`A SHORT ON HUMAN INGENUITY'
Blanket divestment from fossil fuels is off table under new CPPIB CEO'S watch
The new chief executive of the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board has no plans to institute a blanket divestment of oil and gas assets during his tenure, in part because he believes science will find solutions to many of the issues that have made environmentalists and some investors question such holdings.
“Simple divestment is essentially a short on human ingenuity,” John Graham told the Financial Post in a recent interview, adding that there are “incredibly bright, talented” scientists and engineers in the oil and gas industry.
“We've taken the position that we invest in the entire energy ecosystem, and we do not pursue a path of blanket divestment,” he said.
Invoking science to support energy investments may not be a popular position in some quarters these days, but the 49-year-old, who was abruptly named to the top post at the $475 billion fund in February, has the credentials to back it up. A research scientist for more than a decade, Graham has a PHD in chemistry from the University of Western Ontario, as well as an MBA from the University of Toronto's Rotman School of Management.
Navigating the political minefield around energy investments will be one of the key challenges Graham faces as head of the investment platform for Canada's national pension scheme, which has mandate to “maximize investment returns without undue risk of loss.”
Like other large institutional investors, CPPIB is facing criticism not only from environmentalists but from academics who are quick to point out that fossil fuels, no matter how lucrative now, represent risk.
But Graham is not taking sides. On Tuesday, CPPIB announced that two existing investment groups — energy and resources and power and renewables — will be rolled into a single $18-billion platform called the Sustainable Energy Group to build on investments in renewables, conventional energy and innovation through new technologies and services.
“We will continue to invest across the entire energy ecosystem including active investments we have in Alberta,” Graham said in the interview, which took place shortly before the announcement.
Among those investments is Calgary's Wolf Midstream, which he pointed to as an example of what he sees as the path forward.
The company, which CPPIB first invested in six years ago, is involved in the conventional oil and gas sector. But Wolf also built and is part owner of the 240-kilometre Alberta Carbon Trunk Line, which captures industrial emissions from fertilizer facilities and refineries and delivers the carbon dioxide to use in enhanced oil recovery at mature oil and gas reservoirs and for permanent storage.
“It is one (investment) we're quite proud of — a great example of some of the forward-looking thinking around carbon capture,” Graham said.
“I've met lots of people through my career, scientists and engineers, who work in the oil and gas sector, and they're incredibly bright, talented people who will undoubtedly play a role in the energy transition.”
Graham is the second consecutive executive with a science background to lead the investment management team for Canada's national pension scheme. His predecessor, Mark Machin, was trained as a medical doctor before turning his attention to high finance. Machin resigned from his job as CEO of CPPIB suddenly in February after it was revealed that he had travelled to the United Arab Emirates and been vaccinated against COVID-19 while those his age in Canada were still awaiting inoculation.