PRI pushes for just transition

Investors should start factoring in the importance of a just transition to a low-carbon economy, said Bettina Reinboth, head of social issues at Principles for Responsible Investment (PRI).

Speaking at the PRI’s Climate Forum in London, Reinboth called for investors and governments implementing broader climate change strategies to engage with workers, communities and businesses to better support and re-skill stranded workers.

Investors can begin to emphasise the importance of a just transition, part of the Paris Agreement, in their investment strategy through beliefs and mandates – raising it in their engagement processes with companies and in their capital allocation. She also urged investors to use their weight at a policy level to influence government debate.

Workers in the extractive industries, transport sectors and the gig economy – populated by freelance workers on short-term contracts – are most at risk of disruption amid a shift to a low-carbon world. Yet, progress on climate change and workers’ human rights remain separate, Reinboth said.

The human face of climate change

“We need to unify climate change with the social dimension,” she said. “In delivering the upside via green jobs, we need to avoid the downside of stranded workers and communities. Closing a mining site is good for carbon emissions, but what happens to the people relying on these jobs, on re-skilling them, and the ancillary services that are also effected?”

Sponsored Content

The PRI will officially launch a co-written report on the just transition at the 24th Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change. COP24 began earlier this month in Poland.

“Poland is coal-dependent, so it is a fitting venue for launch,” said Reinboth. The International Trade Union Federation, the Grantham Research Institute and the Initiative for Responsible Investment contributed to the report.

Climate migrants

Trade unions are vital partners in the transition to a low carbon world, said Jason Mitchell, Man Group’s co-head of responsible investment. Taking Germany as an example, he told forum delegates that unions have a profound influence on local and federal climate policy. Germany has committed to phase out coal power generation by 2030 but this will only happen with union support, he said.

“The importance of the social dimension has become very clear to us in a number of areas,” Mitchell said. “Trying to understand it is integral.”

An unjust transition is already manifesting in some parts of the world with real investor risk, noted Mitchell, who has just completed a study of the impact of migration on financial markets, looking at climate migrants within the broader migration flows into Europe.

His research examines how population loss in some African economies will impact the long-term GDP of these countries and the risk this poses for holders of African sovereign debt.

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

The +1.5°C asset portfolio

Designing a 1.5°C asset portfolio to mobilise capital for a sustainable future requires some big thinking and intensive collaboration, not to mention transformational change that extends way beyond the borders of the investment industry. So what role do investors play?

A decade needs a purpose

The decade ahead promises to be one in which purpose gets to be much more widely entrenched and influential. And asset owners have a role to play in the path to purposeful capitalism.

ABP’s climate neutral plan for 2025

The largest pension fund in Europe, the €450 billion Dutch ABP, set out its sustainability and responsible investment plan for 2025 last month. The plan sets out long-term objectives – in line with the goal of a climate-neutral economy by 2050 – as well as the short-term steps to achieve that.

China’s opportunity

The crisis in China is far from over. But the Sustainable Finance Institue’s Huang Zhong and Cary Krosinsky, author of the upcoming Modern China: Financial Cooperation for Solving Sustainability Challenges, argue it is never too early to look at what went wrong. They argue if the Chinese government and its ruling party applied some basic sustainable investment principles, it would have taken a very different approach towards critical stakeholders such as Dr. Li and potentially avoided some of the negative consequences.

Investors’ role in a carbon-neutral 2050

Everyone's talking about it - a carbon-neutral economy by 2050 - but what are investors doing about it? Amanda White reports on the specific climate activities of some of the world's leading asset owners.

PRI milestone: 500 asset owner members

The PRI welcomed its 500th asset owner signatory last week, Lorenzo Saa the organisation's chief signatory relations officer, looks at what this means for asset owners and their managers.

Previous