Time Is Running Out For Climate Action

Climate mitigation to achieve Paris Agreement goals requires concerted action by global asset allocators and policymakers alike.

A warning sign sits surrounded by flood water as it covers a road after a tropical storm. (Photographer: Nicole Craine/Bloomberg)

Climate mitigation to achieve Paris Agreement goals requires concerted action by global asset allocators and policymakers alike.

In December 2015, the Eiffel Tower was illuminated with green lights ‘“Accord de Paris c’est fait!” (“the Paris agreement is done!”). That the world leaders could come together and flesh out an agreement was indeed a great step after the disastrous 2009 Copenhagen summit.

As the leader of the world’s largest economy and the second largest (greenhouse gas) emitter … the United States of America not only recognises our role in creating this problem, we embrace our responsibility to do something about it.
Barack Obama, U.S. President, December 2015

Emerging countries like India also pledged to ‘keep global temperatures “well below” 2.0C (3.6F) above pre-industrial times’ and ‘“endeavour to limit” them even more, to 1.5C’ and agreed to high ‘nationally determined contributions’ but were cautious of their resources and growth ambitions.

Climate justice demands that the little carbon space we still have, developing countries should have enough room to grow.
Narendra Modi, Prime Minister, December 2015

However, all of this, based on what climate scientists say, may yet be too late and too little.

The world is reaching the tipping point beyond which climate change may become irreversible. If this happens, we risk denying present and future generations the right to a healthy and sustainable planet – the whole of humanity stands to lose.
Kofi Annan, Former UN Secretary-General, December 2015

Tipping Point Reached?

The world metrological organisation warned in May 2021 that there is about a 40% chance of the annual average global temperature temporarily reaching 1.5 degrees Celsius (1.5°C) above the pre-industrial level in at least one of the next five years.

This 1.5°C above the pre-industrial level is crucial as it is the baseline lower target of the Paris Agreement on Climate Change.

That the world will reach its warmest year between 2021-2025 is yet another reminder to move faster towards achieving the commitments made and to improve upon them to move to Net-Zero.

An expedition led by scientist Markus Rex to study the arctic summer ice came back with very despondent news. He claimed in an interview on June 15, 2021 “The disappearance of summer sea ice in the Arctic is one of the first landmines in this minefield, one of the tipping points that we set off first when we push warming too far,"

Climate economists like William Nordhaus, who won a Nobel prize for his work, worked out the impact on economic growth under various scenarios of increase in global temperatures. Many have argued that those economic scenarios do not consider the impact of tipping points. Scientists have argued that once we pass the tipping points, the impact of climate change on economic activity will be manifold.

Bittu Sahgal, a well-known Indian ecologist, warned us in an interview on the disastrous economic and business impact of climate change.

Climate mitigation to achieve the Paris Agreement goals — remaining within 1.5°C from pre-industrial levels — requires staying within a carbon budget of ~420-580 GtCO2e. This means today's GHG emissions of ~53 GtCO2e on net need to be cut in half by the 2030s, and reach net-zero by mid-century.

Net negative emissions would further help as part of ongoing climate restoration.

There is a massive financing need to meet these climate targets.

The IPCC studies forecast an annual investment of $1.6-$3.8 trillion. A report by BCG-GFMA details the total investment to be $100-$150 trillion over the next three decades to achieve a scenario to limit temperature rise to 1.5°C.

A study by climate policy initiative over 2017-2019 showed that annual actual climate-related finance investments have been rising but was only ~$600 billion, well below the actual investment required of ~$2.5 trillion per annum. (see chart)

lower line = actual investment, middle line = lower range of investment required; upper line = upper range of investment each year to stay under the 1.5°C based on IPCC estimates.

lower line = actual investment, middle line = lower range of investment required; upper line = upper range of investment each year to stay under the 1.5°C based on IPCC estimates.

A majority of the investments required are in Asia and the emerging world. Channelising investments of such scale into emerging markets with weaker financial markets, transparency, and reporting standards will take some doing.

Some projects may be too risky for private capital to implement alone. The ongoing experience with COVID where governments funded the development of the vaccines to fight the pandemic, suggests that – when there is a will, the governments and markets will find a way for a mutually beneficial partnership.

The World Has The Financial Resources

Global central banks and governments created $20 trillion of stimulus post Covid-19.

Global wealth as per credit Suisse is estimated at $400 trillion. The top 1% (~52 million people) account for $173 trillion (43%) of the total wealth.

Global financial assets, as per OECD (The Organisation of Economic Co-operation and Development) report, are estimated to be $380 trillion. This includes banks ($146 tn), financial institutions ($132 tn), central banks ($30 tn), sovereign wealth funds ($8 tn), pension ($35 tn), and insurance funds ($32 tn). Global asset management companies manage over $90 trillion in assets. Some of these financial assets will lead to double-counting, however the basic premise is that the world has the financial resources to fund a sustainable future.

‘SAVE THE WORLD’ ALLOCATION

The annual requirement of ~$2.5 trillion to meet the IPCC targets is less than 1% of the stock of global financial assets. Even on a flow basis, if global wealth increases annually at the conservative nominal GDP growth estimate of 4%, there is enough to sustain the annual ~$2.5 trillion for the next three decades.

There are several good things from this simple ‘SAVE THE WORLD’ allocation:

  • It is simple to allocate. Every institution creates a 1% allocation from its existing stock and an incrementally higher share of its annual assets.

  • It does away with the issues that institutional investors have on asset allocation buckets, asset class, public v/s private, developed markets v/s emerging markets.

  • The allocation will be made across equities, loans, bonds. It will be done through public equities, private equity, infrastructure, real estate.

  • These investments are predominantly held by the private sector. The spending by the governments out of their budgets will be incremental.

Who Will Pay?

One cannot deny the desire of every individual in the less developed world to have a higher standard of living – goods that people in the West consume (from microwave ovens to dishwashers to washing machines to air-conditioners) are now the aspirational goals for material success.

Having enjoyed an unprecedented boom in “convenience appliances” since World War-II, policymakers in the West cannot expect austerity from aspiring consumers in Asia, Africa, and South America. That would be blatantly unfair and not acceptable.

The solution to this challenge of “wants v/s needs” will be to allow the consumption to become a reality – but by using new technologies: whether for power (renewable energy v/s coal and gas), transportation (electric vehicles v/s petroleum; public transport v/s private cars), or housing material (concrete v/s sustainable materials).

Older manufacturing facilities that may be energy inefficient or produce harmful effluents will need to be retooled with new technology while new factories will need to be set up to meet future, anticipated demand.

As the table above showed, the invention of new technologies and their adaptation and conversion into the production processes for the use of consumers will cost trillions of dollars.

The less-developed counties do not have the capital to invest the estimated annual ~$2.5 trillion required to get the planet on a more balanced path to economic development.

India is ground Zero for climate change: Needs a higher allocation of global investment.

The world will not meet any of its climate targets, net-zero targets, 1.5°C targets if it focusses only on the developed, high-income, less populated world. It is countries like China, India, Indonesia, Nigeria which hold the potential for altering the climate realities – positively or negatively.

The global pools of capital thus must ensure that they build capabilities to allocate money into climate transition projects in these countries.

Work out these calculations for the other low and middle-income, populated countries and you would know that the world will never meet its climate goals if these countries develop the way the now developed world did.

The policy world needs to hasten the introduction of global standards of reporting climate data. Alongside, a near-standard template to finance climate mitigation projects across the world will help asset allocators in making investment decisions from its SAVE THE WORLD allocation towards low to middle-income countries.

India’s pledge to take renewable energy (RE) up to 450 GW by 2030 is very ambitious. (RE capacity – 141 GW; ~37% of total installed capacity; Mar-21). Estimates based on India’s NDCs put India’s total investments from 2015 till 2030 at ~$2.5 trillion, $170 billion per year for climate action.

As per a study, climate finance in India, over 2017 and 2018, averaged only $38 billion. Only 15% of that was from international sources. The world needs to find a way to allocate more to India.

Climate, ESG And Capital Market Integration

The “ESG” theme within climate investments has come a long way in the last 10 years. The principles of responsible investing (PRI) claims to have signatories which account for over US $100 trillion of assets under management. The 2018 Global Sustainable investment alliance (GSIA) said in its 2018 report that US $30 trillion of assets follow some form of sustainable investment strategies. The UN convened Net-Zero asset owner alliance comprises 30 of the world’s largest institutional investors with assets under management over $5 trillion.

This move is not only on the institutional investor front. Many other aspects of the capital markets have also made impressive strides towards climate actions, reporting of climate data, and other sustainability reporting.

As per a Macquarie research report of May 2021, over 90% of S&P 500 companies publish sustainability reports. Over 1,000 Chinese A-share companies had published ESG reports. The Global Reporting Initiative claims over 30,000 global sustainability reports written in line with their standards. The Task Force on Climate Financial Disclosures has grown to exceed 1,500 globally, including 1,340 companies with a combined market capitalisation of $12.6 trillion. In 2020, the sales of Green, Social and Sustainable bond (GSS) totaled USD ~550 billion, up 76% over 2019.

ESG Integration Easier To Implement At Scale In Public Markets

The SAVE THE WORLD bucket which is dedicated to climate change may have a high share of direct and private investments in climate mitigation projects. Alongside, ESG integration investments by institutional investors could be scaled through liquid investments in public equities and fixed income.

Sovereigns and quasi-sovereigns will increasingly issue sustainability linked or SDG (Sustainable Development Goals) linked bonds which when well defined and with transparent reporting can meet investors ESG requirements.

Global large, listed corporations are the likeliest to adopt ESG standards. The main signatories to TCFD are large corporations. As per Macquarie research, Companies with a net-zero commitment together represent sales of nearly $14 trillion –33% of total sales across the top 2,000 public companies.

MSCI in a recent study found that companies with high ESG scores tended to enjoy a lower cost of capital than companies with poor ESG scores, and this relationship held in both developed and emerging markets. In the MSCI World Index, the average cost of capital for the quintile with the highest ESG scores was 39 basis points (bps) lower than the bottom quintile.

The key primary stock indices across the Americas, Europe and select Emerging markets have market-capitalisation of ~$100 trillion. The absorptive capacity of these public markets allows investors to deploy large money at scale and meet their ‘ESG’ targets.

Indian public equity market capitalization is now ~$3 trillion. Foreigners own less than 25% of Indian stock markets. More so, global investors have less than 1% of their overall allocation in India.

We argued that India deserves a dedicated mandate and thus higher allocations from foreign investors. When we look at climate investing or ESG integration, the world needs to make a higher allocation to India and to Indian companies. India’s climate transition will be driven by the private sector. For instance, 90% of India’s solar power investments are in the private sector.

India’s large and listed companies have and will make the required climate transitions, governance changes, and social endeavours to meet the global investors increased requirements. We make the case to global institutional investors to look at Indian public equities as well for ESG integration.

With the increased regulatory reporting and hopefully standardized data, we may be able to counter the growing issue of EHG (Eyewash, Hogwash, Greenwash). For firms using proprietary ESG research, it would become easier to rank, grade, and score companies on their climate, sustainability, and overall ESG disclosures.

Quantum India: We Knew The ‘G’; We Have Added The ‘E’ And ‘S’

Since 1990, Quantum Advisors has been a pioneer in India’s capital markets and was well positioned for the historic moment when India would open its doors to foreign investments – from portfolio investors and multinationals.

From Integrity screen to E, S, and G:

  1. In 1996: Introduced the Integrity Screen - “Count your fingers after you shake someone’s hands…” + No “sin” stocks.

  2. In 2014: Initiated the process of converting this qualitative system into an “ESG” framework.

Not A DESK “ESG” Research; Not Passive

While we recognize that “scoring” ESG is an evolving science and we are all on a learning curve, one needs to ensure we avoid the path of EHG: Eyewash, Hogwash, and Greenwash!

Given our concerns, we rolled up our sleeves and set out to do what we did in 1990: build our own database of India’s publicly listed companies, with a proprietary ESG score. Since 2015, our internal ESG team has built a proprietary ESG research process and we now have an ESG score on a growing number of publicly listed companies.

By 2018, we started running back-tested models of portfolio construction around our ESG databases. By 2019, our 100% subsidiary, Quantum Asset Management Company (QAMC), launched a Daily NAV “Quantum India ESG Equity Fund” which has full disclosures, is highly regulated and allowed us to showcase our track record for thorough scrutiny. The Quantum India ESG Equity Fund, launched in July 2019, has just about a 2-year track record but has already thrived through one cycle given the surge, collapse and recovery of stock markets since its launch.

The identical portfolio process of the Quantum India ESG Equity Fund is being offered to international investors as a Separately Managed Account under the strategy named as the Q India Responsible Returns Strategy.

In summary, we offer two approaches to investing in Indian equity markets and reaping the benefits from the expected long-term growth of the Indian economy. Both the equity products are tailored to avoid the risks – monetary and reputational – that concerned institutional investors could face when investing within developing countries like India. Both come with a commitment of being investment managers, not asset gatherers: we will always focus on what is best for our clients.

*For detailed description of Q India Responsible Returns Strategy and Q India Value Equity Strategy such as investment objective, assets allocation pattern, investment strategy and philosophy, associated risk factors and other details please refer to the Disclosure Document available at www.qasl.com # Inception data of Quantum India ESG Equity Fund.

*For detailed description of Q India Responsible Returns Strategy and Q India Value Equity Strategy such as investment objective, assets allocation pattern, investment strategy and philosophy, associated risk factors and other details please refer to the Disclosure Document available at www.qasl.com # Inception data of Quantum India ESG Equity Fund.

This article was originally published on the Quantum Advisors Insights blog.

Arvind Chari is the Chief Investment Officer at Quantum Advisors.

The views expressed here are those of the author, and do not necessarily represent the views of BloombergQuint or its editorial team.

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