Brookfield Asset Management Inc. plans to raise at least $7.5 billion for a new climate-focused fund.
Firm plans to raise $7.5B for business headed by former BoC head Carney
Brookfield Asset Management Inc. plans to raise at least $7.5 billion (U.S.) for a new climatefocused fund, as the Canadian investment firm builds out an ESG business led by former Bank of Canada and Bank of England governor Mark Carney.
The Brookfield Global Transition Fund seeks to take advantage of accelerating interest in solutions to the global climate crisis, with a focus on renewable power and other investments that help cut carbon emissions.
It would be one of the largest — if not the largest — funds in a sector that’s attracting a flood of new capital. Activist investor Jeff Ubben is trying to raise as much as $8 billion for an impact investing fund at Inclusive Capital Partners LP. Roughly $347 billion poured into ESG-focused funds in 2020, leading to the creation of hundreds of new funds to catch the money.
The investment potential is huge as governments and corporations aim to reach net-zero emissions, Carney said in an interview broadcast Wednesday at the Bloomberg Invest Talks virtual event.
“Climate change is the biggest risk to the world, but when you turn it around, if you’re part of the solution, it makes it the biggest commercial opportunity in the world,” said Carney, who joined Toronto-based Brookfield last year as vice-chairman and head of ESG and Impact Fund Investing.
Carney, who also serves as a special envoy to the United Nations on climate action and finance, said public opinion about climate change has pushed businesses and governments to make commitments to curb emissions faster.
More than 100 countries have pledged to get to net-zero emissions over the next 30 years, with China setting a goal for 2060.
The Biden administration’s decision to rejoin the Paris Agreement is “hugely important” for the effort, Carney said.
“Without question, having the U.S. government — the full force of the U.S. government — behind this, they’ll bring new ideas, better ideas, energy, the impact in terms of direct policy,” Carney said, citing the expertise of officials including Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, with whom Carney wrote a paper last year about climate and policy.
There’s no path to net zero without large capital investments in clean power, said Carney, adding that about threequarters of greenhouse gas emissions can be traced to the energy and power-generation sectors.
Getting the carbon out of energy systems means replacing fossil fuels with solar and other renewable sources and will require $3 trillion or more a year in capital investment for decades, so there is “a huge capital opportunity to catalyze that,” he said.