Author: Aviva Investors

  • Grow the pie: An interview with Alex Edmans

    Grow the pie: An interview with Alex Edmans

    Interest in ESG investing is expanding at a seemingly exponential rate – and with it the risks of greenwashing only grow. However, Alex Edmans, Professor of Finance at the London Business School, explains why he believes it is possible for companies and investors to create win-win situations for all stakeholders.

  • Crisis or opportunity of a lifetime? Rethinking the future of the planet

    Crisis or opportunity of a lifetime? Rethinking the future of the planet

    Will a world beset with challenges spin into catastrophic breakdown or spur humanity to change and reach new heights? John Elkington, widely regarded as the ‘godfather of sustainability’, contemplates the future with AIQ.

  • The age of climate extremes: Crises, cascades and comfort zones

    The age of climate extremes: Crises, cascades and comfort zones

    The latest assessments from climate scientists suggest some geographical zones that have been lived in for thousands of years are becoming uncomfortably hot and fire-prone or wet and vulnerable to flooding. How will humanity adapt to new extremes? Rick Stathers assesses the evidence.

  • We need to talk about waste: Tackling renewable energy’s dirty secret

    We need to talk about waste: Tackling renewable energy’s dirty secret

    Renewable energy has a vital role to play if the world is to combat climate change. But its widespread adoption comes with a price. As older installations come to the end of their useful life, countries urgently need to work out what to do with the waste.

  • Supply chain ripples: The positive spillovers of decarbonising upstream emissions

    Supply chain ripples: The positive spillovers of decarbonising upstream emissions

    Some of the world’s biggest companies are setting ambitious net-zero targets, with significant implications for their supply chains. How impactful could the ripple effect be in helping to meet the goals set out in the Paris Agreement?

  • Law and climate: Using the legal stick to accelerate change

    Law and climate: Using the legal stick to accelerate change

    Energy majors, cement producers, utilities and financial services providers are among the latest targets of legal action designed to make them move faster towards a lower carbon world. Could this be an inflection point, as the conversation turns to specific responsibilities rather than vague commitments to change?

  • Pricing carbon: Taxing polluters is the only way forward

    Pricing carbon: Taxing polluters is the only way forward

    Nearly three decades after it first agreed to tackle climate change, the world has failed miserably to curb the growth in CO2 emissions. To succeed, it urgently needs to establish an effective price for carbon.

  • The going gets tough: Can heavy industry decarbonise?

    The going gets tough: Can heavy industry decarbonise?

    Heavy industry and heavy transport are hard to decarbonise, but this must be done to reach net-zero emissions by 2050. Can companies, policymakers and investors join forces to make it happen?

  • A fair COP: Why social justice is vital to climate action

    A fair COP: Why social justice is vital to climate action

    For too long, issues of justice and equality have been left out of the climate conversation. But policymakers, companies and investors are slowly beginning to acknowledge the social dimensions of climate action.

  • Cleaning up: Transforming finance for a net-zero world

    Cleaning up: Transforming finance for a net-zero world

    To align with net-zero emissions targets, the financial system needs a radical transformation. Can it get there and, if it does, what should it look like in 2050?

  • Counting emissions and accounting omissions: The struggle to measure, monitor and manage corporate net-zero efforts.

    Counting emissions and accounting omissions: The struggle to measure, monitor and manage corporate net-zero efforts.

    Accurately measuring, monitoring and managing net-zero initiatives is a major task for policymakers and corporate executives, which should be reflected in financial accounts.

  • 50 shades of green

    50 shades of green

    With the noise and interest in ESG investing reaching levels that would have been unthinkable a few short years ago, much of the analysis surrounding it is becoming polarised. A more sophisticated conversation and debate is required, argues Mark Versey, CEO at Aviva Investors.