In recent years, the relationship between sustainability and finance has shifted from a reputational dimension to a structural risk-return variable. For Italian SMEs, this shift is particularly significant: access to bank credit remains the primary source of financing, but evaluation criteria are evolving. ESG performance, environmental, social, and governance, is no longer an “ethical” addition to financial statements: it is becoming part of rating models, credit pricing, and contractual covenants.
The key question for an entrepreneur today is not whether the bank considers ESG factors, but how it considers them and which elements it rewards
Why banks ask SMEs for ESG data
Financial institutions are subject to increasing regulatory and market pressure. They must:
- Assess climate and environmental risks in your portfolios.
- Reporting on alignment with European taxonomies.
- Demonstrate prudent management of transition and physical risks.
- Responding to the expectations of institutional investors and supervisory authorities.
This means that the bank can no longer limit itself to analyzing traditional economic and financial ratios (EBITDA, PFN/EBITDA, DSCR, shareholders’ equity). It must understand whether the client’s business model is resilient in the medium to long term.
For SMEs, this translates into ESG questionnaires, energy information requests, emissions data, environmental and social policies, certifications, and transition plans. It’s not a formal exercise: it’s a direct input into credit risk assessment systems
How ESG variables are integrated into rating models
The operating methods vary from bank to bank, but we can identify three typical levels of integration:
- a) ESG as a corrective qualitative factor
In an initial evolutionary phase, ESG information is included as a qualitative element in the overall assessment: solid governance, environmental certifications, or documentary transparency can marginally improve the internal rating.
Conversely, significant environmental issues, litigation, sanctions, or dependence on high-impact technologies may represent a risk factor.
- b) ESG as a structural risk variable
The most advanced banks are integrating ESG indicators directly into quantitative models, for example through:
- Energy intensity relative to the sector.
- Exposure to regulatory risks (carbon pricing, environmental restrictions).
- Supply chain vulnerabilities.
- Concentration on regulated markets.
Here, ESG has a more direct impact on the rating, and therefore on creditworthiness.
- c) ESG as a basis for dedicated financial products
Tools such as:
- Sustainability-linked loans (SLL).
- Financing with rates tied to the achievement of ESG KPIs.
- Dedicated credit lines for investments in energy efficiency or decarbonization.
In these cases, ESG performance is not only evaluated: it becomes a lever for reducing the cost of capital.
What do banks and investors really want from SMEs?
Contrary to what many fear, banks don’t expect 150-page reports from an SME. They want three fundamental things: reliable data, consistency, and transparency.
1) Measurable and verifiable data
Financial institutions and investors prefer a few solid indicators over generic documents. Among the most requested data:
- Annual energy consumption.
- CO₂ emissions (at least scope 1 and 2).
- Incidence of accidents at work.
- Governance structure.
- Any certifications (ISO 14001, ISO 45001, etc.).
What is needed is not complexity, but methodological rigor.
2) Consistency between strategy and numbers
If a company claims to be committed to sustainability but fails to invest in energy efficiency or monitor its consumption, its credibility suffers.
Financial analysts seek alignment between:
- Industrial plan.
- Planned investments.
- Environmental and social KPIs.
- Risk management.
Sustainability must not be an isolated chapter but integrated into the strategy.
3) Transparency also on critical issues
One of the most common mistakes is to present an exclusively positive picture. Transparency about areas for improvement is often viewed positively.
An SME that acknowledges its high energy intensity but presents a reduction plan with clear timelines appears more reliable than one that avoids the issue.
ESG and the cost of credit: is there really an advantage?
The central question for many SMEs is a pragmatic one: “Does it cost me less if I am sustainable?”
The answer is: potentially yes, but not automatically.
The advantage can manifest itself in different ways:
- Reduced spread on sustainability-linked financing.
- Greater ease of access to dedicated credit limits.
- Better risk assessment in the medium term.
- Greater attractiveness for private investors or private equity funds.
Furthermore, reducing operational risk (e.g., energy efficiency, reduced litigation, increased supply chain stability) has an indirect but real impact on creditworthiness.
The role of standardization: why voluntary reporting matters
With the evolution of European regulations and the reduction of direct obligations for many SMEs, voluntary reporting takes on a strategic role.
Using a recognized and proportionate scheme – for example a standard dedicated to SMEs – allows you to:
- Reduce the fragmentation of bank questionnaires.
- Provide data in a comparable format.
- Demonstrate organizational maturity.
From a financial perspective, a clear standard reduces information uncertainty, and uncertainty is a major driver of the cost of capital.
ESG as a factor of industrial resilience
Banks do not look at ESG just as an “ethical value”, but as an indicator of resilience.
An SME that:
- Monitor your energy consumption.
- Diversify your suppliers.
- It has structured internal control systems.
- Invests in training and safety.
it is perceived as less exposed to regulatory, energy or reputational shocks.
In the current context – characterized by energy volatility, geopolitical tensions and climate transition – this resilience is a key element in credit assessment.
What SMEs should do
To position itself competitively in the dialogue with banks and investors, an SME can follow an essential roadmap:
- Map the ESG risks relevant to your industry.
- Collect energy and environmental data systematically.
- Define 3–5 clear, trackable KPIs.
- Link ESG objectives to the business plan.
- Present information in a structured way during banking dialogue.
It’s not about turning into a big corporation, but about reducing information asymmetry.
Conclusion
Sustainability reporting for SMEs isn’t a passing fad or a mere bureaucratic requirement. It’s a tool for financial dialogue.
Banks and investors are looking for transparent companies, aware of their risks, and capable of planning for the future. Sustainability, interpreted through ESG considerations, becomes a metric of managerial quality.
In the new competitive landscape, the real difference will not be made by who produces the longest report, but by who can demonstrate, with consistent and credible data, that they have a resilient and long-term business model.
And in finance, resilience almost always translates into a competitive advantage.