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(Outlet: Wired)
The world needs thousands of new grid battery installations to fight climate change. They rarely catch fire—but many people are skeptical of having one next door.…Read More
(Outlet: Wired)
The world needs thousands of new grid battery installations to fight climate change. They rarely catch fire—but many people are skeptical of having one next door.…Read More
Wharton graduate Suzanne Biegel is a global leader in gender-smart investing who has influenced billions of dollars in capital. Biegel, 60, was recently diagnosed with terminal lung cancer and has been candid about her health. She said her illness has brought even sharper focus to her lifelong mission of gender equality and solutions to the climate crisis. This year, she and her husband, Daniel Maskit, invested $1 million to launch an endowment toward those goals. Biegel, a New Yorker who currently lives in London and has dual citizenship, spoke by phone to a reporter for the Wharton School about her career, her association with the school, and what she hopes will be a lasting legacy of change.…Read More
Turner ESG Fellow and WIVA Investment Associate Teadora Dragic, C’25, explores how businesses can invest in the social determinants of health and the communities they operate in.…Read More
Turner ESG Fellow Kristin Tingle, W ’23 C’23, researches how employee-owned businesses perform against environmental, social, governance, and financial metrics.…Read More
Turner ESG Fellow Marielle Kang, C’24, investigates how climate adaptive agricultural technologies can solve for some of our most complex environmental and social issues.…Read More
(Outlet: Benefits Canada) There’s no one-size-fits-all approach for pension funds looking to use an environmental, social and governance lens in their investment approach, according to a new publication from the pension research council at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania.…Read More
(Outlet: The Washington Post) Climate disasters are only going to become more frequent, intense and expensive even with massive investments in adaptation. Insurers are now waking up to — and attempting to price in — these risks: “Climate risk is driving insurer decisions like never before,” writes Benjamin Keys, a professor of finance and real estate at the Wharton School.…Read More
(Outlet: The Pennsylvania Gazette) To better prepare business students entering or returning to a transforming workplace, the Wharton School announced the introduction of two new curricula designations to debut this fall semester. …Read More
(Outlet: The Wall Street Journal) Those with sizable stakes in ESG investments aren’t in it just to feel good about themselves, a study finds. A paper co-authored by researchers at the Wharton School suggests that many investors who own ESG stakes expect those investments to outperform the U.S. stock market.…Read More
(Outlet: Bloomberg Law) CEOs at Home Depot Inc, Booking Holdings Inc. and other executives found themselves clashing with investors this proxy season as companies faced an unprecedented level of pushback on ESG policies. Executives should be ready to prove the business case for their ESG policies, corporate governance experts say. “Start connecting the dots for the investors and that’s going to help everyone, and then it’s not a red or blue issue,” said Witold Henisz, vice dean and faculty director of the ESG Initiative at The Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania. “Be prepared for these questions and always link it back to the business case, because that’s going to be less politically polarizing.”…Read More