Law Firms, Legal Departments Upskilling Lawyers to Meet Growing Demand for ESG Expertise: Wolters Kluwer Survey
Law firms and corporate legal department are increasingly providing specialized ESG-related training for lawyers, as a significant majority report a rise in demand for legal expertise, yet less than half feel prepared to meet this demand, according to a new survey released by professional services and information solutions provider Wolters Kluwer.
For the report, the 2024 Future Ready Lawyer Survey, Wolters Kluwer’s Legal and Regulatory division conducted quantitative interviews with more than 700 lawyers in law firms and corporate legal departments across the U.S. and Europe, examining the impact of client expectations, technology and market trends on the legal profession.
The survey found that more than two-thirds of respondents (68%) reported seeing an increase in demand for ESG-oriented legal expertise. The increase was particularly notably felt in legal departments, reported by 77% of respondents, while also being reported by 61% of law firm respondents.
Notably, the survey results mark a significant increase in reports of an increase in ESG demand compared to prior years, with only 43% of lawyers in the 2023 survey reporting seeing increasing demand, and 50% in 2022.
The most prevalent driver of growing demand for ESG expertise reported by lawyers in the survey was increased regulatory demands and compliance complexity, cited by 50% of respondents, followed by challenges related to ESG data quality and access, at 42%. Additionally, 40% of respondents reported that demand is being driven by a preference by employees for companies with higher ESG standards.
While noting growing demand for ESG services, however, the survey also found that respondents were not confident in their organization’s ability to meet these needs, with only 41% of legal departments and 29% of law firms reporting feeling very prepared to address the demand for ESG-related legal expertise. Additionally, nearly a third (29%) of law firms, and 12% of legal departments said that they are not very prepared or not at all prepared to meet ESG demands.
The most common solution found by the survey to address the preparedness gap was upskilling of lawyers, with slightly over half of respondents (51%) reporting that they are providing ESG training to existing legal staff. Legal departments appear to be ahead on this metric, with 56% reporting providing ESG training, compared with 45% of law firms.
Additionally, many respondents that they have established dedicated ESG departments focused solely on ESG matters, including 41% of legal departments and 42% of law firms. Other measures reported by respondents included developing internal policies and guidelines for ESG compliance, and working with external experts or consultants to meet ESG responsibilities.
Commenting on the survey’s findings, Kamila Kurkowska, President and Founder of the Women in Law Foundation, said:
“In-house legal departments are certainly leaders in the legal industry when it comes to ESG. In a sense, they influence law firms, their suppliers, to also incorporate ESG into their policies.”
Click here to access the report.