PRI to be more ‘hands-on’ with signatories as it seeks identity refresh 

The UN-backed Principles for Responsible Investment (PRI) is in the process of an identity refresh as it looks to shift its primary function away from driving ESG accountability among investors (which it has been doing for the past two decades) to facilitating collaboration.  

In an interview with Top1000funds.com, the organisation’s chief sustainable systems officer Nathan Fabian says the pivot is necessary “in a world where regulators of financial services are stepping in and where they have the actual substantial mandate on supervision”.  

The PRI’s signatories have all committed to a set of responsible investing standards, including practicing active ownership and encouraging appropriate ESG disclosures internally and in companies they invest in.  

Now a network of some 5,500 asset owners, investment managers and service providers, the PRI’s expansion is a good indicator that responsible investment is becoming increasingly mainstream. But Fabian says this development has also caused a lot of divergence in ESG approaches from investors. 

“If you put all of those things together, it’s easy to understand why there’s accusations of greenwashing and even pushback on ESG in some quarters,” he says. 

“Even though that anti-ESG is a politically motivated campaign, there are reasonable questions around who is doing what and why on responsible investment. 

Sponsored Content

“There’s an acceleration of practice and diversity, and our role is better served in helping signatories’ progress. 

“So we’re trying to move away from accountability being the primary basis of our relationship to our assistance to signatories’ progression being the primary basis of what’s valuable about the PRI, which means providing collaborative spaces.” 

Fabian says working closer on the ground with prospective emerging markets signatories will be a focus in the year ahead. The PRI just made new hires in the Middle East and Africa, and while it has an established team in South Africa, the organisation is looking to ramp up its presence ahead of the Brazil COP 30 in 2025.  

Working with developing world signatories requires a different approach, Fabian says. 

“[In these markets] You’ll have some managers with foreign capital, and you’ll have some who are maybe managing a little bit of sovereign savings. When that’s the dynamic, there’s a smaller base of local investors to work on that financial system on incorporating ESG,” he says. 

“So what we’re finding is that we need to work with a broader range of collaborators, and much more time spent with regulators, stock exchanges, and international development finance institutions.” 

For example, stock exchanges can bring together listed companies, financial advisors and regulators on ways to improve market infrastructure, Fabian says. He concedes that these are not usually the priority partners for the PRI, but they are essential if the organisation “wants to do something meaningful around the role of [responsible] finance in emerging markets”. 

“In the past, we would have just recruited the big signatories to be part of the PRI, provided some guidance, and allowed them to start developing their practice,” he says. 

“But we just realised we need to be far more present, far more hands on, bring in far more expertise and share much more dialogue.” 

With that said, the work is far from done in developed markets. The US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) last month stayed the implementation of its climate-related disclosures by public companies in the face of multiple legal challenges from attorney generals of several Republican-led states.  

“The US is a difficult place at the moment,” Fabian says.  

“I don’t believe there’s any doubt in the minds of investors in the US about the importance of climate disclosure for their investment activities… and I think the SEC, by attempting to bring forward a climate disclosure rule, also believe that’s relevant to investors into companies. 

“The fact that the speed of transitioning on fossil fuels is the source of a political argument is not surprising. We’ve seen that in lots of countries of the world over the past few years, and the Americans have not fully emerged from that argument. 

“But that’s a transition issue. Investors will still expect companies to disclose, whether the SEC makes the rule or not, and I think they’ll default to the ISSB standards.” 

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

Asia’s climate transition requires unique regional presence 

Asia is going through its own sustainability journey, and it’s different from the transition pathways in Europe and North America. Robeco head of fixed income, Asia, Thu Ha Chow told the Top1000funds.com Fiduciary Investors Symposium in Singapore that this means investing in the region requires a unique, regional perspective.

Recasting emissions abatement as expensive rather than hard 

When it comes to figuring out how a company will get to net zero and how their transition will be financed, more investors are making a distinction between emissions that are hard to abate, and emissions that are expensive to abate.

NY Common makes further divestments, ups commitment to climate solutions 

The $260 billion New York State Common Retirement Fund will divest and restrict approximately $26.8 million of corporate bonds and actively traded public equities in eight integrated oil and gas companies, including ExxonMobil; and is doubling its commitment to the Sustainable Investments and Climate Solutions program.

Investors trying to change the world: Why climate investing is so difficult

Asset owners are preparing their portfolios for the climate transition, reducing holdings in companies with high emissions and pledging billions to climate investments. But climate proofing portfolios is proving one of the most arduous and complex challenges investors have ever faced. Top1000funds.com takes a close look at the progress.

NBIM’s RI report showcases benefits of transparency

Risk-based divestments increased returns on Norges Bank Investment Management's equity portfolio by 0.07 per cent in 2023. Measuring the impact of its investment decisions, reported in NBIM's latest RI Report, is part of a concerted drive for greater transparency by the manager of Norway's Government Pension Fund Global.

Brunel keeps wary eye on markets and raises manager reporting duties

In a recently published review, Brunel Pension Partnership vows to “turn the screws” on managers and its holdings via increased RI expectations and warns that rosier economic forecasts of lower interest rates and tamed inflation may not come true.

Previous