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Michel Driessen. Author of 'Green Gold: How Sustainability Creates Deal Value'

  • May 3
  • 2 min read

Updated: May 5


Sustainability has shifted from corporate aspiration to financial reality, but how do companies actually measure its impact on value creation?


In this episode, Alberto Lidji speaks with Michel Driessen about the evolving relationship between sustainability, ESG, corporate finance, and mergers and acquisitions. Drawing from the themes explored in Green Gold: How Sustainability Creates Deal Value, Michel explains how businesses and investors are increasingly translating sustainability into measurable financial outcomes.


The conversation examines why sustainability has become more politically charged in recent years, while simultaneously becoming more embedded inside corporate operations, investment decisions, and supply chains. Michel argues that although the public conversation around ESG may have cooled, many companies continue advancing sustainability initiatives behind the scenes because the financial and operational implications are too significant to ignore.


A major focus of the discussion is the role of CFOs and financial leaders. Michel explains how sustainability responsibilities are shifting away from standalone ESG teams and becoming central to finance, strategy, and investment committees. The episode explores how organizations can assess sustainability risks and opportunities at the business unit level, rather than relying solely on broad company-wide ESG ratings.


Alberto and Michel also unpack:


• How sustainability factors influence valuation, EBITDA, cash flow, and cost of capital

• Why materiality and maturity assessments matter in transaction due diligence

• The growing influence of investors, pension funds, banks, and regulators

• The connection between reputational risk and financial risk

• Why governance issues are often underestimated compared to environmental topics

• The complexities and unintended consequences of ESG decision-making across industries and geographies

• How new disclosure and reporting standards are reshaping corporate accountability

• Why MBA students and future executives are increasingly focused on sustainability regulation and financial integration


The discussion also touches on examples from global business, including Unilever’s sustainability leadership, investor expectations, supply chain resilience, and the practical realities of balancing profitability with long-term responsibility.


Ultimately, this episode explores how sustainability is becoming integrated into mainstream financial decision-making, not simply as a reputational exercise, but as a core component of business performance and enterprise value.


About Michel Driessen


Michel is a Professor in the Practice of Finance and the Director of the M&A Research Centre at Bayes Business School. In addition, he is the Chair of Queen’s Tower Advisory, an independent deal advisory company focused on Private Capital. He is passionate about Art and is a Trustee at Turner Contemporary and at the Gallery Climate Coalition.

Previously he was a Senior Partner in the Strategy and Transactions Group at EY UKI, a Partner at Accenture and held senior executive roles at Visa and Rabobank. He is the co-author of two business books ‘Why Deals Fail and How to Resue Them’ and ‘The Deal Paradox; Mergers and Acquisitions Success in the Age of Digital Transformation’.

 
 

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