China needs to play TCFD catch up

Beijing, China - October 19, 2014 - A souvenir stall at a Beijing night market selling Xi Jinping face plates and other kitsch rubbish.

Last month’s net zero pledge by President Xi Jinping was heralded as a monumental step forward to achieving the Paris Agreement. But can China seriously reach peak carbon before 2030 and net zero by 2060?

The world’s largest emitter of CO2, responsible for 28 per cent of global emissions, will need to radically reshape its entire economy to stand any chance of reaching this target. The financial sector will be a crucial part of this transformation.

If China is to make finance a force for good, it makes sense that all institutions will need strong TCFD alignment paired with capital allocation to low carbon businesses.  However, CDP’s research in partnership with UK PACT (UK Partnering for Accelerated Climate Transitions, funded by BEIS) shows that responding Chinese financial institutions are far behind global peers on TCFD alignment and need to ramp up efforts around disclosure and climate change related risks and opportunities.   

Progress to be made in global rankings

China’s net zero target is laudable but it’s critical that the country’s financial institutions continue to ramp up their efforts in measuring, disclosing, and responding to climate risk. Chinese financial institutions only began responding to CDP questionnaires four years ago. Thus disclosure in the region is still nascent, with only 7 of the 65 (11 per cent) invited Chinese financial institutions responding to CDP’s TCFD–aligned 2019 questionnaire.

Although Chinese financial institutions still have a long way to go to catch up with their European peers, of which 47 per cent disclosed – and most Chinese financial respondents received a D score (which means the respondent has achieved information disclosure) – the country has seen steady progress in promoting environmental information disclosure in past years.

Sponsored Content

There is cause for optimism however, with one Chinese financial institution receiving a B score (environmental management level), a sure sign of effective identification, assessment, and management of climate-related risks and low-carbon transition plans. A B score1 is an exceptional achievement for a first-time discloser and evidence that there is global leadership potential among Chinese firms.

How can China’s financial institutions catch up?

First and foremost, broader disclosure is needed, and if Chinese institutions are to play their part in the country’s net zero transformation they need to get up to speed in preparing TCFD-compliant quantitative information, particularly around target setting and Scope 3 (indirect) emissions reduction.

Scope 3 accounting for the financial industry is complicated but evolving fast, with guidance on calculating emissions from equity, debt, project finance and managed investments now available.  Having access to this kind of data brings a host of other benefits as well as better environmental performance, helping financial institutions get ahead of regulatory and policy changes, identify and tackle growing risks, and find new opportunities. With 83 per cent of global institutions now disclosing their scope 3 impact, there are few excuses left for those yet to tackle their indirect emissions.

Time to put words into action

China’s announcement to reach peak emissions before 2030 and achieve carbon neutrality before 2060 is a giant step forward in tackling the climate crisis. But actions speak louder than words, and the question now is how Chinese leadership will ensure that its actions match its commitments. The right frameworks and concrete implementation plans need to be put in place.

China’s financial institutions have a vital role to play and TCFD aligned disclosure will be a crucial part of how they catch up with the rest of the world. If the world’s biggest coal producer is to have a serious shot at realising a net zero future, its financial institutions need to act fast and help get the country on track to reach its 2060 target.

  1. According to CDP Scoring Methodology, responding companies will be assessed across four consecutive levels which represent the steps a company moves through as it progresses towards environmental stewardship. The levels are:
    Score A: Leadership; B: Management; C: Awareness; and D: Disclosure.

Antigone Theodorou is regional director, Asia Pacific, Latin America and partner regions at CDP

Leave a Comment

La Caisse’s oil exit pays off as renewables portfolio pulls ahead of fossil fuels

La Caisse’s oil exit pays off as renewables portfolio pulls ahead of fossil fuels

Divesting from the oil sector has been a boon for La Caisse’s performance, as the Canadian pension giant says its energy investments have earned billions in value-add compared to the benchmark since the inception of its climate strategy. Head of sustainability Bertrand Millot unpacks the fund’s approach in an interview with Top1000funds.com.

Sort content by

Active engagement needs research, cadence and materiality

Investor engagement and stewardship programmes seek to change corporate behaviour, reduce risk and shape positive real world impacts. But experts notice that to be most effective investors need to ensure they are seeking to change the most material and important issues.

Hydrocarbon investment could avoid global recession

United States policy has quietly encouraged India and other countries in Asia to buy Russian hydrocarbons to avoid a global recession, driven by energy and food shortages, according to US government adviser and Russia expert Stephen Kotkin. While “no one wants Russia to get away with” invading Ukraine, an energy supply shock prompted by sanctions

The challenge of investing sustainably in sovereign debt markets

Investors speaking at Sustainability in Practice reflect on the challenges of sustainable investment in the trillion-dollar sovereign debt market: engagement, choosing what to measure and the impact of elections on policy to name a few.

Bridgewater sees opportunity for impact and return in mining groups

After a decade of underinvestment, Carsten Stendevad, co-chief investment officer for sustainability at Bridgewater Associates sees impact and return opportunities in commodities.

Infrastructure investors hunt decarbonisation pathways

Investors discuss the importance of being able to decarbonise infrastructure assets over the long-term. It's leading to lacklustre appetite for investments that can't - like airports.

Robeco signals unchartered territory ahead as sustainability takes off

Robeco's Victor Verberk opens Sustainability in Practice urged investors to invest at the frontier and push boundaries

Previous