Meaningful increases in value: BCI talks ESG uplift in private equity

ESG integration in BCI’s $25 billion private equity portfolio produces meaningful, double-digit percentage increases in value through focusing on strengthening operational resilience, unlocking growth, and build more valuable businesses.

Strategy at the the C$200 billion ($144 billion) pension fund doesn’t frame ESG in private markets as an ethical or reputational matter but is wholly focused on its role in core value creation.

BCI, together with Stanford University’s Long-Term Investing Initiative, produced research highlighted in a recent paper that finds rigorous, financially-driven ESG integration can materially enhance investment performance, showing that sustainability-linked drivers in a direct private equity portfolio can lead to meaningful, double-digit percentage increases in value.

The paper draws its conclusions from observed operational improvements rather than from realised exit outcomes.

One case study in the paper looks at BCI’s direct investment in a US logistics and transport group which ties delivery drivers’ compensation to a percentage of load revenue rather than miles driven, the industry norm, incentivising employees to complete deliveries efficiently and move to the next highest paying load, rather than maximise mileage. It’s helped the company cut driver turnover and associated recruitment and training costs, translating to approximately $18 million in avoided annual expense. A more experienced driver base has also contributed to a best-in-class safety record, with significantly fewer accidents and injuries, lowering insurance premiums from 8 cents per mile to 5 cents and generating an additional $12 million in annual savings.

Overall, BCI estimates that its ESG-linked strategy at the logistics firm contributes to a projected $144 million uplift in enterprise value, driven by improvements in retention, safety performance, fuel efficiency, and commercial differentiation.

Sponsored Content

BCI does not approach ESG as a political or philanthropic initiative, but as a strategic lever to strengthen operational resilience, unlock growth, and build more valuable businesses: ESG initiatives are prioritised only when they affect core levers of value creation that include margin expansion, cost of capital advantages, and positioning for exit multiple uplift.

“We define ESG as a set of societal issues that, due to their growing relevance, have become material to business performance. These factors influence core drivers of enterprise value such as profitability, risk exposure, capital allocation and readiness for exit. Viewed through this lens, ESG is not a parallel track or external obligation; it is embedded in investment judgment and aligned with fiduciary duty,” state the report authors Evan Greenfield, managing director of ESG at BCI Private Equity, Ashby Monk, executive director at the Stanford Long-Term Investing Initiative and his colleague Dane Rook, research engineer.

In another example, integrating health and safety protocols in a US industrial manufacturing group increased returns by cutting the frequency and severity of operational disruptions, lowering insurance premiums, and mitigating the risk of regulatory penalties or production delays, as well as supporting contract retention and new business wins.

Elsewhere, BCI’s investment in a global specialty insurance and reinsurance broker supported re-positioning the company to become a strategic partner in ESG risk management and climate transition planning in a return-boosting strategy.

During the diligence phase, BCI’s private equity team assesses ESG risks based on their potential to impact valuation and investment performance in a process that includes both sector-wide exposures and company-specific vulnerabilities.

“The focus is not just on identifying risks, but on determining whether they should be priced into the transaction, mitigated post-close, or monitored during ownership. These are not treated as “extra-financial” concerns; they are assessed entirely through an investment lens,” states the report.

Methodology at the investor emphasises data quality, transparent assumptions, replicable analysis, and measurable results that could be independently verified by a third party.

Where material risks are identified, the investment team proposes mitigants such as purchase price adjustments, enhanced reps and warranties, or targeted post-close interventions.

Moreover, deeper access to company data and management teams through equity ownership enables a more nuanced understanding of material ESG issues. BCI progresses from identifying ESG risks to managing them and, equally important, to capturing ESG-driven value. ESG is not just a defensive exercise: it is also a potential source of upside.

Every investment is linked to clear, measurable, and financially relevant outcomes. Many of BCI’s portfolio companies are middle-market businesses with limited internal resources. It means ESG is pursued with financial discipline and strategic focus – it cannot become an administrative burden or resource drain.

Investments must meet the same standard as any other operational priority and equate to a quantifiable contribution to enterprise value. BCI uses EBITDA as its core KPI and evaluates whether any ESG initiative has the potential to influence valuation multiples, typically requiring an expected uplift of at least 0.25x to merit further consideration. This screen, based on valuation multiples, is used to prioritise high-impact opportunities.

“ESG is not an overlay; it is embedded in the core value creation plan,” states the report.

As portfolio companies approach exit, ESG is a central part of how BCI positions them to buyers. The investor collaborates with management to craft a data-backed narrative that links ESG initiatives to specific business outcomes like improved margins, reduced volatility, customer stickiness, and stronger strategic positioning.

“For buyers assessing relevance and durability over time, a credible and proven ESG strategy enhances confidence in both the company and its future trajectory.”

While public market studies increasingly show valuation premiums for companies with stronger, financially material ESG performance, the purpose here is to isolate the impact of ESG actions on earnings quality, risk reduction, and growth, conclude the authors.

Leave a Comment

The twin forces rewriting the rules of investing

The twin forces rewriting the rules of investing

Portfolios built for the old world will be severely tested as emerging forces rewrite the rules of investing. The Fiduciary Investors Symposium heard that geopolitical and macroeconomic upheaval, together with the disruption wrought by AI, should force asset owners to rethink the structure and composition of portfolios.

Sort content by

Strategic tilting adds value at NZ Super

Strategic tilting has added 1.1 per cent, or NZ$3 billion, to the New Zealand Super Fund’s reference portfolio over the past 10 years, David Iverson, head of asset allocation at the NZ$41 billion fund says. This is way above the expected return from the program which was set at around 40 basis points.

At a glance: FIS Cambridge day three

An overwhelming number of delegates at the Fiduciary Investors Symposium said the funds management industry was not doing well in innovationMartin Gilbert, who started Aberdeen Standard Investments in 1983 and is now chair, said industry participants needed to innovate and disrupt themselves.

Different ways to navigate risk

Institutional investors are navigating the different risks that can impact their portfolios in different ways, explained chief risk offers speaking at the Fiduciary Investors Symposium in Cambridge. Arjen Pasma, chief risk officer at Dutch asset manager PGGM noted how risks span investment risk, counterparty risk, liquidity risk and ESG risk. Measuring ESG risk in the manager’s large allocation to private markets where each deal is scored on ESG and climate risk is particularly important, he said.

How to build innovation

Innovation is more important than ever given the uncertain and ambiguous times that lie ahead for institutional investors like climate change, political dysfunction and poor returns. “Returns can only come from an ecosystem that works and we need innovation to do this,” said Roger Urwin, global head of investment content, Willis Towers Watson speaking at the Fiduciary Investors Symposium at Cambridge University.

Climate change risk to spur stress test

Mercer has quantified a ‘low-carbon transition’ premium in the sequel to its seminal climate change report, showing that a 2⁰C scenario equates to 11 basis points per annum to 2030 in a typical growth portfolio.

Long-term investors must engage

Long-term infrastructure investors need to engage with the public and do much more to build trust in the value of their capital, said Brett Himbury, chief executive, IFM Investors (Australia), the global infrastructure manager, owned by 27 leading pension funds with $120 billion AUM.

Previous