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The chief executive officer at the world’s largest sovereign wealth fund once said employees shunning AI would never be promoted. Now, the Norwegian fund is using AI to get insights into how climate change is impacting the companies it invests in. 

In today’s newsletter, Nicolai Tangen tells our reporters about how AI helps the fund identify which companies are decarbonizing faster, and more effectively than the market expects — allowing its traders to act on the information. 

Meanwhile, a senior executive at Apollo Global Management says the energy gap between what data centers need to power AI and what is available will not be closed in our lifetime. 

Here’s what could help: a startup is creating rocket-inspired technology that it hopes can one day power data centers.

Want more AI, investing and energy news? Please subscribe to Bloomberg News.

AI seeks a climate signal

By Frances Schwartzkopff and Heidi Taksdal Skjeseth

Norway’s sovereign wealth fund, the world’s biggest, is giving artificial intelligence a key role in protecting its $2 trillion portfolio from climate risk.

Norges Bank Investment Management will use AI for a range of tasks including to “extract signals from company dialogues,” according to its 2030 Climate Action Plan. The fund also intends to use AI to improve decision making, and “to strengthen investment processes across teams,” ultimately helping it identify corporate winners and losers, it said.

“AI has become a real game-changer for how we work on climate,” the wealth fund’s chief executive, Nicolai Tangen, told Bloomberg. It’s helping turn “mountains of information into clear insights that we can act on immediately.”

Nicolai Tangen Photographer: Carina Johansen/Bloomberg

Tangen has made no secret of his enthusiasm for AI. In an interview in May, the 59-year-old former hedge fund manager said he’s been running around “like a maniac” trying to get staff to use the technology, even going so far as to say that employees shunning AI “will never be promoted.”

The wealth fund, which essentially functions as an index investor, is emerging as an outspoken proponent of AI as some other money managers caution against relying too much on the technology. This month, billionaire investor Ken Griffin said generative artificial intelligence isn’t helping hedge funds produce market-beating returns.

At Oslo-based NBIM, AI is already proving useful in determining whether the fund’s climate policy is working, Tangen said. That includes evaluating the effectiveness of its engagement with portfolio companies, crunching data to guide recommendations on proxy votes and generating quantitative climate scores, he said.

“Portfolio managers get this information directly in their trading systems,” Tangen said. AI can help identify “transition winners,” which he describes as companies that are “decarbonizing faster and more effectively than the market expects.”

The wealth fund’s decision to rely more on AI coincides with evidence that the physical fallout of climate change is picking up, adding urgency to the need for investors to act fast. Erratic government policies have also increased the likelihood of a disorderly future, and investors now face the risk of “meaningful losses at the portfolio level,” the wealth fund said in its report.

Waves surge during Super Typhoon Ragasa in Hong Kong Photographer: Justin Chin/Bloomberg

NBIM intends to increase investments in renewable energy infrastructure, it said in Wednesday’s climate report, singling out renewable electricity generation and storage, electricity grids and renewable energy infrastructure funds in its climate plan.

The fund will also examine how physical climate risk is likely to impact its government and government-related fixed income portfolios as well as its real estate investments, the report shows. And NBIM will increase focus on stopping deforestation and on monitoring corporate lobbying on climate change, it said.

“The scientifically established relationship between greenhouse gas emissions and climate change is unequivocal,” the fund said. “The impacts of physical climate change will get worse.”

The Nordic Center for Sustainable Finance called the plan “barely a step forward” and said it will ask Norwegian lawmakers to toughen their oversight of the fund. That includes requiring it to divest from fossil fuels, said Diego Alexander Foss, program co-lead at the center.

Read the full story on Bloomberg.com and subscribe to Green Daily to get more exclusive content on climate finance straight into your inbox.

Betting on renewables

$38 billion
The amount of money Norways wealth fund has earmarked for renewable energy infrastructure. The fund made its first foray into renewables in 2021 and has allocated $8 billion of the $38 billion.

Commitment to the cause

“Despite the reckoning over ESG and sustainable investing, the world’s largest asset owners remain committed.”
Jefferies analysts
A June report from the investment bank found NBIM is engaging with regulators and portfolio companies around ESG and actively seeking data. 

An AI-sized energy gap

By Alastair Marsh

Olivia Wassenaar Photographer: Betty Laura Zapata/Bloomberg

The amount of energy required to supply the data centers powering artificial intelligence is so vast that meeting that need may be more than a lifetime away, according to a senior executive at Apollo Global Management Inc.

“The gap between what AI is demanding and what we have everywhere in the world on the grid in terms of generation and transmission is huge and will not be closed in our lifetime,” Dave Stangis, who has led and developed Apollo’s sustainability strategy over the past four years, said in an interview. 

That means sustainable energy investors need to accept that renewables alone aren’t enough to power the AI age, he said. The comments encapsulate a new approach across the finance industry, where the economics of the energy transition — a concept intended to represent the shift to a low-carbon future — are becoming merged with the economics of an unprecedented boost in supply.

Though Stangis says it’s important to acknowledge that “energy addition” rather than a narrow focus on renewables is needed to power the demands coming from data centers, Apollo has also made clear it sees betting on clean energy and decarbonizing technologies as a lucrative strategy. The firm has already committed or arranged around $60 billion worth of energy transition, infrastructure and sustainability-related investments since 2022. That’s well over half its target of $100 billion by 2030.

Apollo’s approach was recently underlined by its head of sustainability and infrastructure, Olivia Wassenaar. Speaking at Bloomberg’s Women, Money & Power summit in London earlier this month, Wassenaar said the scale of expected growth in energy markets represents a “tremendous” opportunity for investors, with private capital uniquely positioned to seize the moment.

Read the full story here and subscribe to Bloomberg News for unlimited access to all climate stories. 

More from Green

Arbor’s system uses natural gas or biomass to generate electricity. Photo courtesy of Francesca Forquet

A startup founded by former SpaceX employees has raised $55 million for rocket-inspired technology that runs on natural gas and can provide always-available, carbon-free electricity. The goal: to eventually power AI data centers.

Read the full story on Bloomberg.com.

Petrobras, Brazil’s state-controlled energy company, received approval to explore for oil near the mouth of the Amazon River, capping a yearslong standoff with environmental regulators.

New Zealand is relaxing climate reporting rules on concerns over the cost to businesses, in another retreat from policies designed to cut greenhouse gas emissions.

A Chinese firm is working on a 50-megawatt, two-headed floating turbine that, if built, would be the world’s largest.

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