USS outlines new climate scenarios for improved investment decision-making

The UK’s Universities Superannuation Scheme has produced new climate scenarios that are more informative for investors by focusing on shorter-term scenarios and switching the focus from temperature pathways to the complex interplay of physical and human factors.

The £75.5 billion fund aims to develop a long-term investment outlook informed by the scenarios and draw out investment implications for capital markets expectations, top-down portfolio construction, and country/sector preferences.

USS commissioned the University of Exeter earlier this year to apply a new approach to scenarios to support its investment and risk management decision making. The result of that collaboration is a report released today No Time To Lose – New Scenario Narratives for Action on Climate Change, which introduces four new climate scenarios that look at shorter-term and more realistic time horizons to inform investment decision making.

The new scenarios are more meaningful for investors because they switch the focus away from global average temperature pathways and towards the complex interplay between physical factors such as extreme weather events and human factors such as disruptions in geopolitics, economics, financial markets, and technology.

The focus is on operationalising net zero commitments and the need to have shorter term and bespoke scenarios to achieve that.

“This paradigm shift towards shorter horizons and business applications requires scenarios that focus less on the climate itself and more on the vicissitudes of politics, markets and extreme weather events. Global warming is not a major uncertainty over the next few years, but extreme weather events are rising rapidly, even if location and timing are uncertain,” the report says.

Sponsored Content

The report highlights that existing scenarios understate both the economic damage of climate change and the potential benefits of action, failing to capture key aspects of the real world, and so restrict their usefulness for investment decision-making. It also recognises that the mainstream economic models being used for climate risk scenarios are not up to this task.

Mirko Cardinale, head of investment strategy and advice at USS Investment Management, says the fund wants to lead in the development of this new approach that is focused on understanding how real-world dynamics could play out.

“The work with the University of Exeter has been extremely valuable in representing an important milestone for the development of a new approach to climate scenario analysis,” he says.

“We aim to lead in the development of this new approach that is less focused on precise estimation and more on understanding how real-world dynamics could play out in a complex world where climate risks cannot be looked at in isolation from political, economic, and technological factors. Moving forward, we intend to develop a long-term investment outlook informed by the scenarios and draw out investment implications for capital markets expectations, top-down portfolio construction, and country/sector preferences.”

USS’s Mirko Cardindale and University of Exeter Visiting Fellow Mike Clark will speak at the Sustainability in Practice event at Oxford University from November 6-8. For the program and more information click here.

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

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.

ESG needs better data, better ratings and better products

Mass PRIM is involved in an MIT initiative to improve ESG with better data, ratings and ultimately products. Executive director and CIO, Michael Trotsky, explains how the ambiguity around ESG ratings creates acute challenges for investors trying to achieve both financial and social return.

Previous