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Ontario Teachers, CPP Investments Chart Net Zero, 2050 Investment Strategies

Canadian pensions to deploy +$90B towards transition, decarbonization.

By Mario Marroquin

Two of the three largest public pension systems in Canada are
doubling down on sustainable investments and increasing their exposure to
transition and decarbonization assets through 2030. According to two annual
reports on sustainable and responsible investment by the Canadian Pension Plan
Investment Board (CPP Investments) and the Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan, the
pension plans aim to reach net zero – greenhouse gasses and carbon emissions,
respectively – across their portfolio by 2050 by realigning portfolio companies
and capital deployment.

The pension plans said the goal of realigning their
portfolios towards net-zero emissions is to increase portfolio resilience and
that they will deploy over CAD$90 billion (US$66 billion) in investments
towards transition and decarbonization assets.

 “We believe it is
important to invest in a way that helps accelerate the transition to a
low-carbon economy,” Ontario Teachers’ Chief Investment Officer Zlad Hindo said
in its 2022 Annual Responsible Investing and Climate Strategy Report. “To
maximize our impact, we have developed a multi-pronged climate strategy, which
includes: helping our portfolio companies decrease their emissions, investing
in green assets, helping high emitters decarbonize, issuing green bonds,
understanding and mitigating physical and transition risks, and developing
partnerships to amplify our efforts.”

The CAD$242.5 billion (US$178 billion) AUM Ontario Teachers’
plan expects to receive annual emissions data assured by a third party from
companies with high greenhouse gas emissions and reported its primary focus
areas will be high-emitting sectors like power generation, heavy industry,
mining and transportation.

The pension reported plans to grow its exposure to green
investments by up to CAD$50 billion (US$36.7 billion) through 2050 and expects
90% of its portfolio’s emissions will be covered by a ‘credible net zero by
2050 plan’ by 2030. The pension  said it
plans an initial investment of up to CAD$5 billion (US$3.67 billion) in “high-emitting
companies with credible decarbonization plans that [OTPP] believes can
accelerate through [OTPP’s] capital and expertise.’”

On the other hand, CPP Investments, which has CAD$687
billion (US$504 billion) AUM, reiterated plans to expand its exposure to green
and transition assets from CAD$66 billion (US$48.4 billion) to at least CAD$130
billion (US$95.4 billion) by 2030.

CPP’s 2022 Report on Sustainable Investing said assets
considered to be in transition are in high-emitting sectors with a plan to move
towards net zero.

“Many current initiatives to tackle the climate crisis do
not address strategic sectors that are both essential and high emitting,” CPP’s
report said. “These strategic sectors include, but are not limited to,
agriculture, buildings, chemicals, cement, conventional power, oil and gas,
steel and heavy transportation. The successful decarbonization of these
strategic sectors is not only essential to meet wider net zero ambitions, but
also to sustain economic growth, stability and a responsible transition.”

Related articles: 

New Zealand’s ACC Shifts Majority of Equity Holdings to Low-Carbon Benchmarks

CPP Investments Downloads Capital into Fast-Growing Startup

Q&A: Marat Zapparov, CEO of Temasek-Backed Pentagreen Capital, Talks Infrastructure Opportunities

Photo Credit: Roberto Nickson/ Pexels

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