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Most major asset owners and asset managers now recognize the deleterious effects climate change can have on their overall portfolios. Climate change represents a system-level risk that very large, long-term investors cannot diversify away from. Exclusions or divestments can make sense in economic terms if an investor thinks a sector or company’s value is going to decline over the long term, but it does not solve the system-level problem.

What does help address this problem is active engagement through which investors encourage and pressure companies to improve their carbon performance and, in some cases, to dramatically transform their business models. One group of investors taking this approach is ClimateAction 100+, a coalition of investors with around $33 trillion in assets under management (AUM) They are focused on the world’s largest 100 “systemically important emitters” who account for two-thirds of annual global industrial emissions, along with 60 other companies who present significant opportunities to drive the clean energy transition.

One of the members of ClimateAction 100+ is the U.K. based asset manager Legal & General Investment Management (LGIM), the world’s 11th largest asset manager with around $1.3 trillion in AUM. Under the leadership of Sacha Sadan, Director of Corporate Governance and Board member, they have developed an interesting and sophisticated approach to climate change which combines elements of both engagement and divestment. They announced their “Climate Impact Pledge” in November 2016 in “ESG SPOTLIGHT: Time to act on climate change” by Meryam Omi, Head of Sustainability and Responsible Investment. Through a proprietary methodology they evaluate 84 companies in six sectors: oil and gas, metals and mining electric utilities, automobiles, banks and insurance, and food and retail distribution). Companies are evaluated in terms of five criteria:

  • Statement on Climate Change: Formally recognizes climate and energy impacts
  • Transparency: Transparent disclosure of key indicators to investors
  • Board Governance: Diverse and robust board that is equipped to drive innovation and market changes
  • Business Strategy: Robust strategy that embraces current and future climate related challenges for the company. Investments into new technology/products
  • Public Policy: Disconnect between public statement and collective advocacy

They rate all of these companies and then engage with them to help them improve their performance on climate issues in order for these companies to deliver sustained financial returns. Those that fail to meet a minimum threshold and improve will be disqualified from their family of Future Word funds which “have been designed to take advantage of the opportunities posed by the transition to a low-carbon economy.”  In some cases, LGIM divests from the company. When it cannot do so they vote against the chair of the board.

FILE – In this Thursday, April 25, 2019 file photo, Extinction Rebellion climate change protesters hold up a banner near the Bank of England, in the City of London. The environmental activist group Extinction Rebellion has postponed a plan to shut down London’s Heathrow Airport with drones after it was criticized by politicians and police. The anti-climate change group said Sunday, June 16 it would “not be carrying out any actions at Heathrow Airport in June or July.” (AP Photo/Matt Dunham, file) | ASSOCIATED PRESS

Since their preferred outcome is for companies to change rather than just getting divested (which still sends a strong signal but alone will not create the system-level changes that are necessary), LGIM also recognizes companies that are leaders and “improvers” (faming) and those that are laggards (shaming).

Yesterday LGIM published “LGIM’s Climate Impact Pledge: The results so far,” also by Omi, and very interesting results they are. Since they began their engagement process in April 2017, LGIM found that the scores of U.S. companies have improved, “dispelling concerns over the knock-on effects of President Donald Trump’s decision to withdraw from the Paris climate accord.” They also found improvements in the average scores of Australian, Japanese, and Korean companies. In contrast, average scores for companies in France, Germany, and the United Kingdom have decreased. LGIM attributes these results to the fact that investments in clean energy in Asia have increased but have slowed down in Europe.

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Robert G. Eccles

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Robert G. Eccles of Saïd Business School, University of Oxford is the author of a number of books on integrated reporting, sustainability and the role of business in society. His focus is on sustainability from both a company and investor perspective. Professor Eccles is also involved in a variety of initiatives to embed environmental, social, and governance (ESG) issues in real world decision making. One of these is the Sustainability Accounting Standards Board (SASB), of which he was the founding chairman. In 2018, Professor Eccles was selected by Barron’s as one of the top 20 influencers on ESG investing.

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