$13bn fund seeks coal haven in reversal of ESG policy
26 Jun 2024
After
divesting from Whitehaven in 2021, new research from Market Forces has revealed
that Vision Super is once again invested in the thermal coal miner.
According
to Brett Morgan, superannuation funds campaigner at Market Forces, the industry
fund has changed its environmental, social and governance policy, removing its
ban on companies that generated more than 25 per cent of their revenue from
thermal coal mining.
This,
according to Morgan, has allowed the fund to quietly reinvest in Whitehaven, a
company which Morgan described as “one of Australia’s worst climate wreckers”.
“By
scrapping its coal exclusion policy, Vision Super is out of step with member expectations
as many super funds are dumping all investments in thermal coal,” said Morgan.
Since
Vision Super was among the first to implement a partial exclusion on thermal
coal, oil, and gas producers, Morgan is concerned about the precedent this move
sets.
“It’s
alarming that Vision Super has withdrawn its thermal coal exclusion policy
after previously demonstrating climate leadership,” he said.
Responding
to a request for comment from Super Review, Vision Super said that it “evolved”
its ESG policy on 1 July, so that instead of focusing only on fossil fuels, it
now seeks to “reduce carbon emissions across the entire listed equities
portfolio”.
Namely,
under its new strategy, the fund does not restrict its managers from buying
shares in any particular company, instead they are given an overall budget
expressed as a reduction in carbon intensity from the relevant benchmark.
“Climate
change is one of the greatest environmental and financial risks our investment
portfolio faces, which is one of the reasons why we made this change – the
risks are not confined to fossil fuel companies,” a spokesperson for the fund
said.
This new
policy, the fund said, has been successful in reducing its carbon intensity.
“According
to our ESG data provider, Institutional Shareholder Services (ISS), in FY2023
under the carbon budget approach, the fund level weighted carbon intensity of
our listed equity portfolios was 42 per cent less than the primary benchmark,”
the spokesperson said.
“The
previous year, under the previous exclusions approach, that number was 17 per
cent.”
However,
acknowledging that from FY2022 to FY2023, many energy companies had a decreased
carbon intensity due to higher revenues, Vision Super said according to revised
metrics, the reduction is actually in the order of 8 per cent rather than the
25 per cent suggested above.
Concerns extend beyond Vision Super
Market
Forces also highlighted recent actions by Whitehaven which it fears could
encourage other funds to reinvest in the firm based on their current policies.
Namely,
back in April, Whitehaven hailed the purchase of two of BHP’s metallurgical
coal mines as an opportunity to transform the company “into a metallurgical
coal producer”. In the financial year 2023, Whitehaven generated more than 90
per cent of its revenue from thermal coal but now claims this purchase will see
that drop to 30 per cent.
Given that
several super funds currently have policies in place that exclude investments
in companies generating more than a certain percentage of their revenue from
the sale of thermal coal, Morgan is worried that Whitehaven’s latest play will
see it placed back in funds’ portfolios.
“Whitehaven
will try every dirty trick in the book to keep expanding coal production and
deserves no financial support from any super fund serious about ensuring a
stable climate and retirement for members,” he said.
“Members
are crying out for all super funds to dump all coal for good,” Morgan said.
Morgan is
particularly concerned about Commonwealth Super Corp (CSC) which has a 70 per
cent revenue threshold in its policy. Despite the fund having divested from
Whitehaven several years ago, Morgan highlighted CSC as the only fund that
could categorically reinvest its members’ retirement savings in the coal miner
if it, indeed, starts to generate significantly less revenue from the sale of
thermal coal.
Super
Review reached out to CSC for comment but was told that CSC does not provide
running commentary in response to market reports such as this.
The
corporate regulator has recently taken a firmer approach in policing
greenwashing behaviour among institutional investors, including super funds.
In March,
the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) saw its first
greenwashing court victory after the Federal Court found Vanguard Investments
Australia contravened the law by making misleading claims about certain ESG
exclusionary screens applied to investments in a Vanguard index fund.
A few
months later, in June, the corporate regulator achieved another win with the
Federal Court finding Active Super’s trustee, LGSS, contravened the law in
connection with various misleading representations concerning its ESG
credentials.
Among other
things, the Federal Court ruled that Active Super invested in various
securities that it claimed were eliminated or restricted by ESG investment
screens from 1 February 2021 to 30 June 2023.
Moreover,
late last year, Mercer Super was handed an $11 million penalty under a proposed
settlement with ASIC over allegedly misleading statements to members on the
sustainability of its investments.