CalSTRS sets sustainability as strategic priority in 10-year plan

Becoming a sustainable organisation is one of three pillars in CalSTRS’ new five-year strategic plan, as it also reveals progress on its net zero plan.
Presented to the board in March, the $312 billion fund’s 2022-25 strategic plan includes 10-year vision for the future broken down into three, three-yearly strategic plan cycles, kicking off in July 2022.
The plan is centred around three core pillars: being trusted stewards to ensure a well-governed, financially sound trust fund; leading innovation and managing change, including innovation to grow resiliency and efficiency; and focus on a sustainable organisation, including fully integrating a unified ESG ethos in everything it does. The latter includes investments but also a focus on internal diversity, equity and inclusion to drive organisational outperformance.
Many of the new priorities are a continuation and advancement of the current strategic plan including operationalising sustainable investment beliefs to create long-term value, execute on the CalSTRS Collaborative Model 2.0 and a focus on advanced technology for business agility and to increase efficiency while transforming business processes and digital adoption. The Collaborative Model focuses on managing more assets internally to reduce costs, control risks, increase expected returns and leverage external partnerships. Since 2017 this has saved the fund more than $780 million.
Some of the objectives of the previous strategic plan, which finishes at the end of June this year, will be carried over into the new plan including achieving full funding of the defined benefit program by June 30, 2046; integrating the fund’s sustainable investment and stewardship strategies; implementing the collaborative model leveraging all of CalSTRS resources; and a focus on technology to reduce costs.
In September 2021 the fund pledged to a net zero portfolio by 2050 or sooner but has invested in climate-oriented solutions and integrated climate risk considerations into its investment and stewardship activities since 2004.
When it made the pledge it also outlined that it would take a year to figure out the plan for implementation.
In February CalSTRS released its eighth annual Sustainability Report which shows it is evaluating its internal policies and practices for greenhouse gas emissions in line with its portfolio commitment. This includes business travel, remote work and onsite energy use.
The fund is expanding its West Sacramento headquarters with a new 10-story tower. The project is being financed through tax-exempt, lease-revenue green bonds issued through the California Infrastructure and Economic Development Bank.

CalSTRS head of sustainability, Kirsty Jenkinson, is one of the speakers at the Sustainability in Practice event to be held at the University of Cambridge from April 19-21. If you are an asset owner and would like more information on attending visit us here.

Sponsored Content

Leave a Comment

Finland’s Elo: Larger equity allocations promise new media scrutiny

Finland’s Elo: Larger equity allocations promise new media scrutiny

As Finland's pension funds prepare to increase their equity allocations to unprecedented levels compared to global peers, they must also navigate a new and unfamiliar risk. Elo's chief investment officer Jonna Ryhänen explains the fund's investment approach going forward and how it will manage stakeholder and media scrutiny as they react to swinging volatility and returns.

Sort content by

Understanding complexity at BCIMC

On the first page of the British Columbia Investment Management Corporation (BCIMC) annual report is a flow chart titled “complexity and connections”, outlining how the Japanese earthquake and subsequent tsunami and nuclear disaster sent shock waves through the global economy. Understanding complexity and both the risks and potential opportunities that can arise from an increasingly

CPPIB doubles logistics spend in China

The $165.8-billion Canadian Pension Plan Investment Board (CPPIB) has substantially increased its investment in logistics properties in China, doubling its funding of a partnership with the Goodman Group. It is the second time in a year that CPPIB has doubled its exposure to logistics properties in this Chinese joint venture, with its latest injection of

AustralianSuper
pivots to Asia

Asia will be a growing part of investors’ portfolios, predicts the chief investment officer of AustralianSuper, Mark Delaney. He is steering the $43-billion fund towards the Asian century with up to 45 per cent of its international equities now in emerging markets. Asia represents about half of this emerging market exposure and, despite the flight

A catalyst for change: PGGM owns ESG

Not content to sit back and wait for the market to move, PGGM decided to learn by doing and launched its own responsible-equity portfolio three years ago. In line with its belief that sustainability pays, PGGM’s portfolio has a long-term investment horizon that integrates financial and environmental, social and governance (ESG) factors with active ownership.

NYCRS CIO focuses on the achievable

Reducing equities, expanding the resources and changing the RFP process are on the agenda of New York City Retirement System (NYCRS) chief investment officer, Larry Schloss, as he makes structural and investment changes to turn the $123-billion fund around. Two and a half years in to what is most likely only a four-year tenure –

OMERS sharpens strategic focus

OMERS Strategic Investments (OSI) is more than the international co-investment arm of Ontario Municipal Employees Retirement System (OMERS), it is the vehicle which the system uses to shape and implement several key parts of its strategic plan. OSI is one of five investment groups that fit under the OMERS Worldwide brand. The other four groups

Previous