Ontario Teachers’ leading net zero strategy

For asset owners wanting to know how to set interim targets for your net zero portfolios, here’s how to do it. Amanda White speaks with Deborah Ng from Ontario Teachers’ on their world-class approach.

Back in January, the C$227.7 billion Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan made a commitment to a net zero portfolio by 2050. At the time it said it was aiming to set interim targets by the end of Q1 but the fund’s journey is a demonstrable reminder of the difficulty in setting targets for large complex global portfolios. Come September it has now released its interim targets.

Deborah Ng, head of responsible investing at Ontario Teachers’ says the delay reflects the fund’s complexity. OTPP took a collaborative approach with representatives at the most senior levels of the organisation having key buy-in, and it had to incorporate the intricacies of setting net zero targets in a large and growing allocation to private markets.

A net zero commitment was a corporate strategy initiative at Ontario Teachers’. The fund’s net zero taskforce was led by members of the investment executive team, as well as representatives from total fund management and global strategic relationships.

The idea was to get a broad group to work through the interim target setting and get buy-in from the entire organisation. There was a lot of interaction and meetings with the investment teams which Ng says was integral as “they are the most impacted”. It also worked with external consultants to help facilitate some of the work which included extensive interviews with peers.

“It was a collaborative approach that we took across the plan internally and externally. We did a landscape assessment of our peers to find best practice and mostly focused on asset owner peers who had set net zero targets as well as asset managers like Blackrock and Wellington,” Ng told Top1000funds.com in an interview.

Sponsored Content

“It varied quite a lot with where they were at with their plans, some were at very advanced stages and had targets. A lot of them were top down and we also took a tone from the top approach which unlocked resources and efforts to work towards it on a bottom up basis.”

Setting interim targets

The starting point for OTPP was the International Panel on Climate Change’s recommendation of reducing 2019 levels by 50 per cent by 2030.

The fund landed on interim targets that were a lot more ambitious than that, with a plan to reduce portfolio carbon emissions intensity by 45 per cent by 2025 and two-thirds by 2030, compared to its 2019 baseline.

“We did a lot of scenario analysis, we knew there would be emissions reduction because of the decarbonising world, and we wanted to capture that and add to it,” she says. “All of our businesses are buying electricity from somewhere and with this macro decarbonisation we looked at how much reduction was expected in each jurisdiction and applied that to our portfolio.”

The second step was to spend time with the investment teams and examine where the fund was already looking at opportunities, and what plans there where with the transition of assets.

“There was lots of discussion to understand from an investment strategy viewpoint how investments would evolve from now to 2030,” she says.

One of the nuances here was that the broad indices in public equities were very emissions intensive and driving a lot of the fund’s intensity exposure.

OTPP’s strategy overall is to invest more in private markets and high conviction positions in public companies so the portion of the portfolio that was high intensity, broad-based market investments, would be declining over time. In addition, Ng says, the sectors that were of interest to the deal teams were not the high emissions sectors.

“Understanding the investment strategy helped us to understand the targets,” she says.

More in private markets

Ontario Teachers’ currently has 50 per cent of the portfolio in private markets, and that is expected to grow by as much as $70 billion over the next five years as they lower their allocation to fixed income.

“From an investment standpoint we will be increasing private assets over time and our private equity portfolio is very low intensive compared to public equity,” Ng says. “Part of [net zero] strategy is as we pivot more to PE will be able to achieve some of those reductions.”

As a direct investor, the fund will also use its role as an owner of businesses to set portfolio companies on a clear path to implement Paris-aligned net-zero plans and meaningfully reduce emissions.

“We invest a lot directly, and sit on boards, so we can use that influence to help facilitate improved practices and decarbonisation,” she says.

Part of the net zero plan is to significantly grow investments in companies that generate clean energy, reduce demand for fossil fuels and build a sustainable economy.

Sections of the private equity team have been pivoting towards sustainable energy such as sustainable fuels, bio energy and battery storage.

The fund has also set up a team called VERT – the virtual, energy and renewables team – which is a cross-collaborative team made up of representatives from every asset class.

“This group is working to develop an over-arching total fund strategy for how we find investment in clean energy technology, so they are on the cutting edge,” Ng says. “We are trying to understand the areas of interest, our capabilities and what is most investable. We didn’t want to create a new standalone team, we already have the talent, this is a forum to accelerate that and look at opportunities.”

 

Green bonds and transition assets

OTPP has a debt issuance program as part of its total fund management program and has signalled its intention to grow its green asset base. It will issue green bonds and invest the proceeds in climate solutions and sustainable companies.

In addition it intends to address transition assets, recognising their importance in the net zero pathway.

“We can buy higher emissions investments and through our efforts help them to decarbonise faster than they planned or could before and that’s an important area for net zero. There is so much focus on emission reduction what we see happening is the easiest way to meet a target is to sell an asset. There will be times when our footprint doesn’t go down as much because we are taking on a high emissions investment, but we will be taking it down in future years. Most importantly, these efforts lead to real-world emissions reductions,” Ng says, adding it is developing a taxonomy to help define that.

OTPP is an anchor investor alongside Temasek in Brookfield’s global transition fund, co-led by Mark Carney, which will scale clean energy as well as invest capital to transform carbon-intensive businesses. PSP and IMCO are also investors.

 

Operational plans

Ng says a lot of the net zero steps are operational items. Things like how to allocate the targets across the organisation and asset classes, how to define transition assets and measure them in a meaningful way.

“Measuring our green investments is another definitional challenge. We are leveraging our green bond framework, but we also need to understand and measure our entire exposure to green assets and how much that is changing over time,” she says. “We also have to get the deal teams focused and working on private companies to help them moving. We have already done work with portfolio companies to measure their carbon footprint. The work ahead is now we’ve measured it what are the opportunities for reducing those emissions?”

While the fund has been working on the net zero interim targets for the past six months, Ng says the work has just began.

“2025 is not very far away and it will take support from the investment teams to reach these targets. They are aware of targets and are on side but sometimes they need help on getting started so we are working with them on things like how to have the conversation with your portfolio companies. We are looking at what we need to equip the team with to execute this.”

The last piece of the roadmap is on the policy advocacy level to work at the industry and regulatory level to promote policies that are conducive to a transition to net zero.

“As much as we are an influential investor there are much bigger pools of capital out there so standards and regulation also important lever that can create positive change across the entire market .”

 

 

 

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

GIC: Geopolitical risks rewire asset allocation ‘operating system’

Some investors are “missing the point” of geopolitical risks by equating them to the disruptions from conflicts and wars, according to GIC chief economist Prakash Kannan, but in reality, geopolitical risk is no longer episodic or peripheral. This means investors need to think harder about inflation and country composition in their portfolio.

GIC, OPTrust on how TPA reshapes allocation process, accountability

Long-time practitioners of the total portfolio approach said one of its greatest advantages is that the investment team can make significant asset allocation at its discretion, as interest towards adopting the framework picks up among asset owners to handle more complex decision-making. At FIS Singapore, GIC and OPTrust unpack the governance and risk culture to enable it.

Why game theory falls short in AI-driven trading market

The rise of artificial intelligence-driven trading has raised questions about the possibility of algorithmic investors crowding into many of the same ideas and amplifying stress during times of volatility. Nanyang Technological University computer science professor Bo An explores the question at FIS Singapore.

Why active management matters in emerging markets

The emerging markets are a great way to access the AI thematic without buying into expensive US large caps, but their nuances demand local active management if investors want to unlock their rewards.

Asian private credit shines as US, European covenants weaken

As covenants in US and European private credit become weakened from an increasing flow of lending capital, asset allocators and managers are eyeing Asia as the next frontier due to its relatively untapped yet sizable market. At FIS Singapore, investors unpacked the region's complexity premium and why a local approach is essential.

Why China thinks it will lead the next industrial revolution

While China was mainly a beneficiary rather than a participant of previous industrial revolutions, it now believes it can lead the next one, and the US will have to work hard to catch up to its extraordinary capacity and speed for development.

Previous