Investors are stuck between climate commitments and action

Photo by Jon Tyson on Unsplash

Has institutional investment behaviour really changed?

12 months ago we found a sample of 60 institutional investors from mainstream Australian investment organisations were not prioritising climate risk compared to more traditional financial metrics such as CEO performance and capital management. We recently repeated this survey to see if corporate strategy had changed over the last 12 months in this influential cohort of Australian investors.

Institutional investors continue to downplay climate risk

We asked investors to score and prioritise a list of 27 corporate performance metrics including ESG, financials, management, strategy and shareholder engagement criteria. We found some noteworthy shifts, for instance culture and conduct had increased from 19th to 7th most-important priority.

Our research shows that institutional investors are stuck in the void between climate ambitions and climate actions

What’s behind the commitment — action gap?

We wanted to unpack the gap between corporate climate commitments and real action when it comes to investment decisions. We asked a series of open-ended questions about how institutional investors factor climate risk into their investment decisions. Three themes emerged.

Qualitative themes and insights from institutional investors

There is a lag between investor attitudes and actions

The results of our survey suggest a disconnect in how investors acknowledge value in incorporating climate risk but don’t prioritise it. They believe markets are responding fast enough, despite energy stocks increasing in value as temperatures soar and wildfires burn.

Regulation is catching up with the greenwashers

Investors also told us that substantive action cannot be substituted with greenwashing. Yet our study finds evidence that the increased climate announcements by major firms might reflect a change in rhetoric rather than real action. Our previous work showed greenwashing can effectively mislead consumers into believing firms are green, especially consumers who are concerned about the environment. A number of large financial firms including BNY Mellon and Goldman Sachs have recently made headlines for engaging in financial greenwashing.

Bold action is needed

Our research shows that institutional investors are stuck in the void between climate ambitions and climate actions. They could take inspiration from Patagonia CEO Yvon Chouinard’s recent move to give away the company to fight climate change! As bold climate action gains momentum, it would be great to see the finance industry step up to the challenge.

--

--

Designing our world for who and how we are: brought to you by the Behavioural Insights Team — The Nudge Unit

Get the Medium app

A button that says 'Download on the App Store', and if clicked it will lead you to the iOS App store
A button that says 'Get it on, Google Play', and if clicked it will lead you to the Google Play store
BIT

We are The Behavioural Insights Team (BIT), one of the world’s leading behavioural science organisations, working around the world to improve people’s lives.