More work needed on climate integration

Cracked Ground From The Indian Subcontinent

There has been widespread adoption and more board engagement since the launch of the Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures recommendations in 2017 but more work is needed to get a uniform and comparable approach to climate change disclosure across the investment community.

The $201 billion Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan said consultants and advisers need to educate themselves on climate change to help the smaller funds integrate the risks into their investment process.

Barbara Zvan, chief risk and strategy officer at OTPP, said the challenge facing the pension industry was no longer about raising awareness but rather how to implement climate change into their organisation. She said it was easier for the bigger plans with more resources to get access to the climate data they need to make investment decisions.

The smaller organisations “can’t always afford to do that,” she said in a telephone interview. “The ecosystems of consultants and advisers need to improve their knowledge on climate change. Bringing groups together will help build the tools needed.”

Canada’s second-largest pension fund was a contributor on a report by the Investor Leadership Network that shows how some of the world’s biggest institutions have implemented the recommendations from the Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures, or TCFD.

It found that while there has been widespread adoption and more board engagement since the recommendations were launched in 2017, more work is needed to get a uniform and comparable approach to climate change disclosure across the investment community.

Sponsored Content

“Traditional risk management is usually a lesson in history, but there is no history in climate change,” said Zvan. “It’s a complicated topic and there are so many scenarios to take into account – that’s the hardest part.”

The report, which coincides with the United Nation’s climate action summit in New York this week, also showed which asset owners were more ahead than others in embedding climate change into their investment process. Canadian funds particularly fared well.

These include Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec, which has made climate change part of the mandates of board sub-committees, and OTPP, whose investment committee has formalised climate change as part of its mandate for investment strategy and risk. The report also cited CPP Investment Board, which last year set up a formal climate change program that is being overseen by a dedicated steering committee made up of almost half of their senior executive team.

Zvan says by showing how the bigger plans have tackled climate change, it may help drive momentum among the smaller players. She said while a lot of leadership will also come from the private sector in bringing about change, investors played a key role as they were the ones that ultimately own the risk.

“We have to make 4 per cent real every year so we are looking for opportunities to steer the big ship,” she said. “And at the end of the day,  (we) can just pull their capital.”

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

Investors eye indigenous rights in Canada’s mining sector

As investors continue to demand  more reporting around social impacts, Canada's mining sector grapples with how to provide investors with more transparency on indigenous relationships.

Financial service providers commit to financing net zero

A range of global investment service providers, from stock exchanges to index providers, have signed up to the new Net Zero Financial Services Providers Alliance committing to align their products and services to net zero.

Sustainability and the need for practicality over ideology

Stephen Kotkin, Professor in History and International Affairs, Princeton University warned that the sustainability debate needs to become less ideological and more practical. He added that policy on a carbon price would do more to counter climate change than Biden’s huge infrastructure spend.

Unprecedented opportunity ahead

The climate challenge requires new investment on a staggering scale: new generating capacity, the electrification of everything, emissions-free fuel, carbon capture and sequestration, new supply chains and infrastructure, plus the building of negative emissions technologies. Stanford’s Dr Arun Majumdar explores the opportunities for new investment, the risk return trade-off and how investors should approach the opportunities.

Implementing net zero

What does it really mean to achieve a net zero strategy? As more investors make pledges for net zero, they need to set a strategy to achieve it. Investors leading the pack - ABP, Church Commissioners for England and CalSTRS - discuss the behaviour changes that are needed and how to allocate.

Poor disclosure is now a systemic risk

Poor corporate sustainability disclosure and the absence of global standards is now a systemic risk for investors, said panellists at Sustainability in Practice which included chief governance and compliance officer at Norges Bank, Carine Smith Ihencho.

Previous