Mounting climate change fears push U.S. investors to
assess geographical risks
Send a link to a friend
[June 04, 2019]
By David Randall
NEW YORK (Reuters) - With an above-average
percentage of its power generated from renewable sources and one of the
largest battery storage operations in the United States, utility Sempra
Energy seemed to check all the boxes for portfolio manager Todd Ahlsten,
who manages more than $18 billion for Parnassus Investments based on
each company's environmental, social and governance attributes.
But he sold his shares in the San Diego-based company earlier this year
because of his conviction that its location in California will put it in
the crosshairs of increasingly severe weather patterns, no matter how
environmentally responsible it may be.
"They were doing all the right things, but the risks were too high on
the physical side so we exited the position," Ahlsten said.
Ahlsten's decision to factor in the geographical risks of climate change
is becoming increasingly familiar in the fast-growing world of so-called
ESG investing, which has long focused more on avoiding companies with
poor environmental track records than assessing which face the greatest
risk of physical damage or business disruptions from more volatile
climate.
The bankruptcy of California utility company Pacific Gas and Electric in
January following devastating wildfires caused in part by climate change
is prompting investors to recognize what had been one of the biggest
blind spots of environmentally driven investing: the reality that even
companies that pledge to combat climate change could be negatively
affected by it.
As a result, ESG investors are increasingly judging companies based on
what sort of physical risks they will face as global temperatures
continue to rise and storms become more severe.
Firms including Parnassus, Hermes Investment Management and Eaton
Vance's Calvert Research and Management are avoiding companies ranging
from retailers with large footprints in Florida to utilities in Southern
California to barge shipping companies that may have to deal with more
frequent Midwestern floods.
PG&E faces liabilities that it estimates at over $30 billion in the
aftermath of November's Camp Fire, which killed more than 85 people and
destroyed more than 14,600 homes, making it the most destructive
wildfire in California history.
VOLATILE WEATHER PATTERNS
The risks of physical damage, liabilities or business disruptions from
climate change do not currently factor into ESG-ratings by
index-providers, which often shape the investable universe for fund
managers or exchange-traded funds.
[to top of second column] |
School pupils protest to demand action, during the world march for
climate change and the environment, called by the organization
Fridays for Future inside of Secretary of State for the Environment
in Sao Paulo, Brazil, May 24, 2019. REUTERS/Nacho Doce
"The industry is turning more to try to understand and embed and measure the
physical risks associated with climate change, but that's still an evolving
area," said Tony Campos, head of ESG, Americas, at FTSE Russell.
More accurate analytics and modeling programs that help predict the specific
impacts of different weather scenarios on individual companies are prompting
more fund managers to take the impact of climate change into consideration, said
Louise Dudley, portfolio manager of the Federated Hermes Global Equity fund in
London.
"In terms of physical risk up, until now we've looked at the type of companies
that are the most exposed. But now with more data we're able to get more
specific, more accurate insights and therefore more useful outputs," she said.
Over the last year, Hermes has spent more time on modeling the likely outcomes
for each company it evaluates based on global temperatures rising by 2, 4, or 6
degrees Celsius, she said. Global temperatures are on course to rise between 3
and 5 degrees Celsius (5.4 to 9 degrees Fahrenheit) by the end of this century,
according to a 2018 estimate by the U.N. World Meteorological Organization.
Brian Ellis, portfolio manager of the Calvert Bond fund and the Calvert Green
Bond fund, said his fund is increasingly focusing on the geographical footprint
of companies, ranging from retailers to hotel operators to real estate
investment trusts that may be concentrated in areas that could get hit by severe
storms or high temperatures.
That focus on recognizing which companies may be more likely to bear the
physical brunt of climate change is relatively new, he said, and is a step up
from crediting companies that had been investing in renewable energy or
decreasing their carbon emissions.
"I think people are recognizing more so that you can do all that but you can
still have very large impacts to your infrastructure" due to more volatile
weather patterns, Ellis said.
As a result, he is increasingly demanding more enticing potential returns to
compensate for the risks of physical damage from climate change, he said.
(Reporting by David Randall; Editing by Dan Grebler)
[© 2019 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2019 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |