How Private Equity Can Create Value Through Purpose

Private Equity Firms Can Be Catalysts in Fighting Climate Change; Here Is How

  • Private equity leaders can drive climate change solutions and create value by decarbonizing higher-emitting “gray” assets, rather than avoiding these risks completely
  • Private equity is uniquely placed to drive sustainability due to its longer holding periods and full-ownership models
  • Although industry barriers can pose a challenge, a new whitepaper from the World Economic Forum and BCG outlines five key priorities that the private equity industry can adopt to create sustainable solutions through their investments

NEW YORK—A new whitepaper, “Creating Value Through Sustainability in Private Markets,” released by the World Economic Forum in collaboration with Boston Consulting Group (BCG), identifies key steps that the private equity industry can take to drive change.

The study explored the private equity industry’s unique opportunity to be a key driver in fighting climate change. With its full-ownership model and relative freedom from short-term pressures, the industry is well placed to lead the way in capturing value through sustainable transformation of its investments.

“Many private equity firms are missing out on opportunities to create real financial value through long-term, sustainable investments,” says Shrinal Sheth, Lead, Investing, World Economic Forum. “Industry leaders who are interested in driving climate solutions must act quickly to ensure their firms are operating in ways that allow them to successfully create sustainable value.”

However, key barriers such as knowledge gaps, internal organization misalignments, and an excessive focus on divestment are still blocking the private equity industry from fully realizing its potential in driving sustainability shifts.

Transforming “Gray” Assets to “Green” Ones

The study shows that private equity firms can improve the sustainability performance of currently high-emitting assets by investing in long-term opportunities to make them greener, instead of pursuing divestment-only approaches.

In fact, the industry is ideally positioned to play this role, due to its full-ownership model and longer time horizon, relative to public markets.

“Many private equity investors avoid ‘gray’ or high-emitting assets in an attempt to decarbonize their portfolios,” said Greg Fischer, a partner and director at BCG, and a coauthor of the whitepaper. “This is a missed opportunity. We cannot divest our way to global net zero. Meeting the world’s decarbonization challenge requires investment and engagement. Private equity—with its ability support strategic transformations and a longer horizon than public markets—is ideally positioned to meet this need, transforming high-emitting assets ‘from gray to green’ and making real progress toward our global ambition.”

Three key enablers for this transformation include:

  • Change-over-time emissions reduction frameworks to supplement existing levels-based portfolio emissions targets
  • Carbon pricing to help investors capture the value of their decarbonization initiatives more directly during the holding period
  • Clear retirement and decarbonization policies for high-emitting assets that explicitly define the intended trajectories, provide incentives for sponsors to undertake bold sustainability transformations, and make owners accountable for ensuring that the high-emitting assets they divest are sold not to the highest bidder but to new owners with well-defined decarbonization plans

“The ownership model in private equity allows for meaningful positive change through data and engagement,” said Marcie Frost, CalPERS’ Chief Executive Officer. “As long-term investors, sustainability is critical to value creation, and we believe the convergence and standardization of sustainability data will enable a rapid acceleration in the integration of these factors across portfolio companies in our private equity partnerships.”

“As investors and partners, our job is to improve all aspects of a business to drive growth and improve how they operate over the long haul,” said Kewsong Lee, Carlyle’s Chief Executive Officer. “In a rapidly changing world, that increasingly means helping companies to improve their performance on ESG issues. This is a job we are positioned particularly well for, given our ownership stakes, investment horizon, and expertise.”

Five Steps for Sustainability in Private Equity

The whitepaper has identified five first steps for private equity firms to take to ensure that their investments are driving sustainable change.

1. Invest in capabilities and culture. The gap in capabilities is one of the primary barriers to action for limited partners (LPs) and general partners (GPs) today. Ensuring leadership includes people who have relevant operational and traditional investment experience along with a sustainability mindset can be a vital first step in building institutional capabilities.

2. Focus on a long-term plan. Developing capabilities and driving a cultural change may involve false starts along the way. To stay the course, private equity leadership needs to take advantage of the greater time horizon flexibility in private markets and optimize for the long-term outcome, not just quick wins, by doing things like embracing experimentation and lengthening hold periods.

3. Communicate the plan, along with measurable milestones along the way. Given the lengthy time horizon required to see results at the asset and portfolio levels, communicating the long-term plan and progress toward it to all stakeholders is vital to securing and maintaining buy-in. This effort should include use of both standardized metrics and customized reporting.

4. Don’t just divest, transform. Private equity’s full-ownership model and flexibility to take a longer-term view relative to public markets should enable the industry to transform sustainability-laggard assets, but so far it has not capitalized on this opportunity. Divestment and sector rotation offer quick wins for a single investor, but they do not remove sustainability-laggard assets from the global mix. Sustainability challenges need to be addressed head-on by deploying capital to transform these gray assets.

5. Collaborate to address key barriers. Addressing measurement challenges and establishing the right incentives cannot be accomplished in isolation. LPs and GPs across the industry must continue to collaborate to set standards and policies.

“Private equity leaders can take these five ‘Monday morning’ priorities as first steps to help their firms fully realize their important role in decarbonizing hard-to-abate sectors,” says Shrinal Sheth, Lead, Investing, World Economic Forum. “It is time for private equity to take its role in tackling the global crisis of climate change seriously.”

Read more about Creating Value Through Sustainability in Private Markets and the Future of the Future of Financial and Monetary Systems platform.

Media Contacts:
BCG: Eric Gregoire, gregoire.eric@bcg.com
WEF: Madeleine Hillyer, mhll@weforum.org 

About The World Economic Forum

The World Economic Forum, committed to improving the state of the world, is the International Organization for Public-Private Cooperation. The Forum engages the foremost political, business and other leaders of society to shape global, regional and industry agendas. (www.weforum.org).

ボストン コンサルティング グループ(BCG)

BCGは、ビジネスや社会のリーダーとともに戦略課題の解決や成長機会の実現に取り組んでいます。BCGは1963年に戦略コンサルティングのパイオニアとして創設されました。今日私たちは、クライアントとの緊密な協働を通じてすべてのステークホルダーに利益をもたらすことをめざす変革アプローチにより、組織力の向上、持続的な競争優位性構築、社会への貢献を後押ししています。

BCGのグローバルで多様性に富むチームは、産業や経営トピックに関する深い専門知識と、現状を問い直し企業変革を促進するためのさまざまな洞察を基にクライアントを支援しています。最先端のマネジメントコンサルティング、テクノロジーとデザイン、デジタルベンチャーなどの機能によりソリューションを提供します。経営トップから現場に至るまで、BCGならではの協働を通じ、組織に大きなインパクトを生み出すとともにより良き社会をつくるお手伝いをしています。

日本では、1966年に世界第2の拠点として東京に、2003年に名古屋、2020年に大阪、京都、2022年には福岡にオフィスを設立しました。