Water risk is real, experts warn

Investors need to understand the risks and opportunities related to water in their portfolios, including recognising the different water users in the sectors or regions where they are investing.

Experts used California’s water shortage and seven-year drought as context for a panel discussion on the issue at the PRI in Person annual conference in San Francisco. The message for delegates: take water seriously.

Although California faces some unique water challenges, many of its issues are prominent in other parts of the world as well. Demand is growing and in a free market, water runs “uphill to money”, Pacific Institute president Jason Morrison said. But California’s agricultural community has disproportionate access to water, given its smaller role in the state’s GDP compared with urban areas, which are massive generators of economic activity. Yet taking water from the agriculture sector is difficult because it would have real-life implications for rural communities, Morrison explained.

California’s challenges also include capturing the rain water that is replacing snow fall because of climate change, Morrison said. Historically, most of California’s water has fallen in the north, where it lies in the mountain range in the form of snow until spring, when it melts. It is then transported south, where most of the state’s people live.

“We are seeing a lot more winter rain rather than snow, Morrison said. “Instead of a snowpack and slow release, rain is coming when we don’t need it as much and we don’t have the infrastructure to hold that water in wet months and have it last all the way through to late summer and fall.”

Much of California’s difficulties stem from local water providers not being able to deal with changing weather patterns, he said.

Sponsored Content

Other challenges include generating pressure to divert water in rivers for agricultural and urban purposes and, until recently, the unregulated use of ground water in times of drought. Landmark legislation in the state now requires agencies to plan long-term sustainable management of ground water.

The risks

Disregarding water risk can have a profound impact on a company’s wider supply chain and cause reputational damage. Yet many companies struggle to measure and report water risk accurately, making it difficult for investors to judge the extent to which their portfolios are exposed.

“It is a macroeconomic risk that affects entire regions. Global investors need to understand it,” said Piet Klop, senior adviser, responsible investment, at the Netherlands’ PGGM, which charts water risk in its portfolio and calculates what percentage of its assets are in areas where these risks are high. Klop notes the challenges around data gathering. Coverage is patchy and companies that do supply water data question the extent to which the disclosure and data they provide is being used.

“We can’t expect companies to keep disclosing [under these circumstances]; we need to act on this data, otherwise we will never get anywhere,” Klop said.

Regulation

Regulation can help investors manage investee companies’ water risk and leads to creative solutions from companies, too, Klop notes. Recent regulation in California that caps overall groundwater use has led to creative solutions by companies and exciting opportunities.

“Investment opportunities arise once companies and investors understand the risk and governments set incentives,” he explained. “Once you have this, creativity breaks through.”

For example, a dairy farm, a non-government organisation and an Israel tech company have partnered to develop a drip irrigation system to water crops for cows that uses manure. In a win-win, the system reduces the amount of fresh water needed to irrigate crops and the amount of fertiliser crops need, while increasing the yields.

“A lot of technologies can come into play,” Klop said. “These combine efficiency with other benefits and make an investment case.”

That is important because low water prices in many regions make it hard to build a water investment case. Even the most successful investments may not be scalable. In the drip-irrigation example, the technology may not be transferable to other farms with fewer crops; and irrigating food crops in the same way would pose regulatory problems because of questions about whether the manure could be transferred to other crops in the area, like almonds, Morrison said. It also puts all the responsibility on first-movers.

“It is a problem we need to solve together,” he said.

Company risk

The panel noted how companies are navigating water risk. Agribusiness Olam, the world’s second-biggest grower of almonds, with extensive farms in California, faces falling yields and rising costs in line with water availability. The company now stores more water and is involved in better management of ground supplies, investing in projects to flood orchards in wet months; however, the absence of a policy overlay or framework has made it challenging because neighbouring farms have benefited from replenished aquifers but have not contributed to the cost.

“At the end of the day companies won’t mitigate the risk until there is policy intervention,” Morrison 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:PGGM / PFZW

Leave a Comment

How the Future Fund built a TPA culture that scales

How the Future Fund built a TPA culture that scales

The total portfolio approach has allowed Australia’s sovereign wealth fund to capture the themes that will power markets and economies for decades to come, said director of thought leadership Craig Thorburn – but that doesn’t mean it’s not hard to scale.

Sort content by

Right benchmark provides different perspective on private markets alpha

A private market equivalent benchmark is superior to either peer group benchmarks or a public market equivalent in measuring private equity and infrastructure manager outperformance, according to Frederic Blanc-Brude, director of Scientific Infra & Private Assets at EDHEC Asia Pacific.  

China is getting its mojo back

After years of underperformance the Chinese stock market had strong gains at the beginning of 2025, giving investors confidence that the country might be getting some of its pre-COVID mojo back.  

Why the energy transition won’t die with Trump 2.0

Despite the uptick in anti-ESG sentiment that’s come with Donald Trump’s return to the White House, large institutional investors are certain that innovations in transition technology will continue and that the broader world has not changed course on the journey to decarbonisation.  

How Asia-Pacific investors can navigate Trump’s America first plan

President Trump is dramatically reshaping geopolitics, creating new risks and opportunities for investors across the Asia-Pacific.

How new technologies are changing the game in private markets

With the ability to uncover hard-to-find information and enable more frequent trading in traditionally illiquid asset classes, new technologies like artificial intelligence and tokenisation could be the biggest disruption most private markets investors will see in their lifetime. 

How capital markets became a weapon of choice in great power conflict

Capital markets continue to be a key battlefield of power between Beijing and Washington, and whether the yuan has a serious chance of taking over the dollar as the international currency is the next big question for the world economic order. 

Previous