The Times Australia
Google AI
Business and Money

Super funds are feeling the financial heat from climate change

  • Written by Amandine Denis, Head of Research, ClimateWorks Australia, Monash University

The wild fires that have ravaged the US west coast, turning skies orange, are a lurid reminder that climate change looms ever larger as an economic threat.

This week has seen a flurry of announcements reflecting that reality.

Read more: Coping with Western wildfires: 5 essential reads[1]

New Zealand’s government has declared it will become the world’s first country to require its financial sector to report on climate risks.

A collaboration between Australian banks, insurers and climate scientists – the Climate Measurement Standards Initiative[2] – has issued the nation’s first comprehensive framework to assess climate-related risks to buildings and critical infrastructure.

And another of Australia’s largest superannuation funds, UniSuper, has committed to achieving net zero carbon emissions[3] from its investment portfolio by 2050.

UniSuper, the industry fund for university workers, is the third major Australian super fund to make such a commitment.

Read more: UniSuper take note: there's no retirement on a dead planet[4]

The first was HESTA, the industry super fund for health and community sector workers, in June[5]. The second was CBus, the construction and mining industry super fund, last month. “The reality is that things are coalescing fast around us,” said Kristian Fok[6], CBus’ chief investment officer at the time.

While the superannuation industry remains very much in transition, analysis by ClimateWorks Australia[7] and the Monash Sustainable Development Institute indicates a new determination among Australia’s 20 largest Registrable Superannuation Entity licensees to act on climate change risks.

These 20 licensees represent about 55% of all superannuation investments in Australia, worth a total of about A$2.7 trillion.

Along with the 2050 commitments by HESTA, CBus and UniSuper, another 13 funds are actively looking to reduce their portfolio’s emissions intensity. For example, Aware Super (formerly First State Super) announced in July it would divest from thermal coal miners and reduce emissions in its listed equities portfolio by at least 30% by 2023.

Only four of the 20 – Colonial First State, IOOF, Nulis and OnePath – still have no emissions reduction targets or activities.

Managing risk

This flurry of announcements reflects a changing context.

In the past, fund managers sometimes argued that, in a heavily regulated industry, their legal responsibilities prevented them from committing to emissions reductions. They were tasked, they said, with protecting their members’ finances, not guarding the environment.

Until about 2017, super funds tended to limit action to asking companies in which they owned shares to disclose their climate risks and to offering voluntary sustainable investment options to their members.

But since the Paris climate agreement in 2015, targets of net zero emissions by 2050 (or earlier) have been adopted by governments, businesses and investors. More than 100 countries and all Australian states and territories have net zero targets in place. So do some major companies, such as BHP and Qantas.

Many businesses now recognise the financial implications of global warming. ANZ, for example, this month announced it expected the 100 biggest-emitting customers to have a plan to adapt to a low-carbon economy – something the bank’s chief executive, Shayne Elliot, said was simply “good old-fashioned risk management[8]”.

This accords with the perspective of regulators, with Australian Prudential Regulation Authority regarding global warming not as a moral issue but one “distinctly financial in nature[9]”.

Super funds are feeling the financial heat from climate change Climate change is now an issue ‘distinctly financial in nature’. Peter Dasilva/EPA

This means asset managers are increasingly thinking about how more frequent and extreme weather events will devalue property and infrastructure. They are also thinking about the future worth of companies rusted to fossil fuels as the global economy shifts to net zero emissions.

Investors must also consider the possibility of litigation. For example, 24-year-old Brisbane council worker Mark McVeigh has taken the Retail Employees Superannuation Trust to court on the basis it has failed to protect his savings from the financial consequences of ruinous climate change.

Creating the new normal

Understandably, many funds are hesitant to commit to net zero emission portfolio targets without knowing how those targets might be achieved.

But by setting targets, super funds can create a norm that spurs investment in the ways and means to achieve those goals.

With the manifestations of that warming becoming ever more apparent, pressure will grow on super funds to make net zero pledges across their entire portfolios – and then to back these pledges with both interim commitments and detailed transition strategies.

Read more: California is on fire. From across the Pacific, Australians watch on and buckle up[10]

As Kristian Fok says, change is coalescing fast. We’re seeing promising signs of the super funds responding. But we’ll need to see more yet.

Authors: Amandine Denis, Head of Research, ClimateWorks Australia, Monash University

Read more https://theconversation.com/super-funds-are-feeling-the-financial-heat-from-climate-change-146191

Business Times

Australia has set new expectations for AI data centres – they sho…

Yesterday, the Australian federal government released new expectations[1] for data centres and artificial intelligence ...

AI Is Already Here. The Question Is Whether Your Business Is Buil…

We sat down with Nirlep Adhikari — CTO at LoanOptions.ai and Founder of Mount Mindforce — to cut through the noise and ta...

Is Hiring a Web Developer Still Worth It?

It’s a fair question to ask in 2026. With AI tools promising to build you a website in minutes and drag-and-drop platform...

The Times Features

AI Is Already Here. The Question Is Whether Your Business Is Built for It

We sat down with Nirlep Adhikari — CTO at LoanOptions.ai and Founder of Mount Mindforce — to cut...

Cleared to Land — and Cleared to Die: How a Runway Failure Killed Two Pilots in Seconds

A modern passenger jet, operating under full clearance, descending onto a controlled runway at o...

Leader of The Nationals Matt Canavan - press conference

CANBERRA PARLIAMENT HOUSE PRESS CONFERENCE WITH SHADOW WATER MINISTER MICHAEL McCORMACK; MURRAY-DA...

The Power Of An Uncomfortable Love

How challenging relationships can help us grow. Never have we lived in a time where relationshi...

US country favourite Larry Fleet joins 2026 Gympie Music Muster

Tennessee singer-songwriter Larry Fleet will bring his band to the Gympie Music Muster on Friday...

56 OF YOUR FAVORITE DISNEY STARS SHINE BRIGHT IN DISNEY ON ICE PRESENTS MAGIC IN THE STARS!

The most Disney characters in one show and the on-ice debut of Raya from Raya and the Last Dragon...

How much do you really need to retire? It’s probably a lot less than $1 million

Every few months, someone in the superannuation industry declares that Australians now “need” ar...

South Australian Nationals to open up local oil from Great Australian Bight

Amid out-of-control inflation and impacts from the Middle East conflict, The South Australian Na...

How does your super balance compare to other people your age?

If you have ever checked your super balance and wondered whether you are “behind” for your age, ...