Politicisation, poor governance to blame for backlash against ESG

John Skjervem (L) and Robert Eccles

CIOs need to fight back against the politicisation of ESG in the United States by adopting sound governance principles and not allowing their funds to be “pinned down to one side of the [political] spectrum,” according to John Skjervem, the chief investment officer at Utah Retirement Systems. 

Expressing disappointment with how sustainability has evolved in public funds, Skjervem said the issue had been “captured by the elected officials and the political class and has strayed terribly from its original intent,” which was to “put an empirical framework around externalities.”

“I went to college in the early 80s and you know, you study microeconomics and you get to the part where the factory is dumping pollution in the river and the professor shrugs his or her shoulders and says: ‘Oh, well, it’s an externality,’” Skjervem said. “And so I felt like one of the greatest things that’s happened in my lifetime as we have evolved as a society is to say: ‘Hey, we’re not going to tolerate externalities anymore.’”

But after around 2016, ESG “became very narrative based” and lost its empirical foundations, he said.

He was speaking at the Sustainability in Practice conference held by Top1000funds.com at the University of Oxford, in a panel session chaired by Robert Eccles, visiting professor of management practice, Saïd Business School, University of Oxford.

Skjervem, a lifelong surfer, skier, and lover of nature, said the popular view of liberals towards ESG “largely comes down to vilifying big oil or vilifying fossil fuels…and there is no appreciation for the fact that it has to be a transition.”

Sponsored Content

Well-intending people are thus ignorant of the complexity of the transition that needs to take place, and think that by divesting, the problem is solved. Environmental officials elected on a two-year election cycle are misaligned with CIOs like him with “a 40-year horizon”. This leads to misguided campaigns that hamper efforts to deal with critical issues like climate change, he said.

For example, expanding the power grid in the United States is one of the biggest impediments to decarbonisation, he said, as the legal environment is onerous and punitive. 

Environmentalists had cheered after defeating the 17-year Northern Pass high-voltage transmission line project to bring hydro-electric power from Quebec to the north-east, “even after the developer agreed to bury something like 60% of the transmission lines,” he said. “And so the north-east now will burn more coal.”

There are numerous examples of this kind, he said.

Utah Retirement Systems takes a “both, and” approach, he said, never getting “pinned down to one side of the spectrum or the other.”

“We are capitalizing on the exodus of private equity in oil and gas and we are coming in right behind that and doing direct deals with oil and gas operators,” Skjervem said. “We are doing full spectrum of renewables and we are, to my knowledge, at least the United States, the only plan that has made direct active investments in what I call emerging energy: fusion, fission, hydrogen.”

The fund does not have any investments in coal, he said.

Arguing climate change and sustainability are seperate issues, Skjervem also said “net zero is a waste of time” as most of the world’s population is not in the developed world and aspire for the same lifestyle as rich countries.

“So 1.6 billion people [in developed countries] have created this problem over the last hundred years,” Skjervem said. “I just find it just infuriatingly sanctimonious that we’re going to spend our time and energy on net zero targets when it doesn’t matter, because the only thing that matters is developing clean energy technologies so that those 5.2 billion people don’t do what we did.”

ENDS

Leave a Comment

Investors head back to EM as US tech capex bill mounts

Investors head back to EM as US tech capex bill mounts

US tech mega caps are grappling with surging capital expenditure, casting doubt on whether the premium attached to these stocks in the AI super cycle has become detached from fundamentals. Investors are now turning their attention to emerging markets equities where they have the opportunity to buy into the AI hype at a much lower price.

Sort content by

Why West Virginia’s CIO is worried about its China divestment directive

The $28 billion West Virginia Investment Management Board will divest from Chinese state-owned companies and CIO Craig Slaughter has reservations about the decision. He outlines in an interview with Top1000funds.com about why the directive is an extension of a big threat facing investors: a decline in liberal democracy. 

USS paper urges governments to do more to support climate policy

A new report from USS and the University of Exeter, argues that investors who focus on decarbonising their portfolios won't change real-world decarbonisation and would have more impact on climate change by buying transition investments.

TRS strikes gold: Tiny allocation crushes its benchmark

This year, TRS doubled its tiny allocation to gold via a special fund that buys gold ETFs and mining companies. The strategy returned nearly 60 per cent, thanks to market conditions including inflation, geopolitics, government debt levels and de-dollarisation pushing gold higher.

Moving from risk 1.0 to risk 2.0

As investors move into 'risk 2.0', how should they change their modelling approach and investment toolkits? WTW global head of portfolio strategy Jeff Chee outlines in this column why investors should consider principles such as greater use of qualitative risk measures.

Private asset funds are no longer fit-for-purpose

The surging interest in generative AI has triggered a technological arms race, driving demand for data centres. Investors are looking to capitalise on what is often described as a generational opportunity, but as Blue Owl’s James Clarke cautions, there are several important factors to assess in partners for the long-term.

PRI slashes reporting burden to preserve code relevance among signatories

The Principles for Responsible Investment will reduce signatories’ responsibilities in their annual mandatory reporting from 240 questions to just 40 next year. The outgoing PRI chief David Atkin explains the move and why asset owners have a big role in stabilising the discussion around responsible investment. 

Previous