Investors find low-carbon opportunities

Leading investors are moving forward on integrating climate change into their portfolios and solving complex problems without support or leadership from governments, a panel of experts at the PRI in Person annual conference in San Francisco said.

The $356 billion California Public Employees’ Retirement System (CalPERS) is developing a new approach to real-estate investment and has navigated complex tax issues that had made investments in renewables tricky.

“We have invested $500 million in the last couple of years in wind and solar and we are looking for more,” CalPERS managing investment director, sustainable investments, Beth Richtman said. “Renewables are an ideal investment with long contracts and long cashflow, but investment has been a challenge because of tax policy and required a creative problem-solving.”

CalPERS has also applied climate-conscious thinking to unearth opportunity in assets it already holds in its portfolio. The pension fund now looks at energy use in its $30 billion real-estate allocation, specifically introducing energy-saving measures in properties that require renovation.

“In the first two years of asking our manager these questions, they have identified 80 million kilowatt hours of electricity we can save annually,” Richtman said.

Now the pension fund is looking systematically at energy use across the whole real-estate portfolio, exploring initiatives such as installing community cooling systems into buildings, or better analysis of data to save energy.

Sponsored Content

“If you are not looking for energy-saving opportunities, you are leaving money on table,” Richtman said.

Australia’s HESTA, the $A46 billion ($33 billion) superannuation fund for health and community service workers, started investing in renewables in 2006; in 2012, it developed a climate-change policy.

“When we launched a climate-change policy, it was about protecting long term returns and about financial outcomes,” HESTA chair Angela Emslie said. “In 2015, we broadened this to a responsibility to improve the environment and society for our retirees who will face the outcomes of climate change,”

The fund is refreshing strategy and developing a transition plan to place $2.5 billion in a variety of low-carbon investment strategies, amounting to 6 per cent of the total portfolio.

Responsible investment strategy at PFZW, the €180 billion ($210 billion) Dutch pension fund for the healthcare industry, has grown out of the fund’s commitment to meet the needs of its participants.

“We asked our participants what they thought was important,” PFZW chief executive Peter Borgdorff said.

Pension returns and a “liveable world” were the two priorities beneficiaries came back with, and PFZW has now integrated these into a three-pillar policy that includes a commitment to sustainability. This includes a pledge to reduce the carbon footprint of the fund’s portfolio by 50 per cent by 2020, combined with continuing to be an active owner and pushing for change.

“The world will only change when companies change – we can help convince them to change,” Borgdorff said.

The fund is also committed to investing in solutions, pledging $20 billion by 2020.

“Reducing carbon is much easier than finding investments with impact,” Borgdorff noted.

Most progress on climate change in China has come from the country’s fast-growing green bond market since the green bond issue in 2015. Integration outside fixed income has been slow, but policymakers, including the Central Bank, regulators and government agencies like the Ministry of Finance, are pushing for the development of a green finance system, said Sau Ha Kwan, president of E Fund Management Co, the largest of China’s 128 fund managers. She called the push towards mandatory disclosure amongst China’s listed companies by 2020 “baby steps”, but said it showed policy moving in the right direction and reflected a determination to act.

Kwan also called for greater collaboration among pension funds to raise awareness of responsible investment amongst local investors in China.

“In China, progress is stymied by an absence of demand for responsible investment,” Kwan said. “As a service provider, we are equipping ourselves, but demand is missing.”

She noted that upcoming pension reform in China offers the chance to encourage long-term responsible investment.

“Asset managers should talk to pension fund trustees in China and make them see that responsible investment doesn’t sacrifice returns,” she urged delegates.[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”]

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

Decarbonisation linked to better returns

As concerns about climate change reach fever pitch, Harvard Business School has published a report that shows investment strategies that “aggressively’ reduce carbon emissions can significantly boost fund performance.

FIS Harvard 2019 podcasts

The Fiduciary Investors Symposium at Harvard University brought together more than 85 asset owners from 20 countries to discuss globalisation, human capital, inequality, longevity, technology, medicine and ethics, and the role of institutional capital in creating real change in the world. We were joined by many distinguished speakers and have put together a podcast series of our favourite sessions.

Healthcare’s multiple opportunities

William Haseltine had a long career at Harvard Medical School, educating a generation of doctors, and designing the strategy to develop the first treatment for HIV/AIDS. He addressed the Fiduciary Investors Symposium about important topics in medicine and health development.

Threats to equity bond correlation

A full-blown trade war, and changes in monetary policy triggered by a loss of credibility in the Federal Reserve and other global policy institutions, could result in a return of the positive correlation between bonds and stocks, and investors need to be aware of the risk, warned Luis Viceira, George E. Bates Professor in the Finance Unit and Senior Associate Dean for Executive Education at Harvard Business School, at the Fiduciary Investors’ Symposium at Harvard University.

Inequality risk equal to climate change

Rebecca Henderson, the John and Natty McArthur University Professor at Harvard University who co-teaches Reimagining Capitalism at HBS, says inequality is equal to climate risk in its potential impact. She told delegates at the Fiduciary Investors Symposium at Harvard University when a system no longer generates freedom and prosperity it must be changed. Change is possible because we have the resources and technology to do it. A first move is decent jobs for people at the “bottom”.

We are going to live longer; prepare now

Understanding the economic implications of changing demographics is essential for investors, said Aubrey de Grey, a biomedical gerontologist speaking at the Fiduciary Investors' Symposium at Harvard University He said the technology exists today so that the ageing process can be combated and people will live much longer in the future than what they do today, so really “longevity is a side effect of health”. He urged investors to think about how people living longer will affect consumer behaviour and investee companies.

Previous