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Women-led Companies More Likely To Meet Climate Targets: Study

  • Writer: By The Financial District
    By The Financial District
  • Mar 25, 2022
  • 2 min read

Companies with more women on their boards are more likely to be on track to meet global climate goals, according to new research, Maeve Campbell reported for EuronewsGreen.


Photo Insert: The data collected reinforces the original premise that diversity and environmental performance are linked.



A study by asset management firm Arabesque found the most diverse 20 percent of the world's 1,000 biggest companies were more aligned with a goal of capping global warming at 1.5C above the pre-industrial average by 2050.


Hitting that ambitious target is crucial to avoid irreversible damage to the planet, UN scientists say, Reuters also reported.



Across the group, including Britain's FTSE, Italy's MIB, the S&P 500, France's CAC, Japan's Nikkei, Germany's DAX and the Nordic OMX, 75 per cent of the more diverse firms were in line with 1.5C.


Arabesque said it gave each company a diversity score by looking at data like board diversity and diversity targets, and a temperature score after checking if the company's climate plans were on course to support the goal. The firm was the first ever to conduct research on this topic.


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Barbara Krumsiek, Arabesque board member and former chief executive at asset manager Calvert Investments, said the data showed a strong correlation and backed up academic studies on the issue.


"So far all the data I'm seeing reinforce the original premise that diversity and environmental performance are linked," Krumsiek said. All the data I'm seeing reinforce the original premise that diversity and environmental performance are linked, she added.


Market & economy: Market economist in suit and tie reading reports and analysing charts in the office located in the financial district.

Conversely, 37 percent of the firms in the least-diverse 20 percent of companies were headed towards a worst-case 2.7C trajectory or above, and most did not disclose any meaningful data, the research showed.


"For investors, lack of disclosure should be a red flag," Krumsiek said. The data from companies underpinning the analysis was collated in the ESG Book, a digital source of sustainability data backed by some of the world's top investors, regulators and companies.





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