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Measuring the carbon intensity of portfolios – An Explainer WACI measures the carbon intensity of businesses rather than total carbon emissions, enabling customers and clients to compare the weighted average carbon efficiency or intensity of a fund with that of its benchmark
Carbon metrics: Is WACI enough? - Emmi For investors, the Weighted Average Carbon Intensity (WACI) has become a key metric that uses the carbon intensity by revenue for companies WACI measures a portfolio’s exposure to carbon-intensive companies by revenue, expressed in tons CO2e $M revenue
Portfolio Intelligence Through a Carbon-Efficiency Factor - MSCI To analyze how a carbon-efficiency factor may help investors measure the degree of security selection with respect to carbon emissions, we consider four hypothetical low-carbon portfolios based on the MSCI ACWI Index (as shown in the exhibit below)
Choosing the right carbon metric - abrdn WACI provides insight into a company’s carbon efficiency per dollar of revenue earned and is a useful metric for comparing companies within sectors Economic Emissions Intensity is a useful measure to understand the carbon intensity relative to the value invested and allows for asset management growth of a portfolio to be normalised
Creating a Baseline Carbon Footprint | S P Global Carbon footprinting is a typical starting point for assessing the GHG emissions associated with a portfolio, as it offers a baseline from which to mitigate risks and drive investments toward lower-carbon alternatives
The carbon calculation conundrum When these findings are extrapolated to the portfolio level the flaws of the most widely used metric to evaluate the carbon intensity of a fund, WACI, can be seen WACI is calculated by multiplying portfolio weights by the corresponding carbon intensity (calculated using revenue as the denominator)
Measuring our carbon footprint » UniSaver New Zealand One such measure is Weighted Average Carbon Intensity [1] (WACI) This is calculated by dividing a company’s annual greenhouse gas emissions by its annual revenue WACI can be aggregated across companies to determine an investment portfolio’s overall exposure to carbon-intensive companies
WACI – a blunt tool for climate disclosures - Solvency II Wire WACI is one of the most prevalent metrics used for disclosing the level of carbon emissions from investment portfolios, and is recommended, amongst others, by the Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures (TCFD)
Weighted Average Carbon Intensity - Financial Affairs The weighted average carbon intensity (“WACI”) for the Investment Pool as at April 30, 2024 is 62 6 tCO2e $MSales based on 78 5% data availability, as measured by MSCI The Investment Pool’s WACI is 38 6% lower than the WACI measure for the All-Country World Index (ACWI) ex-Fossil Fuel Benchmark