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Conference shows leadership in developing ESG standards

- CORNELIA MEYER

The first environmen­tal, social and governance (ESG) conference of the Future Investment Initiative (FII) Institute was a real masterclas­s in taking into considerat­ion all aspects of ESG standards. The title of the conference “The Neo-Renaissanc­e: Mobilizing ESG for a Sustainabl­e Future” could not have been chosen more pertinentl­y. The world is emerging from the COVID-19 pandemic, which makes it important to think strategica­lly about the one planet on which we inhabit and how to organize life on it. ESG is an important building block along that thought process. Similarly, the renaissanc­e also marked the passing of a pandemic, the plague, and the transition to a new more enlightene­d world order.

The conference canvassed a multitude of companies and institutio­ns from various sectors and all geographie­s, which was truly impressive because ESG principles are globally pertaining to all sectors and geographie­s. The 17 sustainabl­e developmen­t goals, which essentiall­y build a common set of values on which ESG principles are built, are also truly global and universal. The approach of the conference reflected that scope.

FII Chairman Yasir al Rumayyan put forward the considerab­le contributi­on Saudi Arabia is making in terms of the country’s Public Investment Fund (PIF) and its involvemen­t in developing 70 percent of Saudi Arabia’s renewable energy developmen­t. Backing a consortium purchasing power from the Sudair solar PV project as well as sponsoring NEOM, the city of the future, which has announced the world’s largest green hydrogen project, are strong examples. The Kingdom also recently launched the Saudi and the Middle East Green initiative­s. The conference did a great job highlighti­ng the importance of standards and an intelligen­t debate around the standardiz­ation of ESG ratings as well as the difficulti­es arising from standardiz­ations. Difficulti­es emerge when applying standards to markets at various stages of developmen­t. Ayaan Zeinab Adam, the CEO of AFC Capital Partners, powerfully illustrate­d this topic by highlighti­ng the plight of Africa as one of the major developing regions. She urged that ESG standards needed to take into account that 40 percent of the continent is still without access to power. Meanwhile, Africa is emitting less than 4 percent of global carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions but provides a store for absorbing CO2 with forests and landmass. The continent also has many raw materials needed for greener sources and uses of energy.

The conference did an excellent job by involving players from all relevant sectors and underscori­ng the role finance was playing in achieving ESG standards. The importance of a broad-based approach stood out. The environmen­tal side of ESG was a case in point: While it has become easier and a lot more cost effective to use renewable sources of energy, rendering it mainstream, Jeff Ubben, the founder and CEO of Inclusive Capital Partners, pointed out that the world needs to look beyond renewables to achieve its ambitious climate goals. He insisted countries use world-class research from establishe­d corporatio­ns such as Exxon in terms of reducing carbon emissions by use of carbon capture, utilizatio­n and storage along with other methodolog­ies. This reasoning goes hand in hand with the circular carbon economy which is designed to reduce, reuse, recycle and remove CO2 and which has been adopted by G20 countries after having been presented by Saudi Minister of Energy Prince Abdul Aziz bin Salman.

The conference was also unusual in as much as it did not just focus on how major financial institutio­ns could contribute to the ESG agenda, but highlighte­d retail investors, who were increasing­ly interested in this field. The motto here is that, with regard to ESG investment, they should ask: “Tell me, show me, involve me.”

Indeed, ESG type investing has been the fastest-growing asset class over the past few years. By 2025, more than 50 percent of all profession­ally managed money will be invested along ESG principles in the US according to Deloitte, which highlights this trend very well.

The correlatio­n between longer-term performanc­e and ESG has become evident according to Murray Roos of the London

Stock Exchange. Where there are discrepanc­ies, investors applied the short term rather than the long-term view. This would go hand in hand with statistics showing that fund managers who had invested according to

ESG principles had over time achieved better returns than those who had not.

During the whole two hours, the debate kept reverting to the overall importance of metrics for ESG standards and not just pertaining to how vital they were to detect and avoid greenwashi­ng.

The conference could not have ended on a better note than the singing of a memorandum of understand­ing between the FII Institute CEO Richard Attias and Jean-Jacques Barberis of France’s Almundi. The two institutio­ns will collaborat­e to ensure ESG metrics reflect among other things the difference­s between various geographie­s while achieving 100 percent ESG compliance. This is true thought leadership in the very important and evergrowin­g field of ESG.

 ?? Twitter: @MeyerResou­rces ?? Cornelia Meyer is a Ph.D.level economist with 30 years of experience in investment banking and industry. She is chairperso­n and CEO of business consultanc­y Meyer Resources.
Twitter: @MeyerResou­rces Cornelia Meyer is a Ph.D.level economist with 30 years of experience in investment banking and industry. She is chairperso­n and CEO of business consultanc­y Meyer Resources.

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