A major new report assessing the climate performance of 274 of the world’s
highest-emitting publicly listed companies finds that almost half (46
percent) do not adequately consider climate risk in operational decision-making.
A quarter (25 percent) do not report their own emissions at all, undermining a
key recommendation of the Taskforce for Climate-related Financial Disclosure
(TCFD).
The study was carried out for the Transition Pathway
Initiative (TPI) by the Grantham
Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment at the London
School of Economics. It uses FTSE Russell data to analyse leading companies in
14 carbon-intensive sectors such as Oil and Gas, Electric Utilities,
Automotive, Aviation and Steel. These sectors account for 41 percent of global
emissions from publicly listed companies worldwide.
TPI is backed by investors
with $14 trillion of assets including pension funds such as CalPERS and
Environment Agency Pension Fund, and asset managers such as Legal &
General Investment Management, BNP Paribas, Aberdeen Standard and
Robeco. This report builds on TPI’s first ‘State of Transition’ report,
released a year ago.
Professor Simon Dietz, co-Director of the Grantham Research Institute on
Climate Change and the Environment and lead author of the report, said: “It’s over three years since the Paris Agreement was signed and this research
shows the corporate sector is improving its climate planning and performance,
but not fast enough. Cutting through the noise we can see that barely 12 percent
of companies plan to reduce emissions at the rate required to keep global
warming below 2°C.”
The report assesses companies on ‘Management Quality’ related to climate, but
also goes further and analyses ‘Carbon Performance,’ in terms of current and
planned GHG emissions. A total of 160 companies are analysed on Carbon
Performance and the research finds that only 20 companies, or one in
eight, are aligned with a pathway that would keep global warming below 2°C.
“TPI’s research shows that we need many more investors to engage with big
emitters across all sectors of the economy to ensure companies are setting
emissions targets consistent with the goals of the Paris Climate Agreement.
Engagement is starting to show results, but not at the pace needed,” said Adam
Matthews, co-Chair of TPI and Director of Ethics & Engagement at Church of
England Pensions Board. “A failure to grasp the seriousness of the warning
from this TPI report, and to recognise the slow pace of corporate progress, will
directly undermine our ability as pension funds to manage the financial risks
within our portfolio for our beneficiaries.”
“Today’s research shows clear leaders and laggards emerging within sectors from
airlines to aluminium — and that gives investors an investment-relevant decision
to make today,” said Faith Ward, co-chair of TPI on behalf of the
Environment Agency Pension Fund, part of the Brunel Pension Partnership. “As
the effects of climate change accelerate we can expect to see more capital flow
away from those companies that bury their head in the sand, and towards those
companies aligning with a 2°C pathway.”
“The failure of 25 percent of high-emitting companies to report their own
emissions is putting investors in a Catch-22 situation on disclosure,” Ward
added. “The UK is one of several countries moving to make climate risk reporting
by asset owners mandatory, yet without emissions data from a quarter of the
high-emitting companies, that request will be impossible to deliver.”
The report findings also include:
• 46 percent of companies are not adequately integrating climate
change into their business decisions.
• 25 percent of companies do not disclose their own carbon
emissions.
• Among the companies assessed for the second consecutive year, 35 of
130 companies (27 percent) improved how they integrate climate change
into their business decisions.
• 84 percent of companies do not disclose an internal carbon
price; and 86 percent are yet to undertake and disclose climate scenario
planning — a critical part of TCFD
reporting.
• Only 16 percent of companies assessed for their current and
planned GHG emissions are aligned with the 2°C benchmark.
• Only 12.5 percent of companies assessed for their current and
planned GHG emissions are aligned with the most ambitious below 2°C
benchmark. These
include German utility giant E.ON, which in 2014 shifted its entire energy portfolio to renewables; Spanish utility
Iberdrola; Stora
Enso, a Finnish leader in renewable packaging materials; and US utility Edison
International.
“The clock is ticking on irreversible climate change. The fact only 1 in 8 of
the highest-emitting firms are responding at anywhere near the pace required is
an urgent challenge to investors. Investors themselves need to adopt an
emergency footing, otherwise the window to secure the change we need will be
gone.”
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Sustainable Brands Staff
Published Jul 10, 2019 8am EDT / 5am PDT / 1pm BST / 2pm CEST