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During Proxy Season, CalSTRS Will Focus on Climate Change and Diversity

The fund has set a priority to enhance its strategy during proxy voting season, and vote for disclosures on greenhouse gas emissions and diverse board members.

California State Teachers’
Retirement System (CalSTRS) released a statement that it is cracking down on large companies without proper greenhouse gas emissions disclosures and board diversity. In an effort to enhance its strategy and address the risks that climate
change poses to its global portfolio, it will use its voting power during proxy voting season,
as global companies are holding their annual general meetings, according to a press release from the world’s largest
educator-only pension fund with more than $300 billion in assets,

 

CalSTRS will focus on the boards of directors of the
largest companies around the world and is paying particular attention to the
companies emitting the highest levels of greenhouse gases, according to the release.

It expects all of its
portfolio companies to provide minimum disclosures, including financial reports
that align with the recommendations of the
Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures and
include, at a minimum, the company’s direct emissions (scope 1) and indirect emissions (scope 2). CalSTRS stated in the release it
will vote against directors at the largest global companies that do not provide
this minimum level of disclosure.


“Without important
disclosures, investors cannot appropriately manage risks and advance our
commitments to achieving a net zero emissions portfolio,” said Aeisha Mastagni,
a portfolio manager on CalSTRS’ Sustainable Investment and Stewardship
Strategies team in a written statement.


While the risk of climate
change impacts the investment portfolio broadly, CalSTRS recognizes the
emissions related to its Public Equity Portfolio are concentrated in a subset
of companies.

 

“Two hundred and fifty
companies are responsible for 75% of the emissions in our Public Equity
Portfolio,” said Mastagni. “We will continue to use our influence to ensure
these high emitters—in multiple sectors—minimize risks and take advantage of
the opportunities available to them to be successful in a low-carbon world.”

 

CalSTRS’ actions are guided by
its
Corporate Governance Principles and commitment to a net zero investment portfolio by 2050 or
sooner
.

 

In addition to advancing its
net zero portfolio emissions pledge, CalSTRS will also continue its
longstanding practice of evaluating the diversity of corporate boards of
directors. (CalSTRS believes companies with diverse leadership have better
decision-making processes because people from different backgrounds bring
varied perspectives and insights, which often results in positive economic
outcomes.)

In doing so, CalSTRS stated it
will also vote against an entire board of directors that does not include at
least one woman and against a board’s nominating and governance committee if at
least 30% of its board members are not women. Furthermore, CalSTRS will vote
against the nominating and governance committees of Russell 3000 companies that
do not disclose their board members’ diversity characteristics.

 

It announced that companies in
the Russell 1000 Index—the largest publicly traded U.S. companies—will be held
to a higher standard this proxy season. “We not only expect disclosure of the
diversity of board members, we want at least one board director from each of
these Russell 1000 companies to be from a typically underrepresented
population,” said Mastagni.

 

While CalSTRS’ strategies and
engagement methods vary with each company within its broadly allocated
investment portfolio, the goal is always the same: to influence long-term value
creation and sustainable business practices for generations to come, which in
return will help ensure California’s public educators have a secure retirement.

 

See CalSTRS’ Stewardship
Priorities
fact sheet
and proxy voting records for more information.

 

By Staff Report

 

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