CLS Blue Sky Blog

The Results Are in: Global Investor-Director Survey on Climate Risk Management

Institutional investors are increasingly focused on “extra-financial performance” as a predictor of long-term success of companies. Topics like climate change, CO2 emissions reduction, respect for the environment, labour rights, and diversity are more and more factored into investment decisions.

Investors, directors and company management need to work together to leverage the new regulatory environment, address unprecedented environmental and social challenges, and promote disruptive technological innovation to strengthen business models and improve performance.

About the Survey

This global survey, conducted by a team of academics from the Millstein Center for Global Markets and Corporate Ownership at Columbia Law School and Environmental, Social and Governance experts at  LeaderXXchange, seeks to understand how – if at all – institutional investors and board directors incorporate climate-related issues in their investment decision making and their oversight responsibilities, respectively. The survey targets both directors and investors with two tracks aggregated in a single survey.

One of our goals in conducting the survey was to understand and assess how ESG issues impact investment and boardroom decisions. The survey collected data on a broad range of topics, including demographic information of respondents and their views on:

The survey was conducted over a period of three months in Summer 2019, during which the Millstein Center and LeaderXXchange each contacted relevant organizations within their networks to help disseminate the survey to directors and investors globally. Both organizations also invited individual investors and directors within their networks to anonymously complete the survey. Most respondents were based in Europe and North America.

Demographics of Survey Respondents

Key Findings

Views of Investors and Directors on the Materiality of Climate Change Issues

Views of Investors and Directors on Training on Climate Change Issues

Views of Investors and Directors on Climate Disclosure

Views of Directors on Climate Risk Management and Board Oversight

Views of Investors on Engagement & Proxy Voting

Variation by Age and Gender

Variation by Region

Conclusion

This global survey of directors and investors by LeaderXXchange and the Millstein Center supports prior research findings by LeaderXXchange and others that there are several demographic and regional differences in directors’ and investors’ expectations around climate-related issues and disclosure. Generally speaking, younger respondents, European respondents, and female respondents appear to have greater interest in climate issues and/or expectations for corporate disclosure. The survey also provides insights into how boards and companies are engaging on climate issues internally and externally. We believe that these findings deepen our understanding of how directors and investors take climate-related issues into account in their boardroom and investment decision-making, respectively, and how their views may differ across demographic and regional groups.

ENDNOTE

The results presented above represent a selection of findings based on observational survey data. They do not represent a comprehensive discussion of the survey results, and it can also not be excluded that they are at least partly the result of decisions by LeaderXXchangeⓇ and the Millstein Center in designing and evaluating the survey. Lastly, due to the open nature of the survey, the representativeness of the sample of survey participants is not guaranteed

This post comes to us from the Millstein Center for Global Markets and Corporate Ownership at Columbia Law School and LeaderXXchange LLP, an investor-director working group. It is based on the executive summary, available here, of their Global Investor-Director Survey on Climate Risk Management.

Exit mobile version