The Past, The Present, And The Future Of Sustainability Reporting In The Global Real Estate Sector

Sep 17, 2014 10:00 AM ET

Dr. Nils Kok, Executive Director, GRESB

With increased societal focus on resource scarcity, the need for de-carbonization, and the effects of climate change, investors have become increasingly aware of the implications from these, generally longer term, megatrends. More than any other investment class, real assets are exposed to the direct, local consequences posed by these global risks: more stringent regulatory requirements, changing societal preferences for places to work, live, and play, and exposure to climate-related events, such as flooding and extreme weather conditions.

With these investment beliefs in mind, in 2009 three large pension funds joined forces to better understand their exposure to risks related to environmental, social and governance (ESG) issues in their global portfolios of investments in property companies and private equity real estate funds. The first assessment of the sustainability performance of the real estate industry, based on a selection of 43 material metrics, led to the inaugural results of the Global Real Estate Sustainability Benchmark (GRESB), including 198 property companies and funds. The outcomes clearly showed that the real estate sector was just waking up to the reality of integrating sustainability in its investment and asset management strategies: for example, only 19 percent of benchmark participants had some information on energy consumption, and only 20 participants (10 percent) achieved a ranking in the highest category (Green Stars).

Five years later, sustainability reporting has become standard practice for a large part of the world’s property companies and fund managers. In consultation with the real estate industry, GRESB has further developed the set of metrics that constitute the most important sustainability issues for its more than 130 members, of which 42 are pension funds and their fiduciaries, jointly representing some USD 8.8 trillion in assets under management. This year, 637 listed property companies and private equity real estate funds submitted data, covering 56,000 buildings (excluding single-family residential assets) with an aggregate value of USD 2.1 trillion. Not only has the coverage of sustainability reporting improved, but the sustainability performance of benchmark participants also shows significant progress. For example, 79 percent of property companies and funds now measure energy consumption in their buildings. Collectively, between 2012 and 2013, the commercial real estate sector reduced its energy consumption by 0.8 percent, carbon emissions fell by 0.3, and water consumption by 2.3 percent (based on like-for-like data from 508, 434, and 462 participants, respectively). Over a third of the benchmark constituents are now ranked in the highest “Green Star” category.

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