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AWESG: Thermal accounting and a landscape resilience premium
AWESG: Thermal accounting and a landscape resilience premium
As climate adaptation moves up the investment agenda, this article argues that investors may be overlooking one of the most important determinants of long-term resilience: the physical design of the landscapes on which businesses depend.
Drawing on a simple observation during France's recent extreme heat, it explores how diverse, water-retaining landscapes can remain significantly cooler than simplified agricultural and forestry systems, and why this matters for productivity, drought, wildfire risk and long-term asset performance.
Calvert Research & Management: Investing in Energy Transition 2.0: Navigating Rising Demand, Cost Pressures and Geopolitical Complexity
Calvert Research & Management: Investing in Energy Transition 2.0: Navigating Rising Demand, Cost Pressures and Geopolitical Complexity
(https://www.calvert.com/insights/articles/navigating-rising-demand.html)
Calvert Research & Management argues that the global energy transition has entered a more complex, demand-driven phase — 'Energy Transition 2.0' — shaped by rapidly rising electricity demand, shifting geopolitics, infrastructure constraints and uneven policy environments.
Authors Tarek Soliman and Jonathan Pragel identify companies with durable positions across the evolving energy system and present an investment framework for navigating the new terrain. The paper is available as a downloadable PDF.
Climate Bonds Initiative: Sustainable Debt Global State of the Market: Q1 2026
Climate Bonds Initiative: Sustainable Debt Global State of the Market: Q1 2026
(https://www.climatebonds.net/data-insights/publications/sustainable-debt-global-state-market-q1-2026)
Climate Bonds Initiative's Q1 2026 Sustainable Debt Global State of the Market finds that aligned GSS+ debt instruments totalled USD230.3bn for the quarter — a 9% decline from Q1 2025 on a like-for-like basis. Cumulative aligned volume has reached USD6,986bn, just short of the USD7 trillion landmark.
Green bonds retained their dominant position, accounting for 62% of cumulative aligned supply (USD4.3tn), with social and sustainability labels each contributing USD1.3tn.
Carbon Tracker: Oil Companies in Disguise
Carbon Tracker: Oil Companies in Disguise
(https://carbontracker.org/reports/oil-companies-in-disguise/)
Carbon Tracker's 'Oil Companies in Disguise' finds that several major automakers may carry carbon intensity comparable to oil and gas companies, due to systematic gaps in Scope 3 emissions reporting.
The research analyses transition risk and investor exposure across the automotive sector, finding that current disclosure practices obscure the true carbon footprint embedded in vehicle manufacturing. The findings have material implications for investors assessing portfolio alignment with net-zero targets.
Impax Asset Management: Stewardship and Advocacy Report 2026
Impax Asset Management: Stewardship and Advocacy Report 2026
(https://impaxam.com/insights-and-news/blog/stewardship-and-advocacy-report-2026/)
Impax Asset Management's ninth annual Stewardship and Advocacy Report fully integrates its response to the updated UK Stewardship Code, covering the firm's active ownership activities — engagement outcomes and voting decisions — over the past year. Authors include Lisa Beauvilain, Chris Dodwell, Heather Smith and Robyn Lockyer.
Man GLG: A Sustainable Future: Professor Nicola Ranger, London School of Economics, on Climate Adaptation Blind Spots (podcast)
Man GLG: A Sustainable Future: Professor Nicola Ranger, London School of Economics, on Climate Adaptation Blind Spots (podcast)
(https://www.man.com/insights/ri-podcast-nicola-ranger)
Man Group's 'A Sustainable Future' responsible investment podcast features Professor Nicola Ranger of the London School of Economics, who explains why adaptation finance is significantly underdeveloped relative to climate mitigation and identifies the key blind spots that impede progress. The episode, hosted by Jason Mitchell, covers how investors can begin to close the gap — a timely contribution as physical climate risk grows in portfolio significance.
Calvert Research & Management: The Barron's 10 Most Sustainable Companies of 2026
Calvert Research & Management: The Barron's 10 Most Sustainable Companies of 2026
(https://www.calvert.com/insights/press-release/the-2026-10-most-sustainable-companies.html)
Calvert Research & Management has published its ninth annual Barron's Most Sustainable U.S. Companies ranking, evaluating the 1,000 largest publicly traded U.S. companies across more than 230 key performance indicators.
The methodology draws on Calvert's proprietary ESG research framework, with financial materiality as the central lens. The result is a benchmark for assessing sustainability leadership among large-cap U.S. equities, published in partnership with Barron's magazine.
Baillie Gifford: Has ESG reached its expiry date? The term needs a rethink
Baillie Gifford: Has ESG reached its expiry date? The term needs a rethink
Baillie Gifford Investment Insight piece arguing that the ESG terminology, as it has come to be used, has outlived its analytical usefulness and needs a rethink — not because the underlying environmental, social and governance considerations have lost relevance, but because the label itself now obscures rather than clarifies long-term investment risk.
Contents
- Why "ESG" as a single composite label is becoming an obstacle to analysis
- Separating the genuine long-term financial drivers from the marketing overlay
- What Baillie Gifford's research process retains from the ESG era and what it sets aside
[Selected by Mike (54) | Summarised by Opus 4.7 | Human-directed; AI-powered]
AIGCC: Energy Companies Need to Do More on Capital Allocation and Emissions Reduction Strategy (AUEP 2026)
AIGCC: Energy Companies Need to Do More on Capital Allocation and Emissions Reduction Strategy (AUEP 2026)
AIGCC's Asian Utilities Engagement Program (AUEP) 2026 update on the progress and gaps observed across the cohort of Asian listed power utilities subject to investor engagement on capital allocation and emissions reduction strategy.
Focal points
- Progress: more AUEP-covered utilities now disclose emissions data, interim climate targets, and net-zero ambitions — disclosure infrastructure has materially improved over the engagement period.
- Gap: capital allocation has not kept pace. Stated transition ambition is not consistently reflected in capex flows, plant-level retirement schedules, or grid investment patterns. AIGCC's headline conclusion is that "energy companies need to do more" on the link between ambition and execution.
- Investor engagement priorities for the next cycle focus on plant-level capex transparency, coal phase-out timelines aligned with national NDC pathways, and governance evidence that boards are accountable for execution against targets.
Contents
... AUEP 2026 report on Asian listed power utilities ...
- AUEP cohort and engagement methodology
- Progress assessment against AUEP's engagement framework
- Gaps in capex alignment, transition plan credibility, and physical-risk integration
- Investor engagement priorities and escalation indicators
- Implications for sectoral capital allocation
[Selected by Mike (54) | Summarised by Opus 4.7 | Human-directed; AI-powered]
World Benchmarking Alliance: Transition readiness of Canada's most influential companies
World Benchmarking Alliance: Transition readiness of Canada's most influential companies
(https://www.worldbenchmarkingalliance.org/transition-readiness-canadas-most-influential-companies)
WBA analyses the sustainability performance of 49 Canadian-headquartered companies (27 companies, 22 financial institutions) across 18 industries, looking at impacts on both people and planet. The headline inconsistency: Canadian companies and financial institutions are global leaders in disclosure and governance — with particular strengths in low-carbon financing, water management and collective-bargaining transparency — but lag in turning commitments into action.
A companion press release notes Canadian financial institutions are three times more likely than global peers to invest in climate solutions.
[Selected by Mike (54) | Summarised by Fable 5 | Human-directed; AI-powered]
World Benchmarking Alliance: 2026 Ocean Benchmark: Key insights, leading practices and strategic recommendations
World Benchmarking Alliance: 2026 Ocean Benchmark: Key insights, leading practices and strategic recommendations
WBA's 2026 Ocean Benchmark assesses 80 of the most influential ocean-economy companies — across seafood, maritime transport, offshore wind, cruise tourism, shipbuilding and ports — on climate, nature and human rights. Findings are sobering: while more than half of companies have GHG-reduction targets, only 7% report actual progress on reducing emissions (Thai Union and Orsted are the only two with 1.5°C-aligned targets); just 12/80 assess their impact drivers on nature and only 5/80 have assessed nature-related risks; and only 8/80 demonstrate having assessed human rights risks and impacts.
Mowi, Orsted, Thai Union and Vattenfall stand out for integrated thinking across climate and nature transition plans — a precursor to WBA's Integrated Transition Assessment framework arriving in 2027.
[Selected by Mike (54) | Summarised by Fable 5 | Human-directed; AI-powered]
Ceres: Working Across Landscapes: An Investor Guide to Managing Nature Risk at Scale
Ceres: Working Across Landscapes: An Investor Guide to Managing Nature Risk at Scale
Ceres' new report gives investors a practical framework for evaluating companies' participation in landscape initiatives — multi-stakeholder, place-based programmes that tackle nature and supply-chain risk across agricultural and forestry sourcing regions.
As individual corporate due-diligence has proved insufficient to contain systemic deforestation risk, landscape initiatives bring together companies, NGOs, governments, and local partners across geographies averaging 127,000 hectares.
The report explains when landscape approaches are most relevant, provides investor engagement questions to probe the materiality and credibility of participation, and features worked examples from Mondelēz International (Asunafo-Asutifi cocoa landscape, Ghana) and Nestlé (Southern Central Forest Spine palm oil landscape, Malaysia — 75% reduction in forest loss since 2020).
[Selected by Mike (54) | Summarised by Sonnet 4.6 | Human-directed; AI-powered]
Sustainalytics: Transition or Illusion? What Capital Flows Reveal About Net Zero Credibility
Sustainalytics: Transition or Illusion? What Capital Flows Reveal About Net Zero Credibility
(https://connect.sustainalytics.com/netzero_lctr_capex)
Sustainalytics argues that capex allocation — not net zero targets or climate disclosures — is the most reliable signal of corporate transition credibility. The report links corporate capital expenditure decisions directly to real-world climate outcomes, examines where the visibility gap beyond 2030 is leaving concentrated risk underpriced, and provides a framework for distinguishing companies genuinely on a credible transition pathway from those that only appear to be. Essential for investors stress-testing the transition credentials of portfolio companies.
[Selected by Mike (54) | Summarised by Sonnet 4.6 | Human-directed; AI-powered]
Sustainalytics: Leader Badges: 2026's Top Performers, Stragglers, and Strongholds
Sustainalytics: Leader Badges: 2026's Top Performers, Stragglers, and Strongholds
(https://connect.sustainalytics.com/leader-badges-2026s-top-performers-stragglers-and-strongholds)
Sustainalytics' 2026 Leader Badges report tracks which companies earn global, industry, and regional ESG leadership awards each year, drawing on several years of accumulated data to reveal how ESG risk leadership is evolving across markets.
The report covers the screening criteria for badge awards, which subindustries and companies consistently dominate the global list, which regions saw the largest influx of new leaders in 2026, and the structural factors that influence who earns recognition. Useful for investors benchmarking ESG risk management quality across sectors and geographies.
[Selected by Mike (54) | Summarised by Sonnet 4.6 | Human-directed; AI-powered]
Inevitable Policy Response / Theia Finance Labs: Fight, Flight, or Freeze? A Forecast Survey of Market Participants on the Expected Social & Political Response to Climate Change
Inevitable Policy Response / Theia Finance Labs: Fight, Flight, or Freeze? A Forecast Survey of Market Participants on the Expected Social & Political Response to Climate Change
(https://theiafinance.org/wp-content/uploads/2026/06/Fight_Flight_Or_Freeze_Survey-1.pdf)
The Inevitable Policy Response and Theia Finance Labs, in partnership with Climate Proof, have surveyed 86 industry professionals on their expectations for the social and political response to rising physical climate risk over the next decade.
Key findings: 55% expect reactive disaster relief from governments rather than proactive adaptation; near-consensus (97%) that climate, social, and nature tipping points should all feature in physical risk assessments; over 90% expect private insurance to retreat from high-risk regions through selective or large-scale withdrawal; and firms are widely expected to respond through geographic diversification and partial reshoring, with technology and financial products as the leading adaptation tool (72%).
The survey fills a gap in physical risk frameworks — calibrating the social and political response dimension that current scenario analysis largely omits.
[Selected by Mike (54) | Summarised by Sonnet 4.6 | Human-directed; AI-powered]
