Integrating Environmental Risks into Asset Valuations: The potential for stranded assets and the implications for long-term investors
Institutional investors are increasingly committed to integrating environmental, social and governance (ESG) factors into their strategies for delivering risk-adjusted returns and delivering their ownership responsibilities.
Institutions with between USD$20 trillion and US$87 trillion in assets under management have made commitments to varying levels of integration, ranging from requests for improved corporate disclosure to incorporating ESG factors into valuations to changing asset allocation.
The shift to a low-carbon economy is likely to be disruptive for market valuations. Long-term carbon targets have not traditionally been included in market valuations, creating an overinvestment in fossil fuels. These could become stranded assets as policy, market, technology and social conditions change. HSBC and other financial institutions have started to analyze the valuation implications of the low-carbon transition, highlighting that 40 to 60 per cent of current European coal, oil and gas valuations are at risk from the low-carbon transition.
Reforms in investor practice and market frameworks are needed to prevent value destruction. Investors need to take action to anticipate these shifts, diverting capital from high-risk areas ahead of time. In addition, a series of policy and regulatory steps can be taken to enable financial markets to operate with greater foresight through long-term environmental challenges.
Additional downloads
You might also be interested in
What Drives Investment Policy-makers in Developing Countries to Use Tax Incentives?
The article explores the reasons behind the use of tax incentives in developing countries to attract investment, examining the pressures, challenges, and alternative strategies that exist.
What Will Happen at COP 29?
Talks at the 2024 UN Climate Change Conference (COP 29) will range from defining a way forward on finance through a new collective quantified goal (NCQG) to mitigation, and loss and damage. Ahead of negotiations in Baku, IISD’s Earth Negotiations Bulletin Team Lead Jennifer Bansard examines the agenda and breaks down what to watch as eyes turn to Azerbaijan.
Addressing Liquidity Challenges: A conceptual framework
A conceptual framework for addressing liquidity challenges in sovereign debt.
Compensation and Damages in Investor-State Dispute Settlement
This report provides policy reform options to address the growing issue of damages awards in investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS).