Robeco hails the power of stewardship

[vc_empty_space height=”10px”][vc_media_type_category]Global asset manager Robeco has found proactive stewardship triggers important changes in corporate behaviour. Chief executive Gilbert van Hassel urges FIS 2020 Digital delegates to do the same.

The appointment of climate expert Samuel Leupold onto the board of energy multinational Enel Group after a campaign led by Robeco and Climate Action 100+ (the investor initiative targeting the world’s dirtiest companies) shows the power of investor collaboration, said Gilbert van Hassel, chief executive, Robeco, speaking at FIS 2020 Digital. Discussing how to ensure a sustainable recovery in the wake of the pandemic, he called for action among governments and major asset owners to push for sustainability, saying “now is the time.”

“We hope Enel will make major steps towards the non-fossil fuel delivery of products to clients,” he said, reflecting on the long-term impact of investor collaboration on the energy company. Something that he said has also triggered change at oil giant Shell where investors like the United Kingdom’s Church of England Pension Board have influenced corporate sustainability policies.

“Making sure we actively vote and actively engage with corporates can change behaviour. We just need to persist and make sure we do it together,” he said.

A sustainable recovery and sustainable economy require leadership and capital, said van Hassel. Investors need to look at long-term trends and focus on a “healthy planet” that ends species extinction and warming trends.

“If we continue on this path, we will have more storms, disease and vulnerability,” he said. van Hassel also said it was essential that wealth was shared.

Sponsored Content

“People are protesting about inequality,” he said referencing a lack of opportunity to study and access healthcare particularly.

He argued that the recently common argument that “this time things will be different” has no basis: human behaviour doesn’t always change. Indeed, he observed how the recent re-opening of Brussels airport showed undiminished demand for air travel. However, van Hassel is also encouraged by the sacrifices people have made and the “willingness to do things differently” in lockdown. During the crisis social distancing was respected and biodiversity in Amsterdam’s’ canals increased.

“I hope this could be the spark the world needs to start working together to get into a sustainable economy,” he said.

Robeco, which manages around $200 billion, has had 95 per cent of its 1000 staff working from home since mid-March, but is now starting to bring employees back into its offices. He said there are many more rules on bringing people back to corporate premises.

“Working from home is going to be constant for a while,” he said, but added that working from home brings challenges like maintaining a company culture, cohesion and the loss of the social side of office life.

He said Robeco’s assets were conservatively positioned and the manager was able to generate cash relatively easily during the crisis. Getting the operational side of lockdown right was more of a challenge, however.

van Hassel said when sustainability is integrated into investment decision making and processes, it is no longer possible to greenwash. He said sustainability has become “mainstream” and many organisations are trying to “catch up.” Those that understand that sustainability ensures better risk-adjusted returns, and fully integrate ESG into their analysis alongside adopting regulations and taxonomies, are “no longer greenwashing.”

He said governments which have focused on short-term health issues and the need to support companies now need to focus on rebuilding in a sustainable way. Here he urged governments to galvanize around the SDGs.

“The Paris agreement and the SDGs are a road towards a more stable, inclusive society,” he said, noting how the SDGs ensure long term growth, less volatility and a better quality of life. van Hassel concluded that if governments had the “audacity” and “willingness” to introduce a global carbon price it would “be a huge help” and one of the quickest ways to solve pollution.

“Polluters are not seeing the consequences, but we, society, pay the price,” he concluded.

Leave a Comment

China ESG risk: the next unknown

China ESG risk: the next unknown

One of the most important, upcoming challenges at CalSTRS is how the fund should evaluate Chinese investments from a human capital and environmental standpoint, says Chris Ailman, chief investment officer at the giant pension fund.

Sort content by

OECD environment working paper #164

What policies for greening the crisis response and economic recovery? Lessons learned from past green stimulus measures and implications for the COVID-19 crisis

Harvard endowment goes net zero by 2050

The Harvard endowment is about half way through its transition to external investment management and will work with its service providers to implement the university’s new directive, to position the portfolio in line with net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050.

COVID-19 fiscal recovery packages

The COVID-19 crisis is likely to have dramatic consequences for progress on climate change. Imminent fiscal recovery packages could entrench or partly displace the current fossil-fuel-intensive economic system.

Strategic asset allocation

Asset allocation plays such a fundamental role to determining long-term returns that ignoring these sustainability issues – where the impacts affect economies, businesses and society over decades – just does not make sense.

Investor collaboration on sustainability

How can investors be a catalyst for change and have an active voice in a sustainable recovery? This episode explores the role of investors and how they can collaborate for effective collective action. It includes the work of one of the leaders in sustainable investing and the biggest pension fund in Europe, APG. It invites investors to have an active voice in a sustainable recovery.

Enormity of climate crisis misunderstood

There is a lack of understanding in investment decision-making about how big the climate crisis is which could lead to investments and risks being mis-directed, according to Professor Cameron Hepburn, Professor of Environmental Economics at Oxford University.

Previous