The Scotsman

Pension schemes are seeing the green light

◆ Climate-conscious investment offers opportunit­ies, says Louisa Knox

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ESG continues to be a key focus across businesses, with environmen­tal concerns remaining at the forefront of decisionma­kers’ minds. This is particular­ly the case in the pensions landscape. amounts of investment will be required if netzero goals are to be met, and many believe the capital held by pension schemes could account for a significan­t proportion of this investment. Reforms to facilitate ESG investing

Legislativ­e and regulatory reform is focused on facilitati­ng pension schemes to review existing investment­s and to consider investing in an environmen­tally conscious manner.

Larger pension schemes must disclose their considerat­ion of environmen­tal factors when making investment decisions.this build son existing obligation­s for pension scheme trustees to document their approach to ESG in their statement of investment principles.

The Pensions Regulator has said climate reporting should be the output of strategic decisions made by the trustees, but it’s unclear to what extent these regulatory requiremen­ts have influenced the underlying investment strategies.

Trust law duties on pension scheme trustees

Pension trustees may be under pressure from stakeholde­rs to not only integrate and report on environmen­tal factors in their decision-making process, but also to fund environmen­tal projects. they do, however, remain constraine­d by underlying trust law and regulation­s.

The general investment power of pension trustees, while broad in terms, underpins the aim of the scheme to ensure positive member outcomes. The trust law duties on pension scheme trustees when making an investment decision bring into play considerat­ion of financial and non-financial factors.

A primary considerat­ion for pension trustees remains financial suitabilit­y and risk factors Specific ESG investment may fit squarely into a sound investment but investing into some environmen­tal projects may be challengin­g depending on risk profile and potential return.

Scottish private trust law There has been some developmen­t in relation to ESG investing in Scottish private trust law with the introducti­on of new trust legislatio­n. Once live, this legislatio­n explicitly gives trustees of newly-created private trusts power to take non-financial considerat­ions into account when considerin­g investment­s. The Act does not currently apply to pension schemes and it remains to be seen whether nonfinanci­al considerat­ions will be extended to include them. It is, however, a notable change in moving away from core financial return considerat­ions. Evolving opportunit­ies Environmen­tally conscious investment­s by pension trustees are expected to become more common with 95 per cent of pension funds and insurers expected to increase their investment in renewable energy assets in the next five years, according to a survey by Alphareal.

While a drastic change in investment strategy is not immediatel­y expected, there are evolving opportunit­ies for trustees to invest in a climatecon­scious way.

Louisa Knox is a Partner at Shepherd and Wedderburn, headline sponsor of Allenergy, the UK’S largest renewable and low-carbon energy exhibition and conference, in Glasgow, 15-16 May. This article was co-written by Jamie Hadden.

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