Home Banks

Banks

California giant joined by Calvert, Affirmative IM, Praxis and QBE among others
CalPERS
Giant pension fund is in dialogue with (almost) all stakeholders
Development bank sells €163m of notes in club deal
Leading human rights figure responds to recent paper by the Thun Group
Campaign group and SRI investor working together
New report in collaboration with the Banque de France
First-of-its-kind deal involving a utility company
Overview: ‘Water crises’ is recognised as one of the top 3 critical global risks by the World Economic Forum. In addition water scarcity, as has been recently demonstrated in countries such as Brazil and the US, can have significant implications for economic productivity. In 2015 the California drought cost $2.7 billion and shaved 0.1% off California’s GDP. The 2015 drought in Brazil is predicted to have cut GDP growth by 1-2 %, pushing the country into negative growth and contributing to inflation. Draft Agenda: The current impacts of drought on economic productivity What does this mean for investors (portfolio risk) and banks (lending activities)? How is the sector dealing with these risks? Is it possible to create a drought resilient finance sector? And what are the implications for banks, pension funds, insurers etc.? Speakers: Anders Nordheim, Programme Coordinator, Biodiversity, Ecosystem Services and Water, UNEP FI Hubert Aarts, Co-Head of Listed Equities at Impax Asset Management and Manager of BNP Paribas Aqua Fund Piet Klop, Senior Advisor Responsible Investment at PGGM Investments Cate Lamb, Global Head of Water, CDP Moderated by: Sophie Robinson-Tillett, Deputy Editor, Responsible Investor In partnership with: Natural Capital Declaration Sponsored by: BNP Paribas Investment Partners
ri
ri

Copyright PEI Media

Not for publication, email or dissemination