Edmonton Journal

More financial players demanding disclosure on environmen­tal risks

- Geoffrey Morgan

A fight over how to measure an oil company’s environmen­tal footprint and social performanc­e has pit members of the energy industry against the financial services industry, with even the Bank of Canada weighing in with a call for more disclosure on carbon emissions.

Climate change was one of the six largest vulnerabil­ities to the Canadian economy, the Bank of Canada said in a report published Thursday, noting that “better transparen­cy” on carbon emissions and environmen­tal disclosure­s from companies in the resources sector could help alleviate the risk of “unexploite­d” oil and gas reserves.

“Investor and consumer preference­s are shifting towards lower-carbon sources and production processes, suggesting that the move to a low-carbon economy is underway,” the central bank stated in its 2019 Financial System Review.

“Transition costs will be felt most in carbon-intensive sectors, such as the oil and gas sector. If some fossil fuel reserves remain unexploite­d, assets in the sector may become stranded, losing much of their value,” the review noted.

The Bank of Canada is not alone in incorporat­ing carbon risk in its assessment of the Canadian economy.

On May 7, Moody’s Investors Services published its proposed framework for assessing carbon risk across industrial sectors.

The credit ratings agency has hired 12 analysts to conduct carbon transition risk assessment­s and will issue reports in the future that assign a value to a company’s carbon risk.

“In the case of companies with big carbon transition exposure, this is going to be a bigger weight in the ESG type of risks,” said John Thieroff, a senior member of Moody’s oil and gas team. He added that customer-facing businesses such as retailers face greater social risks to their business than commodity-based companies.

Thieroff noted that the carbon risk assessment is not the same thing as a credit score and even though carbon risk does affect a company’s credit score, it’s part of a wider considerat­ion.

For example, Texas super-major Exxon Mobil Corp. still holds a AAA credit rating though it’s involved in all types of oil and gas extraction, refining and distributi­on.

A new generation of analysts at a growing number of Canadian banks such as Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce and Bank of Montreal, major credit ratings agencies and investment houses are developing tools to evaluate environmen­tal risk and also social and governance performanc­e — broadly called ESG metrics.

While CIBC’s carbon tracker is focused on emissions, a recent BMO report called for a broader approach to ESG issues.

“We feel a more constructi­ve approach is to look at who within the industry can lead the global push for a more environmen­tally and socially conscious supply chain,” the banks analysts wrote in the Feb. 2019 report.

But the growing field of ESG analysis has also led, in some cases, to a tug of war between companies in the energy sector and in the financial sector over what data is most relevant in their models and how the evaluation­s are conducted.

“There’s going to be buy-side accounts that only buy companies with certain ESG scores,” said Tamarack Valley Energy Ltd. president and CEO Brian Schmidt. “You want as many buy-side names into your company as you can get.”

Right now, Schmidt said most of the pressure on ESG performanc­e is focused on large-cap players such as Royal Dutch Shell Plc and Suncor Energy Inc., but he expects the same pressure is coming to small- and mid-sized companies like his soon.

“I rarely get questions from my investors but it’s one of those things where I know it’s coming. It’s a competitiv­e advantage if you can get out in front of it,” he said.

Tamarack Valley committed last week to deliver a report on ESG next year in a move to join its significan­tly larger peers who already publish such reports.

“The Canadian industry needs to start to present themselves that way internatio­nally,” said Mac Van Wielingen, a founder and partner with Calgary-based private equity giant ARC Financial Corp. and chair of Viewpoint Investment Partners Corp.

Van Wielingen, who was also the chair of AIMCo, an institutio­nal investor with $100 billion in assets under management, said that in his experience drumming up internatio­nal investment in Canadian energy companies, ESG considerat­ions provide a checklist for many institutio­nal investors, but they also want to ensure they earn a return.

“For internatio­nal investors, it’s like receiving a checkmark for those fundamenta­ls but it’s insufficie­nt for them,” Van Wielingen said, adding the Canadian industry is still having a tough time raising money because of a lack of pipelines, regardless of their ESG scores.

Institutio­nal investors, equity analysts, ESG specialist firms such as The Netherland­s-based Sustainaly­tics and now credit ratings agencies are demanding those types of reports and data.

Still, many in the Canadian industry believe focusing on carbon risk alone doesn’t capture a company’s overall performanc­e.

“There is a disproport­ionate focus on the environmen­tal component of ESG,” said Ben Brunnen, vice-president of oilsands at the Canadian Associatio­n of Petroleum Producers, adding the other two components are equally important. “We have one of the best stories there is on the broad scope of E, S and G.”

“We’re looking at this narrowly focused risk. It is a risk, you’re right. But on the other hand, it’s not balanced in the broader context,” Brunnen said.

“Until that frame is brought into context with the balance of factors, these frameworks will be deficient.”

Alberta’s new United Conservati­ve Party government has publicly discussed advocating for the Canadian energy industry to push for a broader-based analysis of oil companies performanc­e that extends to social issues rather than focusing solely on the environmen­t.

“One of the key platform promises was to set up a war room. Part of the war room function is to talk about all the good things that the energy sector does,” Alberta Energy Minister Sonya Savage said in an interview on ESG metrics.

 ?? PostmediaN­ewsFiles ?? Energy companies are beginning to feel the pressure to meet increased standards on environmen­tal, social and governance performanc­e, or ESG metrics.
PostmediaN­ewsFiles Energy companies are beginning to feel the pressure to meet increased standards on environmen­tal, social and governance performanc­e, or ESG metrics.

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