NBIM approaches water with a filter

Water and how a company manages its exposure to this increasingly scarce resource is a key focus for Norway’s sovereign wealth fund in assessing the environmental and social performance of the more than 8000 companies in its portfolio.

Anne Kvam, the head of Norges Bank Investment Management’s (NBIM) corporate governance team, says the sheer size and scale of understanding the plethora of environmental, social and corporate governance (ESG) risks in its investments demands a focus on a selection of companies and a few key risks. Norges Bank is Norway’s central bank and NBIM manages the Norwegian Government Pension Fund Global on behalf of the ministry of finance.

“If we are to work actively on all 8000 holdings on all environmental, social and corporate governance topics, this would, of course, be impossible,” Kvam says.

“This is why the executive board decided we will have six focus areas and three of those are tied into environmental and social areas, and they are children’s rights, water and climate change. This doesn’t mean that we don’t see that there are many other risks out there that we hope and expect companies to manage.”

NBIM, the asset management arm of Norway’s central bank, is responsible for managing the investments of the $576-billion sovereign wealth fund.

Kvam explains that its investment staff can access an easy-to-handle, one-page report on a company that includes a scorecard of its performance across these three key areas.

Sponsored Content

The report draws on internally generated information and external research that the asset manager purchases.

Data on these three focus areas is gathered on more than 2000 companies. Broader ESG reporting for the fund covers 4000 companies, representing 80 per cent of the fund’s holdings.

 

Distilling best practice

NBIM has had water as one of these key focus areas since 2009. This includes issuing guidelines for companies it invests in on how they should report and manage water risk.

Under these guidelines, companies are expected to have a water-management strategy that evaluates the extent of water use in the production process and, more broadly, in a company’s supply chain.

Companies are also required to report on how its water use affects surrounding communities and how water risk management is built into corporate-governance processes.

NBIM reports that it is invested in several sectors with high water consumption. It has determined seven sectors particularly exposed to water-related risk: agriculture, food, manufacturing and power, mining, pharmaceuticals, pulp and paper, and water supply.

The fund has identified 1100 companies where water is an important input and output factor and these companies have a combined market value of $46.1 billion.

Kvam says that NBIM has narrowed its analysis of water risk at the companies it invests in to 447 companies selected from these high-risk industries.

These companies represent the largest holdings for the fund across these chosen sectors.

It reports annually on these companies in its Sector Compliance Report, which aims to encourage better reporting practices across industries, as well as identify top performing companies for disclosure and management of water risk.

The report notes that: “despite a notable increase, companies’ reporting on relevant metrics that track their exposure to water-related risks and the performance of their water management systems was still too low.”

The forestry and paper sector had the highest level of disclosure whereas companies in the mining and industrial sector had the lowest.

“We are dependent on companies disclosing good relevant information so we can make good investment decisions and good calls,” Kvam says.

Nestlé, Anglo American, Anheuser-Busch InBev and Danone were among 14 companies with the highest marks for reporting on water-related risks in 2011.

GlaxoSmithKline, Kellogg, Kirin Holdings, Merck & Co, Molson Coors Brewing, PepsiCo, Pfizer, PG&E, SABMiller and Sanofi were also top performers.

Of the 447 companies assessed in this area, 32 per cent scored zero.

“It is common to name the worst performers as a kind of naming-and-shaming part of ESG, but we are trying the other route by naming what we think are the best performers and who are the best at disclosure,” she says.

Leave a Comment

The Austin advantage: Texas Teachers talks optimism, innovation and growth

The Austin advantage: Texas Teachers talks optimism, innovation and growth

Jase Auby, TRS's celebrated CIO, explains why TPA doesn't fit with its culture; why community push back on data centres could turn out to be an investor advantage, and argues the case for continuing to invest in fossil fuels. Top1000funds.com sat down with the CIO in his Austin office for an all-encompassing conversation.

Sort content by

Exploring the depths of sustainable investing

Many institutional funds boast responsible investing credentials, but Switzerland’s Nest Sammelstiftung has taken the extra step of molding its investment strategy around a sustainable template. The sustainable agenda is more than just a focus for Nest. It forms the very ethos of a fund that markets itself to potential members as “the ecological and ethical

Wallach takes long view cross the Mersey

Peter Wallach, head of the United Kingdom’s Merseyside Pension Fund isn’t overly worried about the recent fall in equities. “Markets are being driven by liquidity from central banks; this is more about central banks just needing to reassure investors,” he says. “It is bonds, to our mind, that are over-valued in the medium to long

Caution, luck and overlays propel Swedish fund

A solvency ratio of 157 per cent is a clear mark of success for a pension fund at a time when so many are battling deficits. Remarkably, Sweden’s SEK90-billion ($14 billion) KPA Pension has gained this funding cushion without fully embracing the range of new asset classes or strategies often touted as the solution to

Position shift at University of Toronto Asset Management

In organisational terms there isn’t a stone unturned at University of Toronto Asset Management (UTAM). The organisation has a new board, new staff, new risk and reporting systems and has restructured its portfolios, including a new policy portfolio. Where previously the assets were managed in a traditional method, with public market assets and alternatives allocated

Dutch pension fund defines dynamism

Geraldine Leegwater, ABN AMRO Pensioenfond’s director, talks about her fund’s investment strategy process with a matter-of-factness that possibly belies how far it has moved established ground. While Leegwater sees logic at every vantage point behind the changes that she helped to introduce at the Dutch banking giant’s €18-billion ($24-billion) fund in 2007, she skips from

Bavarian fund bales on Berlin bonds

Bavaria is known as the most independent-minded of Germany’s regions, and the pension fund of Bavarian chemical multinational, Wacker, has shown definite divergence from the norm by shedding its holdings of German government bonds. It is not just German paper – which has seen yields on 10-year bonds below 2 per cent for more than

Previous