Gulf ESG efforts fail to link profit with sustainability, study shows
John E. Kaye
- Published
- News, Sustainability

Extensive 14-year dataset finds no robust connection between ESG and financial performance in the region, in contrast with Europe, North America and Asia
The Gulf’s largest study on ESG and profitability has concluded that sustainability does not pay, with results indicating state-driven policy rather than shareholder value is behind adoption.
Researchers from Nova School of Business and Economics (Nova SBE) and ESMT Berlin analysed 14 years of data from publicly listed companies in Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates. The work was carried out by Professors Rodrigo Tavares (Nova SBE) and Catalina Stefanescu-Cuntze (ESMT), alongside Catarina Sá, Teaching Assistant at Nova SBE.
The dataset covered more than 4,400 monthly ESG score observations and nearly 9,000 stock return observations between 2009 and 2023, making it the most extensive academic study of corporate sustainability in the Gulf to date.
While previous research has often asked whether sustainability improves profitability, the study also explored the reverse: whether profitable firms reinvest in ESG. In both directions, the findings revealed weak, inconsistent and statistically non-robust relationships.
Evidence of a two-way causal link between ESG and financial performance was found in only two out of 54 firms analysed, representing around 3.7% of the sample. A further ten firms (18.5%) showed a one-way link, either from ESG to financial performance or vice versa.
“In the Gulf, ESG is driven more by government policy than profit. Our research reveals that, contrary to global trends, ESG performance is a political lever, not a financial one. It has not yet translated into market force, like we see in the rest of the world,” Professor Tavares said.
The paper, ESG-financial performance in the Gulf region: a bidirectional examination, was published in Sustainable Communities in September 2025.
Professor Stefanescu-Cuntze added: “This challenges the prevailing narrative that sustainability drives market value and suggests that, in the Gulf, ESG is primarily a tool for state-led economic transformation, not shareholder returns. We should reflect critically on the universality of the argument that ‘sustainability pays off’, from a financial perspective.”
READ MORE: ‘Redress and UN network call for fashion industry to meet sustainability goals’. Fashion is under pressure to clean up its supply chains, with campaigners warning that the sector lags behind on climate and social targets. At the UN General Assembly in New York, Redress and the UN Fashion and Lifestyle Network set out how designers are trying to close the gap
Do you have news to share or expertise to contribute? The European welcomes insights from business leaders and sector specialists. Get in touch with our editorial team to find out more.
Main image: Energepic.com/Pexels
RECENT ARTICLES
-
Starmer uses Easter message to stress hope, service and national renewal -
‘Houston, we have a problem’: astronauts fix loo aboard Artemis II -
EU moves to make Europe’s tinderbox landscapes less prone to wildfire -
Artemis II lifts off for Moon mission – here is what the astronauts will be doing day by day -
GITEX Africa Morocco to host 1,450 exhibitors and startups as Marrakech event sharpens focus on AI and digital sovereignty -
Artemis II countdown begins as astronauts prepare for first crewed Moon mission in 50 years -
United to introduce economy seat row that converts into couch on long-haul flights from 2027 -
Australia tops global ranking of the world’s most beautiful airport landings -
Ivo Klein takes over Liechtenstein bankers’ body after nine-year handover -
EXCLUSIVE: LA unveils Ghostbusters-style car to fight post-wildfire ‘toxic soup’ -
Supermarkets move to end sale of live lobsters and crabs ahead of UK ban -
Snowdonia church rings again after 150 years thanks to national ap-peal -
Social media giants hit with $6m verdict in landmark youth harm case -
Former Google executive launches €50m fund targeting Europe’s deep tech scale-up gap -
Airbus to acquire Ultra Cyber in UK defence cyber expansion -
The European joins The Content Exchange as publisher accelerates digital expansion -
Animal rights activists stage second day of protests at European Commission over lobbying claims -
Global energy crisis 'worse than 1970s oil shocks combined', IEA chief warns -
New Hindu Kush Himalaya glacier reports warn of deepening risk to Asia’s water security -
UK exposed by cyber omission in Spring Statement as threats intensify, ISF chief warns -
Sadiq Khan says Labour should back return to EU -
World’s most ethical companies revealed as 138 firms make 2026 list -
Celebrities who apologise after a scandal get a better reaction than those who deny it, study finds -
New 235-room hotel planned for Dublin’s Liberties after €54.2m funding deal -
Unclear AI rules risk driving talent away from UK employers, survey suggests

























