INSIGHT-Putting the green in greenback? ESG investors target corporate accounts

In This Article:

* Push to understand corporate social, environmental impact

* Kering and Danone among companies experimenting

* BlackRock, Calvert and others back Harvard project

By Simon Jessop and Matthew Green

LONDON, Dec 18 (Reuters) - Five years ago, many investors and executives would have politely told Jill Atkins to buzz off.

Now they listen keenly when the British academic presents her work, known as "extinction accounting", which shows how companies are contributing to the demise of honeybees, as well as other species - and how that could come back to sting them.

"I think people are beginning to get it now," Atkins, chair in financial management at the University of Sheffield, told Reuters. "The capital markets have contributed to this mess, and they have a responsibility for sorting it out."

But Atkins is appealing to wallets, not consciences. Her method is one of a series of projects seeking ways to assess a company's impact on climate change and the natural world in financial and accounting terms, and thus better price risk for the likes of pension funds, banks and insurers.

These initiatives differ widely in methods and scope. But they share a common goal: giving the growing numbers of investors pledging to rebalance their portfolios the insight they need to sort the most sustainable companies from the most destructive.

While groups such as MSCI or Sustainalytics already offer to guide investors by creating ratings systems to rank companies' environmental, social and governance (ESG) credentials, these approaches take a different tack: aiming to change the way companies report to their shareholders.

Options range from Atkins' research to encourage companies to provide scientific assessments of their impact on plants and animals, to publishing a "carbon-adjusted earnings per share" figure or putting a monetary value on impacts so misdeeds like plastic pollution can directly affect a company's valuation.

Given the scale of today's environmental crisis, some investors and campaigners compare the depth of change needed in corporate reporting with the kind of fundamental reform of accounting seen in the aftermath of the Wall Street Crash.

"In 1929 there was no transparency on profit; companies could pick their own accounting principles and there were no auditors to verify the numbers," said Ronald Cohen, co-founder of London-based Bridges Fund Management and chairman of the Global Steering Group for Impact Investment advocacy group.

"Today, you could argue we're at a similar crossroads."