PRI at a crossroad

The Principles for Responsible Investment (PRI) is reviewing its strategy, program of work and operating model to better serve its more than 5,000 signatories.

“There’s a lot of risks in the world, signatories are under a lot of pressure and how do we support signatories become better at what they do now,” chief executive David Atkin said in an interview.

“The PRI is now at a point where it needs to go to its next level of maturity, we’ve got to be able to industrialise the way we set the place up.”

A refresh

The agency has embarked on a consultation to refresh its mission statement, program of work and operating mode. “We have a mission statement that the board was worried wasn’t fit for purpose of the next phase of the PRI’s work,” he says.

Atkin and his team have been travelling around the world to conduct workshops with signatories to explore ideas around 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.

“What we’re learning is that context matters. That the environment that you’re operating in, the geography, the regulatory environment, your customer base or your beneficiaries you’re serving, all will shape the way you approach ESG and so to believe that there’s one way is flawed.”

Sponsored Content

One of the ideas being considered is adopting a menu of pathways around net zero, sustainability, stewardship or asset class.

“You choose the pathway and then we would provide you with the tools, the networks, the convening groups, where you would share your experience, and then we would use the reporting and assessment to report back to you on your progression of the pathway you select,” he says.

“We will have all this rich data to work out what is the right strategy, program of work and the right target operating model to support the strategy.”

Established in 2006, the PRI has now grown to over 5,000 signatories, representing more than $120 trillion of the world’s assets under management.

“Part of being a member of the PRI is joining the mission to improve your own practices, but also to work collaboratively to create enough momentum influence to change the settings so that it’s rewarding,” says Atkin who has been in the CEO role for almost a year.

“My role as the CEO of the PRI is to ensure that we plot out a strategy that makes sense to signatories for the next phase of responsible investment,” he says.

One of the agency’s key roles is to help signatories manage the growing burden of regulation on the sustainability reporting. “We’re seeing this regulation just accelerate. There is a very important role to play for the PRI to try and harmonise that regulation to bring a practitioners’ view,” he says.

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

It’s actions not words that count in the energy transition

Investors that want to address the low carbon transition as a potential investment theme should build an investment process that helps them focus on tangible investments being made by companies, not just pledges made on paper, the Fiduciary Investors Symposium at Stanford University has heard.

The hands and feet of AI and the renewable energy transition

A foundation stone of the transition to renewable energy - semiconductors - is paradoxically a major contributor to the problem it’s helping to solve. How asset owners think about investing in a solution that is also part of the problem is a challenging and complex task.

CalSTRS positions to take advantage of energy transition

CalSTRS has recognised the unique opportunity presented by the energy transition needs a unique response and its Sustainable Investment and Stewardship Strategies (SISS) portfolio has been specifically positioned to invest in opportunities that fall between private equity and infrastructure asset class buckets.

USS outlines new climate scenarios for improved investment decision-making

USS and the University of Exeter have outlined new climate scenarios that focus on short term, real world impacts and are more useful for investors. USS will use them to develop a long-term investment outlook and top-down portfolio construction.

Politicisation of ESG a ‘constructive dialogue’: Mercer’s Rich Nuzum 

The discourse around ESG investing may be “messy” but Mercer’s global chief investment strategist, Rich Nuzum, says media and political scrutiny can help sharpen the focus of pensions and sovereigns on their objectives and duties.

Net zero: engagement and renewable energy investments pay off at USS

The UK’s largest private pension fund, USS has made ground on its path to net zero with effective engagement, measuring the Scope 3 emissions of its corporate assets and bottom-up carbon analysis focused on transition risk in emerging market equities. But investors need policy makers to do much more.

Previous