29 lines
1.4 KiB
Org Mode
29 lines
1.4 KiB
Org Mode
:PROPERTIES:
|
|
:ID: auto-world-bank-esf
|
|
:CREATED: [2026-05-23 Sat]
|
|
:END:
|
|
#+title: — inclusive growth and well-being, human-centered values and fairness,
|
|
#+filetags: :passepartout:compliance:framework:world:
|
|
|
|
— inclusive growth and well-being, human-centered values and fairness,
|
|
transparency and explainability, robustness and safety, accountability.
|
|
Non-binding but influential — the AI Act, Canada's AIDA, and Japan's AI
|
|
guidelines all cite them.
|
|
|
|
Why it matters: The OECD frameworks are indirect revenue drivers. Regulatory
|
|
alignment with OECD principles is often a procurement requirement for
|
|
international organizations and development finance institutions. First-mover
|
|
advantage is about standard-setting: the gate package that maps to OECD
|
|
principles first becomes the reference implementation.
|
|
|
|
** World Bank Environmental and Social Framework (ESF)
|
|
|
|
The World Bank's framework for managing environmental and social risk in
|
|
investment projects. Ten standards: ESS1 (assessment), ESS2 (labor), ESS3
|
|
(resource efficiency), ESS4 (community health), ESS5 (land/resettlement),
|
|
ESS6 (biodiversity), ESS7 (indigenous peoples), ESS8 (cultural heritage),
|
|
ESS9 (financial intermediaries), ESS10 (stakeholder engagement).
|
|
|
|
Who must comply: Borrowers and project implementers across World Bank-financed
|
|
projects in 100+ countries. Also adopted by many multilateral development banks
|