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In the field with SOCAR Türkiye – IMD business school for management and leadership courses

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At a glance

  • Oil and gas companies face challenges when it comes to sustainability and ESG reporting.
  • They must balance profit with environmental impact while transitioning to cleaner energy.
  • Companies also have an opportunity to question current assumptions, business models and ways of working.

Making sustainability everybody’s responsibility

National oil companies play a critical role in global energy production, yet their environmental, social and governance (ESG) reporting is often deemed to be inadequate, and they face pressure from stakeholders and climate activists to become more transparent and accountable for their actions. A particular challenge that oil and gas companies face is to balance profit with environmental impact by minimizing pollution, ensuring safety, and increasing diversity and inclusion to advance the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)– all while they transition to cleaner energy.

As oil and gas companies are big contributors to pollution, they frequently face significant criticisms regarding their approach to sustainability. These criticisms include accusations of spreading climate disinformation, when systematic misleading communication undermines global efforts to address climate change; and greenwashing, where companies are deemed to portray misleadingly positive images of their environmental actions.

SOCAR Türkiye

Suffice to say sustainability is a challenge – sometimes experienced as a headache – for legacy oil and gas companies. But it also presents an opportunity for such companies if, like SOCAR Türkiye, they are prepared to question their assumptions, business models, and ways of working. SOCAR Türkiye, a subsidiary of the State Oil Company of Azerbaijan, is the largest foreign investor in Türkiye – with assets in oil terminals and storage, oil refining, petrochemicals, gas pipelines and distribution, fiber optics and internet service provision, and boasting an employee base of approximately 5600.

Leadership development and sustainability agenda

A partner with IMD since 2018, the company pondered on how to further develop its leaders at the N-2 level (extended leaders) – very much in line with a top executive program that it previously ran with the school. After an initial start in 2020, the N-2 leadership development roll out was put on hold due to Covid-19. By the middle of 2021, IMD and SOCAR Türkiye decided to reset – given the significant changes that had taken place in the company and environment.

The IMD team, led by Professor James Henderson, engaged in an interview tour of the company’s top executives and senior leaders to find out the burning challenges and leadership requirements SOCAR Türkiye was facing over the next five years that would be addressed in the program. One topic overwhelmingly came up through the interviews – how the company would establish and navigate its sustainability agenda.

SOCAR Türkiye’s sustainability transformation

As a result, IMD re-designed the whole program around setting and leading SOCAR Türkiye sustainability transformation, focusing on all 50+ N-2 leaders as the change champions. Indeed, the 6-month program was named SOCAR Türkiye Pathfinder’s Journey – symbolic of the individual and collective responsibility of the N-2 leaders in embarking on a transformational change with the company. This level of responsibility could not be taken lightly, given the spotlight on oil and gas companies and their contributions to climate change. Numerous sustainability questions were facing this prosperous company, which had already successfully invested and built the most modern oil refinery in Europe, integrated it into its petrochemical division, and transitioned from a project-based organization to a mature process-based entity.

Key questions for SOCAR Türkiye

  • What would SOCAR Türkiye look like in 10 – 20 years?
  • How could it navigate its future into a cleaner, socially beneficial, diverse world?
  • At what speed should it transition into greener fuels such as sustainable aviation fuel, green methanol, green petrochemicals, or hydrogen?
  • How could it engage in greater community work or incorporate more diversity in its management ranks?

Read the full report.

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