.
The forum organized by the National Insurance Commission marks another step in preparing Ghana’s insurance sector for a future where sustainability reporting becomes an integral part of business success.
As regulatory expectations rise and global financial markets demand greater transparency, Deloitte’s warning sends a clear message to insurers across Ghana.
Sustainability is no longer a future consideration. It is becoming a business imperative.
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