Risk mitigation trumps cost savings as the top way for sustainability teams to create business value for their organizations, according to the 8th biennial survey of chief sustainability officers (CSOs) at publicly traded U.S. companies.
More than 62 percent of the respondents said their ability to identify and offer strategies to address regulatory, supply chain and climate risks resonated with other members of the C-suite.
Exhibit A: Spirits company Suntory in January 2025 appointed its chief sustainability officer, Kim Marotta, to head risk management. “What enterprise risk management has given me is the opportunity to see the big picture,” she told Trellis during a Climate Pioneers interview in February. “Instead of just having environmental risks, they’re business risks.”
Two other ways that CSOs can provide business value are through cost savings related to improved energy, waste management and operational efficiency (52 percent); and initiatives that support customer acquisition and retention (38 percent).

The responses come from the 8th biennial CSO insights report from recruiter Weinreb Group. They reflect the opinions of 69 CSOs at U.S. public companies, approximately one-third of the 193 executives who held that title as of July 1. That’s a smaller universe than in 2025, when there were 216 individuals with the title at U.S. public companies.
“CSOs are the futurists of the corporate context,” said International Paper CSO Sophie Beckham, a respondent. “My mandate is to see around corners, build resilience into our business model and create value that will help my company not just navigate but thrive when facing emerging risks and opportunities.”
What’s shaping sustainability
Customer and business partner pressure is the chief driver of sustainability strategy, according to 62 percent of the CSOs that responded to the survey. Other top drivers are regulatory pressure (57 percent) and investor/shareholder pressure (41 percent).
The top challenges CSOs face today: market and economic uncertainty (62 percent), followed by regulatory requirements (57 percent) — a view that respondents said they share with other top executives within their organization.

Approximately 42 percent of the respondents reported that their responsibilities had broadened in the past year.
“We are reaching a tipping point where ‘sustainable business’ is simply ‘smart business,’ ” said one respondent, who chose to remain
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