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

I’ll tell you what’s wrong with the Fed: Ross Levine on a flawed regulator

Blaming the 2008 financial crisis, and more recent turmoil in the US banking system, on the US Federal Reserve Board’s lack of regulatory power, or arguing that shocks to the system were unforeseeable, leaves the system vulnerable to the same thing happening again

CDPQ’s two-way street of efficient external manager relations

Like all good long-term relationships, external fund manager partnerships should be steeped in trust, open dialogue, patience and new ideas. Mario Therrien, head of funds at CDPQ explains the key to external partnership success and the important role external managers play in plugging knowledge gaps.

CPP takes a fundamentally different approach to equities

Access and analysis of unique data is key to CPP Investments’ active equities team creating “one of the most sophisticated fundamental shops in the world” head of the team Frank Ieraci told the Fiduciary Investors Symposium at Stanford.

Managing not just measuring risk is key to long-term returns

Nobel Prize-winning economist Myron Scholes told the Fiduciary Investors Symposium at Stanford University that the focus of asset owners needs to shift from measuring risk to managing it, to avoid the downside while capturing the upside and allowing compounding to do its thing.

Asset owners need organisational prowess to take advantage of distress

The market has already entered the early stages of a multi-year restructuring cycle that will present many opportunities for credit providers. Researchers and investors from GIC, CalPERS and IMCO recommend some organisational changes that will ensure asset owners can make the most of those opportunities.

How Swiss PUBLICA integrates climate risk

PUBLICA, one of the largest pension funds in Switzerland, has built a bespoke equity benchmark to reduce climate risk. It's not the consequence of any target to reduce emissions in the portfolio or wider ESG legislation. Senior portfolio manager Frederik von Ameln explains the process behind the strategy.

Previous