In the face of an environmental imperative, the global logistics and trade industry stands at a crucial crossroads. Transport and logistics are often considered hard-to-abate sectors due to their heavy reliance on fossil fuels and the technical challenges associated with electrification.

Nevertheless, the global push toward electrification of vehicles in these sectors is gaining momentum. According to industry reports, the adoption of electric vehicles (EVs) in logistics could potentially reduce global CO2 emissions by up to 30% by 2050, assuming widespread integration of renewable energy sources.

As one of the leading entities in this sector, DP World acknowledges the significant environmental impact of port operations; however, we are steering the narrative toward a sustainable future. Earlier this year, we unveiled the first charging station for electric trucks at the Port of Callao, Peru. This pioneering move not only marks Callao as the first port terminal in Latin America to adopt such infrastructure, but also showcases DP World’s commitment to decarbonizing the maritime and logistics industries.

Electrification at the Forefront

The installation of the charging station at Callao is a strategic component of our broader objective to achieve net-zero emissions by 2050. This facility, powered entirely by renewable energy, features 10 fast chargers of 200 KW each, capable of servicing our fleet of 20 electric internal transport trucks (ITVs). The dual-vehicle CCS2-type connectors and a 2-megawatt substation ensure efficient energy distribution, while a smart charge management platform monitors and optimizes energy consumption and CO2 emissions savings.

In addition to reducing reliance on traditional power grids, 60 KW of rooftop solar panels supply additional green energy to the station, enhancing our operational efficiency and further diminishing our carbon footprint.

A Sustainable Milestone

The introduction of this electric charging station is anticipated to reduce DP World’s carbon emissions by 2,145 metric tons of CO2 equivalents annually at the Port of Callao. This significant reduction is not only a triumph for DP World but also a substantial contribution to Peru’s environmental health, particularly given the country’s ranking in global air pollution indices.

Broadening the Impact

DP World’s sustainability efforts at Callao are part of a larger, continuous drive for innovation. Last year, we integrated 15 new electric cranes into our operations, underscoring our dedication to more sustainable technologies.

This electrification project transcends the adoption of new technologies; it sets a global precedent within the maritime and logistics sectors. Our initiative is a call to the industry at large, urging a collective pivot to sustainable practices that can be adopted worldwide, thereby magnifying the impact of our efforts.

Pioneering a Greener Future

At DP World, we are not just participants in global trade but active stewards of a more sustainable and responsible industry. The steps we are taking at the Port of Callao exemplify our leadership in environmental innovation, setting a model for ports worldwide. As we continue to expand our efforts, our goal remains clear: to lead by example and inspire a global shift towards sustainable trade practices that ensure the health of our planet for future generations.

On this episode of BuzzHouse, hosts Don Bernards and Garrick Gibson discuss trends and insights on the multifamily housing industry’s second quarter of 2024. Don and Garrick discuss the general economic overview, an update on construction costs, new real estate updates, as well as trends and takeaways from the multifamily housing market. Listen in on what we can learn from recent events as we continue through the second half of 2024.

Download the Q2 2024 REcap here to read more about the multifamily housing sector and more.

Multifamily housing resources

For articles, webinars and additional resources for developers, housing authorities, property managers, state housing credit agencies and lenders, visit Baker Tilly’s multifamily housing page.

Earlier this year, more than 400 students from across the state participated in Michigan Hospitality Foundation’s (MHF) ProStart Invitational sponsored by KitchenAid. It’s the highest-level competition for Michigan high school students training for culinary and hospitality careers. Through this program, students had the opportunity to compete against other culinary students, with the winning teams receiving an invitation to the 2024 KitchenAid Senior PGA Championship at the Harbor Shores Golf Club in Benton Harbor, Mich. for a unique culinary opportunity.

In the pasta competition, teams of young, aspiring chefs from five high schools were recognized for their pasta creations:

Bay Arenac ISDRCTC YpsilantiGaylord High SchoolAllegan ESADCTC Riverview High School

Last month, these five high school teams were invited to work side-by-side with professional chefs at the KitchenAid Senior PGA Championship. The teams reprised their pasta competition, this time judged by KitchenAid celebrity chefs in front of a live audience. They also had the opportunity to engage in educational sessions led by renowned chefs.

This in-depth experience helped the students gain insight into the hospitality industry and explore diverse career pathways. DCTC Riverview High School was crowned the grand champion with their Red Coconut Curry Pasta creation. Each team member from DCTC Riverview, including their educator, took home a KitchenAid stand mixer, and each participating team received a KitchenAid stand mixer for their classroom.

“The KitchenAid ProStart Pasta Competition took students beyond the kitchen and taught them critical life lessons around preparation, critical thinking, communication, flexibility and teamwork,” said Amanda Smith, executive director of the MHF. “These are all skills that directly relate to their future culinary careers, and experiences like this are invaluable at this point in their education.”

Opportunities in the industry are rapidly growing. Hospitality is currently an $18 billion dollar industry in Michigan supporting 595,000 jobs and ranks among the top 10 fastest growing sectors in the state with 20,000 current job openings. The KitchenAid brand hopes to further develop the next generation of culinary professionals across the state through impactful, hands-on education.

About Whirlpool Corporation

Whirlpool Corporation (NYSE: WHR) is a leading kitchen and laundry appliance company, in constant pursuit of improving life at home and inspiring generations with our brands. The company is driving meaningful innovation to meet the evolving needs of consumers through its iconic brand portfolio, including Whirlpool, KitchenAid, JennAir, Maytag, Amana, Brastemp, Consul, and InSinkErator. In 2023, the company reported approximately $19 billion in annual sales, 59,000 employees, and 55 manufacturing and technology research centers.  Additional information about the company can be found at WhirlpoolCorp.com.

View original content here.

Transformative medicines have the greatest impact when they reach the people who need them most.

Here, Johanna Mercier, Chief Commercial Officer, shares how Gilead works to help remove barriers to care, improve health equity and increase access to life-changing therapies – all of which underscore our commitment to being a responsible company.

Gilead Sciences, Inc. is a research-based biopharmaceutical company that discovers, develops and commercializes innovative medicines in areas of unmet medical need. The company strives to transform and simplify care for people with life-threatening illnesses around the world. Gilead has operations in more than 35 countries worldwide, with headquarters in Foster City, California.

Originally published by Gilead Sciences

ESG in Action

Governments, regulators and consumers are pressing for change from carbon-based to renewable energy sources. That shift will involve huge upheaval for the world economy and the businesses that drive it. Investors and companies need a framework to analyze and manage the risks and opportunities of the transition.

The Issue

High greenhouse gas (GHG) emitting companies are under pressure to adapt their business operations to a clean-energy future.

The Investment Case

The transition involves multiple risks for corporates. But it also creates opportunities for them to innovate and to leapfrog competitors by preparing successfully for a low-carbon world.

Engagement Is Key*

Based on our climate transition alignment framework, we assess high GHG emitting companies’ transition readiness and engage with their management to help them navigate the new environment. We believe this process is vital to identify transition winners and losers and to support stock and bondholder returns.

Authors

Erin Bigley, CFA| Chief Responsibility Officer

Sara Rosner| Director of Environmental Research and Engagement

Bob Herr| Director of Corporate Governance

Companies emitting high levels of GHG face complex challenges as they prepare for a low-carbon world. Our experience shows how constructive engagement can help support business strategies and investors’ returns.

Companies Face Pressure from Transition Risks

According to the International Energy Agency, demand for oil and gas is set to peak by 2030 as energy generation becomes less dependent on hydrocarbons—a scenario creating multiple business risks for heavy industries. High-carbon emitting companies are under pressure from governments and stakeholders to decarbonize their businesses. They must adapt to a raft of new policies, regulations and reporting requirements. Difficulties in securing financing and insurance will likely make it pricier to obtain capital. Products face obsolescence, and assets may be stranded—made less valuable or outdated.

However, these challenges also provide a spur to adopt new technologies and to improve competitive positioning versus peers.

Assessing Exposure: Creating a Consistent Approach

Given the wide-ranging effects of the transition—both positive and negative—on many aspects of firms’ business models and operations, analyzing and managing investment exposure is an expansive task.

AllianceBernstein’s climate transition alignment framework (CTAF) is one approach to tackling the challenge of pinpointing transition risks and opportunities. It’s inspired by several similar frameworks promoted by experts and industry organizations. But AB’s CTAF isn’t intended to be a mandatory route to net zero emissions, nor a way to assess transition risk through a single backward-looking metric, such as a carbon footprint. Instead, it helps us better understand companies’ unique paths for navigating a lower-carbon future.

The CTAF starts by identifying companies in certain high-impact industries (such as airlines, autos, energy and utilities) that are the biggest drivers of financed emissions in actively managed equity and fixed-income portfolios. Investment teams assess these companies on a five-point scale, tracking their journeys from having no awareness of climate risk (Level 0) to full alignment with a lower-carbon world (Level 5).

Engaging for Action: Clarity and Shared Insight

After our CTAF analysis has helped identify the key facts and where a company stands on its trajectory, we’re better equipped for the next step: engaging with company management.

Recent engagements include firms across the aerospace and defense, oil and gas, and energy utilities sectors. Dialogues have typically been productive for both sides: using our CTAF approach, we’ve been clear about progress we’d like to see in companies’ management of material climate-related transition risks and opportunities. Management teams have been informative, keen to understand our expectations and receptive to our feedback.

For example, we recently engaged the management team of a US energy company involved in hydrocarbon exploration to gain greater clarity on their plans to reach their stated target of achieving net zero by 2040.  The company shared details on their interim target-setting for Scopes 1 and 2 emissions, their exploration of various emissions reduction strategies, and their readiness for expected climate regulatory reporting requirements; we suggested potential starting points for Scope 3 emissions target setting.

That collaborative style of engagement is a far cry from the adversarial approach some might imagine. But in reality, it’s important that these occasions enable an exchange of views. Two-way engagement gives investment teams a clearer understanding of the nuances of each company’s situation—and helps them put the facts into context. This can go a long way toward highlighting risks and opportunities that can be material to a company’s business and performance.

Disclosures are a good example. Investors value meaningful climate-related disclosures both as the basis for making more informed decisions about risks and returns and as proof that corporate management can measure and manage the associated hazards and opportunities. Although companies may be willing to provide the requisite data, these might be problematic to compile, either because of regulatory uncertainties or difficulties in establishing a consistent, robust methodology.

Companies aren’t cut from the same mold, so it’s also important to consider each firm’s specific circumstances, account for its particular industry background and understand its competitive positioning relative to peers. As investors, we want to ensure that companies have a sustainable future—and managing climate risks is part of achieving that future.

We prefer that management makes climate-related changes thoughtfully and achievably in the interests of the business, so our engagements aren’t about idealistic target-setting but about managing material risks and opportunities that can stem from decarbonization.

Voting with Purpose: Will a Proposal Enhance Shareholder Value?

Voting at shareholder meetings puts considerable influence in the hands of investors, so it’s important that we cast our votes responsibly and constructively. Our touchstone is whether a proposal can enhance shareholder value through better management of business risks and opportunities.

To help gauge its likely impact, we evaluate each proposal’s materiality, transparency and prescriptiveness. For issuers that fall under the CTAF, we apply insights and knowledge from our own assessments and engagements to balance the importance of the issues with the regulatory and disclosure constraints companies face.

It’s a considered approach that results in a variety of voting outcomes, as these example voting decisions from 2024 highlight.

Vote in Favor—Encouraging Better Disclosure and Accountability: A US utilities firm received a shareholder proposal to report on the feasibility of integrating targets to reduce greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions into executive compensation. We believed that supporting the proposal would encourage greater disclosure and accountability from management, which in our view had provided substandard environmental reporting disclosure on these material topics.

Vote Against—Unnecessary Emissions-Reduction Targets: Conversely, at another US utility meeting, we voted against a shareholder proposal asking the company to adopt GHG emissions-reduction targets across its full value chain in alignment with the Paris Agreement. Considering the company’s existing comprehensive emissions commitments, backed by state regulators, we believed additional targets were unnecessary.

Abstain—Providing More Time for Progress. A European integrated oil and gas company proposed a commitment to achieving net zero Scopes 1 and 2 GHG emissions by 2050—but omitted about half its overall Scope 3 emissions in its “Scopes 1, 2 and 3” target. We expressed our concerns to company management; however, when it came to the vote, we concluded that shareholders’ interests were best served by giving the company extra time to address the issue.

The 2024 proxy season saw a prominent focus on shareholder proposals related to Scope 3 emissions disclosure and reductions. We generally abstained on Scope 3-related company meeting proposals for the companies we evaluated using CTAF, reflecting the same attempt to balance the importance of comprehensive emissions disclosures with an acknowledgement of regulatory uncertainty and the challenges of measuring and managing such emissions, which take time and resources to address.

Moving Forward

Implementing the CTAF is a multiyear, ongoing assessment process for us. Over time, we’ll apply it to continue monitoring and benchmarking companies’ progress in mitigating material climate transition risk—and to inform our voting intentions.

Of course, we’ll continue to consider the nuances of each individual situation and proposal. But ultimately, we need the companies we invest in to be well prepared for the risks and opportunities of a low-carbon economy.

Additional Contributors: Cole Moore – Investment Stewardship Associate

*AB engages issuers where it believes the engagement is in the best interest of its clients.

The views expressed herein do not constitute research, investment advice or trade recommendations and do not necessarily represent the views of all AB portfolio-management teams. Views are subject to change over time.

Learn more about AB’s approach to responsibility here.

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