Dutch fund PGB ups ESG ante for a livable world

PGB Pensioendiensten, pension provider for Pensioenfonds PGB (PGB), the Netherlands €32 billion industry-wide pension fund, has rewritten its sustainable investment strategy. Backstopped by a new purpose to invest in a “liveable world” it has positioned investing sustainably at the centre of its strategy rather than as an “afterthought.”

“For us, sustainability is an inseparable part of all our investments. We make an integrated assessment between return, risk, costs, and sustainability with every investment,” states the pension fund.

The recently published strategy is rooted in the results of a survey amongst its 128,000 beneficiaries that revealed 70 per cent of fund participants consider sustainable investing important.

From this, the fund has drawn up three key investment themes around climate, biodiversity and sustainable nutrition, targeting reducing the CO2 footprint of the investment portfolio by half by the end of 2030 and climate neutrality by 2050 at the latest.

Strategies include re-examining and tightening the requirements it imposes on green bonds. Like demanding an independent audit of the promised impact around energy saving or renewable energy use in a green bond.

Elsewhere, PGB has cut the carbon footprint on its listed investments further compared to the previous year and has committed to providing insight into the negative impact of its investments.

Sponsored Content

“We do this according to the EU rules based on a ‘declaration of adverse effects’, according to the Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation. The first report for 2024 will be in mid-2025,” it states.

In another seam, the fund has improved its collection and analysis of ESG data, allowing it to use data to inform new policy and communication with participants, regulators, and the media.

“Thanks to our improved data management, we can report more confidently on our sustainable investment and the results,” it states.

In 2023 the fund excluded government bonds and state-owned companies in 173 countries while 752 companies were excluded from investments because they do not meet the minimum sustainable investment requirements.

Since 2023 PGB has reported the ‘financed emissions’ and ‘implied temperature rise’ (ITR) per year-end in its portfolio, insofar as data was available. Financed emissions amounted to 52 tons per million euros invested for listed corporate bonds and 46 tons per million euros invested for listed shares. This produces an average of 48 tons of greenhouse gases per million euros invested, states the fund.

Investing in solutions

In another pillar, PGB seeks to strengthen sustainable entrepreneurship via ‘capital allocation’ and actively investing.

“We cannot achieve our goal with exclusions alone,” it states.

PGB rewards companies that emit fewer emissions by investing relatively more in cleaner companies against the benchmark.

“At the same time, this means that we invest less in companies that have less sustainable entrepreneurship. Research shows that this approach is not necessarily at the expense of expected returns if the country and sector distribution of the benchmark is maintained.”

In 2021, PGB joined the SDI Asset Owner Platform, the international platform that measures the contribution of investments to SDGs.

“Using this platform, we can calculate what contribution the listed equity and bond portfolios have delivered on the various SDGs. In addition, we also receive reports on the contribution of real estate funds and alternative fixed income securities”.

PGB returned 11.7 per cent in 2023  with a coverage ratio of 112 per cent. The improved funded position puts PGB in an enviable position, able to increase pensions and keep the pension premium the same.

“That is good news for all our participants and employers,” it concludes.

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

How Canada’s PSP Investments is getting to grips with climate data

In an interview with Herman Bril, PSP Investments’ new head of responsible investment, Top1000funds.com looks at how the fund is collecting and reporting on sustainability information based on a technology-enabled, data-driven approach that spans a bespoke, green taxonomy for climate investing to ESG scores derived from AI.

COP: There might be disappointment, but it’s still the best hope we have

In the post-COP twilight with the initial assessment of pass or fail all written, institutional investors are rightly asking where we are up to at the end of 2022. Fiona Reynolds looks at what has changed and what remains the same.

PRI at a crossroad

PRI’s CEO David Atkin has been conducting workshops with signatories to explore different pathways and seeking views around six themes around accountability, the PRI’s policy work and the diversity of signatories and their different needs. A report will be tabled to board of directors in February with recommendations.

Pooling benefits show at Border to Coast in path to investment excellence

As Border to Coast approaches its 5th birthday chief executive Rachel Elwell reflects on the achievement of building a sustainable organisation, what investment capabilities are still to develop and the priorities for the underlying partner funds.

SDGs remain the roadmap out of crisis

APG's Claudia Kruse reflects that the climate emergency, COVID and conflict has put SDG delivery at risk. But the SDGs remain the best roadmap out of crisis and the investor's Asset Owner Platform has become an important tool supporting its quest to invest with impact.

Why real estate investors can forge ahead in quest to cut emissions

Real estate investors are in prime position to cut emissions with the support of benchmarks and standards and a collective voice.

Previous