G20 Foundation Publications Turkey 2015 | Page 26

26 TRADE & FINANCE THE TIME IS NOW FOR SUSTAINABLE INVESTING: BUT WE NEED STRONGER POLICY ACTION “The good news is that we are beginning to see real leadership from a broad range of investors, particularly on the need to drive substantial capital towards addressing climate change challenges.” Jessica Robinson, Chief Execu tive Association for Sustainable and Responsible Investment in Asia (ASrIA) The time is now for sustainable investing. It is no longer an investment approach that is pursued by niche, ethical or impact investors. Sustainable investing is going mainstream. But, with the world facing unprecedented challenges such as irreversible climate change and massive environmental degradation, we need much more. And, for that, we need strong policy action. Industry action is critical but we cannot rely on a market-led transformation alone – it must also be policy-led. Leadership from within the industry The good news is that we are beginning to see real leadership from a broad range of investors, particularly on the need to drive substantial capital towards addressing climate change challenges. As a recent example, an industry-led statement on climate change has been signed by over 370 leading institutional investors, representing assets of over US$24trillion . Through this statement, institutional investors are calling for stronger political leadership and for the more ambitious policies urgently needed in order for climate investments to be scaled up. This commitment by major investors is highly significant. Investors are part of the solution Smart investors can and will be at the heart of change, not least because of a growing awareness that they are facing the prospect of significant losses and erosion of value from climate change and environmental damage. At the conservative end, the Economist Intelligence Unit recently calculated that the resulting expected losses from climate change to the current stock of manageable assets in discounted, present value terms are valued at US$4.2trn, roughly on a par with the total value of all the world’s listed oil and gas companies or Japan’s entire GDP (Economist Intelligence Unit, 2015). Warming of 6 degrees Celsius could lead to a present value loss of US$13.8trn, representing roughly 10% of global total assets.