Measuring the Impact: A Survey of Impact Metrics in Environmental Real Asset Investing
Abstract
Private investment in environmental real assets has increased over the past decade
due to their low correlation with financial markets, inflationary hedge benefits,
and connection to impact investing. As investment funds begin to manage these assets,
concerns arise over environmental accounting practices. To better understand which
impact metrics funds currently use and what motivates measurement, we interviewed
19 fund managers from environmental real assets funds. Results revealed that current
impact metrics schemes are disparate within and between asset types. Funds are motivated
to collect environmental data by internal and external drivers, including voluntary
certifications, regulations, and investor requirements. If environmental accounting
is to mature, fund managers, investors, wealth advisors and environmental professionals
must align expectations of metrics and reporting.
Type
Master's projectPermalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/11892Citation
Copp, Belton VI; Kent, Xander; & Spence, Liz (2016). Measuring the Impact: A Survey of Impact Metrics in Environmental Real Asset Investing.
Master's project, Duke University. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/11892.Collections
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