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Ethics, Carbon Policy, and Sustainability Reporting
One of the most powerful reminders in Episode 30 of the Chartered Accountants Global Update is that professional skills don’t stop at financial reporting — they can help solve some of society’s most urgent challenges.
The episode opens with the story of Khethiwe Sibanyoni, a young South African aspiring chartered accountant and social impact activist tackling gender-based violence by applying the discipline of audit to community programmes. Her work is built around three pillars — detection, prevention and correction — supported by data, controls, budgets and outcome metrics. Through a youth-led foundation linked to thirteen shelters in Gauteng, she focuses on psychosocial care, education and economic empowerment, while designing programmes that can endure beyond any single leader. Her message to business is simple and powerful: define social impact with the same precision you bring to profit. The full profile appears on the Chartered Accountants Worldwide website.
The episode then turns to a fast-approaching regulatory challenge: Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanisms. Chartered Accountants Ireland and The Institute of Chartered Accountants of Scotland are hosting a webinar to help practitioners understand how the European Union regime is working in practice and what businesses should be doing now — particularly ahead of the United Kingdom introducing its own mechanism in 2027. For organisations importing high-carbon goods such as steel, cement or fertilisers, supply chain impacts, reporting requirements and cost modelling are becoming unavoidable priorities.
The final feature highlights a new Sustainability Snapshot from the South African Institute of Chartered Accountants, aimed squarely at boards and executive teams working on transition planning. The guidance places strong emphasis on meaningful stakeholder engagement, measurable and time-bound targets, and governance structures that embed just transition principles. As sustainability claims face the same scrutiny as financial statements, the message is clear: credibility, accountability and transparency matter more than ever.
Across all three stories, Episode 30 delivers a consistent message — the rigour of the accountancy profession is not just a tool for the boardroom, but a practical force for social impact, climate action and long-term organisational resilience.
By Chartered Accountants Worldwide5
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Ethics, Carbon Policy, and Sustainability Reporting
One of the most powerful reminders in Episode 30 of the Chartered Accountants Global Update is that professional skills don’t stop at financial reporting — they can help solve some of society’s most urgent challenges.
The episode opens with the story of Khethiwe Sibanyoni, a young South African aspiring chartered accountant and social impact activist tackling gender-based violence by applying the discipline of audit to community programmes. Her work is built around three pillars — detection, prevention and correction — supported by data, controls, budgets and outcome metrics. Through a youth-led foundation linked to thirteen shelters in Gauteng, she focuses on psychosocial care, education and economic empowerment, while designing programmes that can endure beyond any single leader. Her message to business is simple and powerful: define social impact with the same precision you bring to profit. The full profile appears on the Chartered Accountants Worldwide website.
The episode then turns to a fast-approaching regulatory challenge: Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanisms. Chartered Accountants Ireland and The Institute of Chartered Accountants of Scotland are hosting a webinar to help practitioners understand how the European Union regime is working in practice and what businesses should be doing now — particularly ahead of the United Kingdom introducing its own mechanism in 2027. For organisations importing high-carbon goods such as steel, cement or fertilisers, supply chain impacts, reporting requirements and cost modelling are becoming unavoidable priorities.
The final feature highlights a new Sustainability Snapshot from the South African Institute of Chartered Accountants, aimed squarely at boards and executive teams working on transition planning. The guidance places strong emphasis on meaningful stakeholder engagement, measurable and time-bound targets, and governance structures that embed just transition principles. As sustainability claims face the same scrutiny as financial statements, the message is clear: credibility, accountability and transparency matter more than ever.
Across all three stories, Episode 30 delivers a consistent message — the rigour of the accountancy profession is not just a tool for the boardroom, but a practical force for social impact, climate action and long-term organisational resilience.