Varma has continued its biodiversity work by creating a Biodiversity Roadmap for its operations, with the intention to create a framework for investment sustainability requirements, policies and goals, which prevent biodiversity loss.
We launched our biodiversity work by carrying out a preliminary biodiversity analysis of the biodiversity of our investment portfolio in 2020. We focussed on forest industry companies, since they are most directly linked to land use. Our analysis showed that all the forest industry companies in which Varma had shareholdings had taken biodiversity into account in their sustainability policies. The analysis also revealed that from an investor’s point of view, biodiversity indicators still lack comparability The work was continued in 2021 by exploring the risks, from an investor’s perspective, that biodiversity loss presents for different industries, as a consequence of, for example, nature loss, changes in land use and endangerment of species. We also looked into the measures that companies could employ to mitigate biodiversity loss.
When referring to biodiversity, investors should note a double materiality that refers to the impacts that the investee company has on biodiversity and the sustainability risks impacting the investee company itself. The investor is then able to understand how biodiversity loss causes financial risks to the investee companies. First of all, it is important to understand the relationship between the investee companies and biodiversity and ecosystems. For this purpose, we have created a roadmap in which we examine our investments’ dependencies and impacts on biodiversity. The Taskforce on Nature-related Financial Disclosures (TNFD) defines dependencies as ecosystem services that the company leans on in its business processes. According to the TNFD, impacts mean a company’s positive and negative impacts on nature. Risk assessment is important so that we can identify any risks that could impact our investments’ return expectations. In assessing dependencies, we assess our investee companies’ dependence on biodiversity. The more dependent the investee company is on biodiversity, the greater the risk it is exposed to due to decreasing biodiversity. Similarly, the greater the impacts of the investee company’s operations on biodiversity, the more important it is for the investee company to have its own policy to minimise the negative impacts of its operations. We have analysed the sector-specific impacts of our investment portfolio on biodiversity. In the future, rather than sector-specific impacts, our aim is to focus on the impacts of individual companies on biodiversity in different asset classes.
Our goal is to systematically assess the risks and impacts of our investments in terms of biodiversity loss. Our Biodiversity Roadmap applies to the entire investment portfolio.