Products and services, not operations, key to assessing ESG

Global asset management firm Robeco has differentiated its ESG assessment methodology to give a more accurate picture of the impact investors have on sustainable development goals (SDGs), according to Rachel Whittaker, the firm’s head of sustainable investment research.

Speaking in a panel session with Del Hart, head of external managers at New Zealand Super – which has used Robeco’s methodology to significantly improve its ESG profile – Whittaker said the Robeco SDG framework contains two critical differences to other ESG ratings methodologies. 

The first is it focuses only on sustainability impact, and does not take into account any financial materiality. “We are purely looking at the impacts that companies have on people and planet,” Whittaker said.

The second difference is a focus on the company’s products and services as its primary impact mechanism. “We look at little bit at operations too, but have a very strong focus, we believe that what a company produces and sells has the biggest impact on sustainability,” Whittaker said.

The panel discussion on the evolution and uses of SDGs was part of the Sustainability in Practice conference, organised by Top1000funds.com and held at Oxford University.

Robeco’s framework takes an “avoidance of harm approach,” rejecting the notion that a negative impact in one area can offset positive impacts in another area. 

Sponsored Content

“So, in the company’s operations, even if they are really well managed – maybe even reducing negative impacts or having some positive impacts in their operations – that wouldn’t offset a negative impact that we see coming from their products and services,” Whittaker said.

All assessed companies are given an SDG score between minus three and three, and this is made available open source for everyone, including the public and academics.

“That really grew out of seeing many, many more uses to our SDG framework than even we had initially anticipated,” Whittaker said.

Some organisations want to pick out specific SDGs on which to focus as well as the overall score, she said, giving the example of a client with associations with a labor union that wanted to focus more on social issues. 

But making the information widely available has some obstacles, as Robeco cannot share any data that it doesn’t own. Its website only displays overall scores and individual SDG scores, but doesn’t make the underlying data points available as these are sourced from other providers. 

Robeco is now digging deeper on a number of topics, improving its data and forming partnerships with academics. One partnership with a PhD student at the University of Zurich, for example, is looking at the link between SDG scores and controversial incidents.

New Zealand Super Fund , a NZ$64.4 billion sovereign wealth fund, has been integrating ESG into its investment process from its inception 20 years ago, although its approach has evolved considerably over the years. 

Robeco is one of the managers that  worked with NZ Super to incorporate Paris alignment into its multi-factor portfolios.  Hart, head of external managers at NZ Super, said the framework had removed the -3 and -2 companies from its factor mandates, and aligned more closely with SDGs. 

“So we are really improving the ESG profile by quite a significant extent [but] I think it’s very early days for us,” Hart said.

Leave a Comment

Meeting multiple objectives: The pension fund addressing mental health

Meeting multiple objectives: The pension fund addressing mental health

With the right governance models pension funds can play a role in broader societal issues, such as mental health in the workplace, while still delivering financial security for members. A unique “democratic governance structure” at the Danish Velliv Association allows it to manage multiple objectives, chief executive Lars Wallberg said.

Sort content by

Under-priced climate risk plagues pension portfolios

Climate risk remains systematically under-priced and the world isn’t on course for net zero. Investors need to prepare for the risks of climate and environmental change and re-evaluate the risk in their portfolios, University of Oxford researcher Nicola Ranger warned delegates to Sustainability in Practice.

Emerging tech and a little pragmatism make biodiversity investible

Finding “nature positive” companies to invest in is a challenge, delegates to Sustainability in Practice at the University of Oxford have heard. But Institutional investors can play a key role in turning corporate laggards into leaders.

PGGM prepares to incorporate impact in three dimensional approach

Dutch asset manager PGGM is working with Bridgewater Associates to integrate impact across its portfolio. PGGM's Arjen Pasma and Bridgewater's Carsten Stendevad discuss the strategy, which promises to dramatically reshape PGGM's €228 billion portfolio.

Sustainability in Practice: Time to get realistic about net zero

Many asset owners have net zero commitments in place, but few of these targets are being met with implementation. In the opening session of Sustainability in Practice at the University of Oxford, delegates discuss how investors should get realistic about net zero.

How large would you like your climate risk to be?

Tim Hodgson, co-founder of the Thinking Ahead Institute at WTW, explores the possible consequences of breaching planetary boundaries and triggering systemic risk.

Dutch, British and Australian funds latest to back timberland

Investors are hunting forestry assets because they combines a large-scale sustainable investment with compelling risk-adjusted, inflation proof returns and diversification. Funds like Nest, APG and AP2 explain their approach.