Climate group calls for investor power

Cracked Ground From The Indian Subcontinent

Climate Action 100+ is working, and it can become even more effective if investors and asset managers throw their weight behind it, according to Oliver Grayer, Project Director at the Institutional Investors Group on Climate Change (IGCC).

Speaking at the Principles for Responsible Investments (PRI) Climate Forum in London, he urged attendees to add their muscle to the five-year initiative. Climate Action 100+ aims to engage with the 100 largest greenhouse gas emitters to improve corporate governance, curb emissions and strengthen climate-related financial disclosures.

Most recently, Japan’s ¥158 trillion ($1.4 trillion) Government Pension Investment Fund (GPIF) joined the initiative, which is now backed by around 300 asset owners and managers with $31 trillion under management. The volume of investors getting involved has spurred unprecedented lobbying initiatives and activity, Grayer said.

So far, Climate Action 100+ has been most effective in engaging with supply-side companies in the oil and gas, mining and metals and utilities sectors. Grayer called for investors and managers to push engagement with companies on the demand side in construction, transport and steel where decarbonisation is challenging and complex.

“There are always individuals in firms that want the support of investors,” he said. “Asset managers need to help us drive through the changes required.”

 

Sponsored Content

One metric, one target

Companies need investor engagement to understand what investors actually want, and they need corporate leadership to listen and provide that information,said Marc Jacouris, head of investor relations at Norway’s state-owned oil company Equinor.

Equinor, formerly Statoil, owns oil and gas assets as well as renewables and carbon-capture and storage technology.

“The more investors ask for the same thing around metrics and targets, the more we will listen,” Jacouris said.

He said that the company found scenario analysis particularly challenging because every company has its own assumptions and parameters, making comparability difficult.

 

Data gaps

Seema Suchak, sustainable investment analyst at Schroders, told delegates that Climate Action 100+ sets out “really good” and “consistent” questions for investors to ask companies.  She added that the asset manager is targeting its engagement in Asia, but it has found that successful engagement is tempered by the pace of the regulatory environment.

“China wants to meet the Paris goals, but enforcement is not there yet,” Suchak said.

Schroders’ large allocation to active management helps give the asset manager good access to companies. However, emissions data, particularly in companies’ supply chains, is lacking; data on the location of companies’ assets is also hard to come by. More information on these data points would enable climate modelling tools to work much better, she said.

“We have developed a physical climate risk tool but, with data gaps, we have to rely on assumptions,” she said.

Schroders runs a “nimble” engagement strategy which it has adjusted and evolved.

“What works for some won’t work for others,” Suchak said.

Schroders has also begun to engage with non-executive directors.

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

Stewardship shifts to impact

The focus of stewardship is shifting from the amount of engagement to its quality. The CFA Institute's Mary Leung argues this presents a unique opportunity for institutional investors and companies to elevate the way they engage and create long term, sustainable value for shareholders.

New benchmarks for ESG accountability

The measurement and management of ESG needs to shift from the current paradigm of self-definitions of sustainability according to founder of the Predistribution Initiative, Delilah Rothenberg. She says the World Benchmarking Alliance’s new initiative – the Financial System Transformation Benchmark –aims to address the critical gaps which may result in valuation methodologies and incentive structures changing.

Principles of a climate-impact dashboard

The climate-impact dashboard is part of a 3-D investment framework that balances risk, return and impact. This includes total portfolio thinking, long-horizon investing, impact investment strategies, system-level engagement and strategic partnership between asset owners and asset managers. Here Tim Hodgson lays out eight guiding principles to help shape a climate-impact dashboard.

NBIM prepares to up voting transparency

The world’s largest sovereign wealth fund says that voting is one of the most important tools to safeguard the fund's assets. Ahead of the AGM season getting underway, NBIM - which is the largest single owner of global stock markets - plans to publish its voting decisions five days ahead of corporate meetings in a bid to increase transparency.

Old Mutual SuperFund on COVID and ESG

Hugh Hacking from South Africa's Old Mutual SuperFund refects on the impact of the pandemic on the fund and the importance of ESG integration in its externally managed portfolio.

CalSTRS takes on ExxonMobil

The $255 billion Californian pension fund, CalSTRS, has embarked on a new era of “activist stewardship” which will see it take on large companies such as Exxon Mobil which have not responded to shareholder engagement.

Previous