Infrastructure assets build in ESG

It is possible to invest in infrastructure with a purpose that goes beyond financial return, said Kristian Fok, CIO of Australia’s A$44 billion ($34 billion) Cbus Super, a pension fund for the construction and building industry, speaking at the PRI in Person conference in San Francisco.

Fok said infrastructure investment had an important role in illustrating the practical integration of the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and ESG, and that pension fund investment in the sector was growing as governments realised they could not fund their infrastructure needs themselves. Long-term ownership makes it easier to create and sustain an impact, and a smaller number of shareholders enables decision-making, he said.

ESG and sustainability in infrastructure investment are often pushed by governments, who remind investors that the infrastructure is for a community purpose. Government involvement can drive ESG integration in areas such as caps on fees or performance requirements that draw penalties when they’re not met.

“As an owner, you meet these minimum standards and think about the asset in a much longer-term way,” Fok said. “It means the asset is run better, and people use it more.”

Infrastructure can leave owners much more exposed to reputational risk than other asset classes.

“When you are a private owner of an asset, your reputation as an owner is on the line,” Fok said. This requires real thought on the appointment of contractors, health and safety, and supply chain risk. “If you don’t think about this, your good intentions will be undone.”

Sponsored Content

Delilah Rothenberg, operating adviser, ESG and impact, at Pegasus Capital Advisors, told delegates that infrastructure investors should gauge risk in emerging and developed markets in the same way, expressing a preference for the IFC Performance Standards and EHS Guidelines for all markets.  Currently, the Equator Principles framework requires these standards only in developing countries.

“In terms of ESG risk, there is little difference between developed and developing markets,” Rothenberg said. Frameworks help investors mitigate the environmental and social risks associated with infrastructure investment.

“You can’t have a net positive impact without mitigating ESG risk,” she said. For instance, banks may not fund if certain standards are not met, or local communities may not support projects, causing such projects to lose their social licence to operate, she said.

Infrastructure investment often allows the integration of multiple ESG elements or SDGs. Cbus investments include the UK’s Manchester Airport, where the pension fund is developing renewable energy use via biomass, creating jobs and reducing pollution. Similarly, its ownership of UK water utility Anglian Water has involved developing recycling initiatives that generate electricity and green bond issuance – the first from a UK utility. At Brisbane Airport, Cbus has installed solar panels, investing to remove volatility in energy prices in a win-win, Fok said.

“It is about doing the right thing and making money – doing more sustainably to reduce costs,” he said.[vc_subscription_cta s_cta_text=”Sign up to our weekly newsletter for regular news flashes and industry insights.” text_color=”#0c0c0c” bg_color=”” button_url=”/subscribe/” button_text=”Subscribe” btn_color=”” btn_bg_color=”#c0091f”]

Asset Owner:Cbus Super

Leave a Comment

Impact investing’s case for scale

Impact investing’s case for scale

Impact investing has come a long way in the past two decades, going from a niche strategy to a $1.5 trillion industry, but there are still challenges for it to reach institutional scale due to the lack of products and insufficient evidence of outperformance in some parts of the market.

Sort content by

The subtle complexity of best-practice pension management

Identifying best practice in pension management is not a straightforward task. As much as asset allocators may want there to be a definitive answer, differences in size, mandate and resources between different pension funds means an investment approach that works for one may not work for others.

Why simplicity matters in total portfolio approach

The key to implementing a successful total portfolio approach is not about creating complexities, but rather maintaining simplicity within the shared lexicon of an investment team, said two of the approach's most well-known adopters.

Reflections on Fiduciary Investors Symposium, Toronto

The Fiduciary Investors Symposium was held in May in Toronto. Conexus Institute executive director David Bell shares his reflections through the lens of a researcher focused on Australia’s superannuation system and a former pension fund CIO, and someone with a strong academic background in all things investment and pension related.

Build a playground, but let your investment team play on the slide

Innovation comes from collaboration, not from building silos, the Fiduciary Investors Symposium has heard. Leading academic Redouane Elkamhi told the symposium the boards of pension funds should create structures that allow investment teams to actually do what they are asked to do.

Enhanced tech capabilities makes reinforcement learning viable

What was once too intense to be utilised by computing processes, reinforcement learning has become a viable tool for asset owners. John Hull, Maple Financial chair in derivatives and risk management at the Joseph L. Rotman School of Management, told the Fiduciary Investors Symposium this now outperforms simpler modelling approaches.

Same same, but different: Governance lessons from three markets

Despite global pension markets’ varying levels of maturity, the goal of combining portfolio resilience with meeting fund objectives is the same, and it can be achieved through different manifestations of governance structures.

Previous