Today, the built environment is estimated to account for roughly 40
percent
of global energy consumption. While companies across sectors have committed to
bold, aggressive goals to combat the climate crisis, a gap exists for many
organizations who lack the concrete plans needed to reach these aspirational
targets.
The truth is, investing in sustainability is no longer optional: A recent
study
from Morrow Sodali, for example, found that 100 percent of institutional
investors considered environmental, social and governance (ESG)
risks
and opportunities in their-decision making over the past year. Further to this,
funds that invest according to ESG principles saw net inflows of $71.1bn
globally between April and June 2020, according to
Morningstar.
Companies seeking investment will need to disclose their ESG metrics and show
progress against sustainability goals.
One way to realize a sustainable future is to evaluate the way we build and
manage real estate. And with more than 2.5 billion
people
moving into cities over the next 30 years, we have a responsibility to help
ensure the built environment evolves and adapts in a sustainable way.
An opportunity to shape how we combat greater challenges ahead
As COVID-19 continues
to leave lasting impacts on our world, public health and government officials
will be tasked with addressing not only the pandemic itself — but how these
outbreaks intersect with other global crises, including climate change. However,
in the face of the unanticipated and historically disruptive challenges of 2020,
the pandemic also represents a unique moment in time to shape how we combat
these broader sustainability challenges ahead.
Businesses have never been forced to transform more quickly than they have in
this past year — where the pandemic has fundamentally disrupted and changed the
traditional context for decision-making. Looking ahead, we need to harness that
same energy and direct it toward how we combat even greater global challenges
ahead, driven by climate change.
At this historic crossroad, COVID-19 has given us a once-in-a-generation
opportunity to reopen business sustainably — ensuring short-term emergency and
recovery measures that help increase resiliency through sustainable investment
and corporate policies and practices. If addressed right in a coordinated global
response, the choices made by businesses, governments and investors during the
pandemic recovery window can help us meet critical global targets outlined in
the Paris Agreement and
the United Nations Sustainable Development
Goals — the blueprints to achieve a
better, fair and more sustainable future for all.
Closing the action plan gap
Nearly three years ago, more than 140 global business leaders signed the World
Economic Forum Compact for Responsive and Responsible
Leadership,
committing their companies to deliver on the promise of stakeholder capitalism.
Since then, we’ve seen many examples of companies committing to bold goals to
achieve this aim. It’s important to note, however, that progressive
sustainability agendas won’t mean anything without an action plan to achieve
them.
Often, organizations commit to aggressive goal-setting with executive support —
but lack the concrete plans needed to reach these aspirational targets. It’s
important to think through the entire life cycle of a goal and outline what’s
achievable during your timeline, so the goal can be realized; at the end of the
day, a target without a plan isn’t going to be met. For the real estate industry
specifically, this means establishing a plan for measurement and reporting to
achieve the solution to one of our sector’s biggest problems: the built
environment’s carbon
footprint.
We can’t afford to delay any longer. The time to drive momentum toward
decarbonization is now; and there is plenty of low-hanging fruit as companies
begin their journey to net
zero
— such as lighting retrofit to replace inefficient equipment or centralizing
utility bill management. Just last year at JLL, we
achieved 240 sustainable building
certifications
for clients and averted 112,674 metric tons of CO2e by advising clients on
renewable energy.
Other recommended
actions
to achieve the tangible, measurable progress needed to achieve net-zero
emissions across our industry include:
-
Committing to only occupying assets that achieve net-zero operational
carbon globally.
-
Measuring, assessing and publicly disclosing the energy and carbon
emissions performance of your portfolio.
-
Increasing energy-efficiency measures in both new and existing
buildings; switching to electric, low-emission and alternative-fuel
vehicles;
using renewable energy in offices; and buying renewable energy certificates
when there is no direct supply.
-
Verifying Scope 1 and 2 emissions and related energy consumption
annually through assurance at a site and portfolio level, in accordance with
internationally recognized standards.
-
Committing to educating and influencing clients and suppliers to
mainstream net-zero
carbon
— influencing policymakers and decisions, and driving action through
industry engagement.
Looking ahead
None of us could have anticipated the unique challenges and devastating impacts
that would arise from the events of 2020. In the context of the COVID-19
pandemic, the stakes have never been higher for corporate response to climate
change threats as our global social and economic ecosystem recovers.
A sustainable future is our only future, and the companies who don’t make the
pivot to carbon-neutral investments now will assume even greater risk to their
bottom line. In the months and years to come, the real estate sector must play a
critical role in creating a decarbonized environment — helping society prepare,
respond, re-enter and ultimately re-imagine a sustainable future; where we can
unlock a clean recovery that benefits our people, planet and economies.
Get the latest insights, trends, and innovations to help position yourself at the forefront of sustainable business leadership—delivered straight to your inbox.
CEO of Corporate Solutions
JLL
Published Nov 16, 2020 7am EST / 4am PST / 12pm GMT / 1pm CET