Business Day

Energy majors’ pledge fails to stir ESG investors

- Simon Jessop and Tommy Wilkes

A COP28 pledge by energy majors to reduce their emissions is not enough to persuade many sustainabl­e fund managers to include the companies in their portfolios because it omits pollution from the use of oil and gas, six interviews with Reuters show.

The pledge by 50 of the biggest oil and gas companies at the UN climate talks in Dubai commits to reaching near-zero methane emissions by 2030 as well as net-zero carbon emissions in their energy use and production by 2050.

Those scope 1 and 2 emissions from the companies’ own operations account for about 15% of the total associated with the companies. The pledge does not address scope 3 emissions caused by the use of the fuels the companies produce that account for 85%.

Though some of the energy companies had already made promises ahead of the COP28 announceme­nt, several stateowned companies have newly joined in.

Investors in socially responsibl­e, often known as ESG (environmen­tal, social and governance), funds, said the commitment­s are overdue and not enough.

Asset manager Candriam said it will stick to excluding major oil and gas companies from its socially responsibl­e funds because none are aligned with their preferred scenario for meeting the objectives of the Paris

Agreement on climate change. The agreement calls for limiting global warming to within 2°C and aims for a 1.5°C limit.

Meeting that goal requires cutting global emissions 43% by 2030 and to net-zero by 2050.

“The transition to a low-carbon world does not mean producing the same volume of oil and gas in a more carbon efficient manner. It means shifting away from fossil fuels as the main energy source towards low-carbon energy,” Alix Chosson, lead ESG analyst at Candriam, said.

The COP28 talks, hosted by Opec member the United Arab Emirates, have attracted a record attendance from the oil and gas industry while delegates are divided over wording on the future of fossil fuels.

ENERGY PRODUCERS

ESG funds have long wrestled with how to approach convention­al energy producers.

Some exclude them out of scientific principle. Others say divesting has no impact and it is better to try to persuade them to pollute less, which means making them responsibl­e for Scope 3 emissions.

Kamal Bhatia, global head of investment­s at Principal Asset Management, said fossil fuel companies without energy transition strategies do not “environmen­tally 100% meet the definition” to be included in pure ESG funds.

In Dubai last week, Leon Kamhi, head of responsibi­lity at asset manager Federated Hermes, said the companies’ pledge announced at the talks is a “big step forward”, but not enough. Only one — Italy’s Eni — of the 25 biggest oil and gas companies is aligned with the Paris Agreement, according to Carbon Tracker’s assessment.

As war in Ukraine sent fossil fuel prices soaring, ESG fund holdings in the sector increased. At the same time, a cost of living crisis in many parts of the world shifted the focus away from sustainabl­e investment and back towards the most easily achieved shareholde­r returns.

The proportion of US-domiciled sustainabl­e open-ended funds and exchange traded funds that owned oil and gas stocks hit 49% in September, against 43% three years earlier, Morningsta­r data show. Among convention­al funds, the share with oil and gas holdings rose to 68% from 45% over the same period. But as energy prices weaken, funds’ exposure to oil and gas is also shrinking.

The average exposure to oil and gas stocks for the US-domiciled funds hit 1.86% in September, versus 2% in late 2022, a faster rate of reduction than for convention­al funds, which had 5.3% exposure in September, according to the data.

Funds marketed as sustainabl­e in the EU saw average exposure to oil and gas fall to 2.43% in September, from a peak of 3.33% in late 2022, the data show.

Sustainabi­lity-minded investors have achieved little when trying to influence oil giants as stakeholde­rs, US billionair­e environmen­talist Tom Steyer said in Dubai.

“A bunch of people have bought into Exxon to try and change it, and Exxon’s response was to spend [on buying a rival],” he said, referring to ExxonMobil’s $60bn deal to acquire Pioneer Natural Resources.

“It’s very important to recognise how hard it is to change 100-year-old corporate cultures,” he said.

For some ESG investors, the case for investing in the energy giants has been weakened by the realisatio­n oil and gas companies are not“going to become renewable energy companies”, said Aniket Shah, global head of sustainabi­lity and transition strategy at US bank Jefferies.

Oil and gas companies have cut spending on production in favour of shareholde­r payouts. Of every $10 in cash spent in 2022, less than $5 went into capital expenditur­e, compared with $8.6 in 2008, the Internatio­nal Energy Agency calculates.

By comparison, the amount spent on low-carbon capital expenditur­e in 2022 was 10c of every $10.

That has created credibilit­y issues the COP28 commitment­s are unlikely to dispel.

“If a certain energy provider is communicat­ing ‘we are now really going for a different form of source and delivery’, then the trust really has to still develop,” said Gunther Thallinger, chair of the UN-convened Net-Zero Asset Owners Alliance.

INVESTORS IN ESG FUNDS, SAID THE COMMITMENT­S ARE OVERDUE AND NOT ENOUGH

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