UFTO Note - Calif Treasurer Proposes Green Wave to Invest $1.5B in Cleantech - Feb 3, 2004
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Cleantech 706 Posts |
Subject: UFTO Note - Calif Treasurer Proposes Green Wave
to Invest $1.5B in Cleantech
Date: Tue, 03 Feb 2004
For over a year, California Treasurer Phil Angelides has been
meeting with bankers, VCs, and environmental, business and labor
leaders, and now he's announced a major proposition to
California's two giant pension funds, CALPERS and CALSTRS, which
have $163 B and $113 B respectively (#1 and #3 in the nation).
Flanked by several key players in energy and clean tech, he held
a press conference at NanoSolar here in Palo Alto Tuesday
morning, which it was my privilege to attend.
The "Green Wave Initiative" includes among other provisions the
commitment by the pension funds of $1.5 billion to be invested in
new clean technologies and environmentally responsible companies.
The goal is to gain long term financial returns while reducing
risks -- risks to pensioners' financial security posed by
corporate environmental liabilities, and risks of environmental
damage, energy security, and climate change. Equally, the
opportunities in clean tech are expanding rapidly and represent
one of the next big growth arenas.
There are four main parts to the proposal:
1. Investor Activism
California has been a leader in investor activism, demanding
transparency, disclosure and accountability from the management
and boards of the hundreds of major companies that pension funds
are invested in. With recent corporate scandals, this has become
all the more significant. Companies that cut corners are careless
with environmental responsibilities are just as likely to
disappoint investors as those who cook their books, and companies
that don't plan ahead could get hit with future compliance costs
big enough to hurt their share prices. CalPERS and CalSTRS will
now demand that corporations also provide meaningful and robust
reporting of their environmental practices, risks and potential
liabilities.
2. Private Equity Investments
The funds already have sizable venture capital and private equity
investments (though a small percentage of the total portfolio).
This would be extended by investing $500 million into investments
that nurture "clean" technologies. A similar initiative in
biotech was begun 2 years ago, and now cleantech is a new growth
industry offering returns along with jobs and economic growth,
while addressing critical environmental issues.
3. Public Equity Investments
The funds would invest $1 B of their stock portfolios with
environmentally screened funds, particularly those whose managers
have outperformed non-screened counterparts. This should not only
reduce risk and increase returns, but also help send the message
to corporations.
4. Real Estate Audit
The two funds together own nearly 160 million square feet of
office and industrial space, part of a $16 B invested in real
estate across the US and in 22 countries. The proposal is that a
comprehensive audit be done of the energy efficiency and green
practices in these buildings, towards the goal of using "best
practices" that reduce long term costs and boost property values.
Angelides has asked CalPERS and CalSTRS to put these initiatives
on their agendas for this Spring and Summer.
In supporting remarks, Bob Epstein of Environmental Entrepreneurs
(www.e2.org) observed that the next big growth area isn't always
clear to everyone. In 1984, when he was raising money to start
Sybase, there was a lot of doubt that enterprise software would
be big. He and many others are convinced that cleantech is now
clearly on the launch pad.
http://www.treasurer.ca.gov/news/greenwave.htm
The Treasurer’s website has additional information on today’s
announcement, including the full press release, fact sheets on
the four facets of the Green Wave initiative, and the Treasurer’s
Nov'03 U.N. speech at CERES’ Institutional Investor Summit on
Climate Risk.
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