Growing expectations for transparent environmental, social and governance (ESG) reporting are influencing battery minerals supply. Yet consistency across reporting mechanisms remains challenging. Australian mining and processing companies producing battery-grade materials—including lithium, nickel, cobalt, vanadium and graphite—must increasingly navigate a proliferation of regulatory requirements and voluntary standards designed to demonstrate responsible practices. This study examines how aligned mechanisms are in terms of data requirements, methodological guidance, scope and transparency. The study undertook a comparative review of eleven ESG reporting and management mechanisms relevant to Australian battery-mineral producers. The voluntary and regulatory mechanisms were assessed against a common set of criteria, including: the ESG categories addressed, required data types, methodological specifications, level of site versus corporate reporting, and transparency provisions. A matrix-based comparison was then used to identify areas of convergence and divergence. Frequency counts and cross-tabulation were used to map overlaps in data and disclosure requirement for ESG categories. The analysis found partial alignment across mechanisms, with several ESG topics—such as energy use, greenhouse gas emissions, labour practices and community engagement—appearing consistently. However, there was considerable variation in the depth and specificity of requirements, particularly regarding methodology, data quality and verification expectations. Some voluntary initiatives demonstrated high adherence to best-practice principles, whereas others offered flexibility that resulted in inconsistent data robustness. Differences in scope (corporate versus site-level) also contributed to limited comparability among reporting outputs. Overall, the current ESG reporting landscape for Australian battery-mineral producers exhibits moderate overlap but lacks full standardisation. This fragmentation risks undermining comparability and stakeholder confidence. The study outlines several divergent future pathways, highlighting the need for greater harmonisation to support credible ESG claims and strengthen sustainability performance in both Australian and international battery-mineral supply chains.
Langdon et al. (Sun,) studied this question.