Navigating Australia’s Post-Election Sustainability Landscape: Why Risk, Reputation, and Resilience Matter More Than Ever

Navigating Australia’s Post-Election Sustainability Landscape: Why Risk, Reputation, and Resilience Matter More Than Ever

May 6, 2025 | Business strategy

Australia’s 2025 Federal Election has reshaped the sustainability agenda in business. With climate policy emerging as a top-tier issue for voters, organisations across sectors — including mining, infrastructure, construction, energy and government — must prepare for a new era of environmental accountability.

The public mandate is clear: credible action on climate is non-negotiable. For Australian businesses, this signals a new phase of sustainability reporting, risk management, and strategic transformation.

Voters Want Action — Not Promises

Climate change was one of the top two voting issues for more than a third of Australians in the 2025 election (Climate Council, 2025). Voters — especially in metropolitan and coastal regions — are now demanding leadership that delivers on climate resilience, energy transition, and equitable economic reform.

Australians have made it clear that climate change is not a distant threat. It’s already shaping the economy, insurance costs, disaster response, and public infrastructure. As a result, policy inaction now equates to reputational and financial risk.

The Shift in Parliament Signals Policy Acceleration

The election saw a growing number of climate-focused Independents and Greens entering federal parliament. Many of these candidates campaigned on platforms of climate integrity, anti-corruption, and cost-of-living reform through clean energy investment.

Over the next four years, businesses should expect:

  • Tighter sustainability disclosure requirements, especially through the evolving mandatory climate-related financial disclosure regime.

  • Greater scrutiny of transition plans and emissions transparency.

  • Increased funding for community-driven and regionally inclusive climate adaptation.

  • New expectations around supply chain accountability and social licence.

We are entering a policy era where climate laggards will be left behind, not only by regulators but also by investors, customers, and communities.

The Cost-of-Living Myth: Climate Policy Is Part of the Solution

Contrary to long-held political arguments, Australians no longer see a trade-off between climate action and affordability. The Climate Council’s report confirms that:

“Australians overwhelmingly support clean energy investment, home electrification, and renewable infrastructure as part of the solution to cost-of-living pressures.”

This means businesses that innovate in energy efficiency, circular economy, and climate-smart technologies will not only reduce operational risk — they’ll also tap into consumer demand and government incentives.

Want to explore these opportunities? Read our recent post on energy innovation and net-zero strategy in the resources sector.

Climate Risk = Business Risk (Regardless of Political Cycles)

Whether or not your organisation is currently subject to mandatory ESG reporting, ignoring climate risk is no longer viable. Consider this:

  • Investors are actively screening portfolios based on ESG performance.

  • Insurance premiums are shifting based on climate adaptation planning.

  • Banks and procurement panels are excluding businesses that can’t meet future-aligned sustainability benchmarks.

It’s not about politics — it’s about survival. Businesses must now design risk management systems that are climate-literate, investor-ready, and socially credible.

For practical guidance, see our article on embedding sustainability into corporate governance.

Final Thought: Will You Lead, Or Be Left Behind?

The 2025 Federal Election has shifted the sustainability playing field. With climate now a central political, social, and economic issue, the cost of inaction has never been higher.

If your business isn’t actively aligning its strategy with the post-election policy landscape, it’s time to act. Risk, reputation, and resilience now go hand in hand.