Insights

Find the latest news and insights from TrueShares below.

Climate & Renewables
August 26, 2022

Climate Risk Is One of the Most Urgent ESG Factors

ESG is a financial investment category that considers a company's policies and practices relating to the Environment, community and employee relations (Social), and corporate Governance. All three categories are included in one measurement in part to quantify and compare the positive impacts various companies within and across sectors offer society. Yet when considering the various ESG factors, the environment is considered the most urgent as climate risk simultaneously threatens and offers opportunity in the ESG investment landscape.

There is no doubt that climate risk poses an existential threat to every sector. In fact, 80% of the world's largest companies are exposed to climate risk in some form (1). Climate risks present themselves in three primary ways. First is the physical risk of climate change, both as chronic risk in the form of rising sea levels, drought, and rising temperatures, and as acute risk like floods, hurricanes, fires, and heat waves. The frequency and intensity of both types have increased over the past several decades as the planet has warmed by an average of 1.1 degrees Celsius since the 1880s (2). Every sector from home insurance and energy to health care and agriculture are impacted by the physical risks of climate change. The average area burned by large forest fires increased 1200% between the 1970s and the 2000s (3), with roughly $3.5 billion in property and crop loss alone between 2011 and 2016 (by one estimate (4)), not including other costs associated with health, environmental damage, and loss of life.

Physical risks are the basis for two other types of climate risks. Transition risk acts as a response mechanism to physical risk in an effort to mitigate climate change. Various policies and regulations like a carbon tax, technological developments like electric cars, and changing consumer preferences like the substitution of meat with plant-based protein, all present transition risks, particularly for companies and portfolios emphasizing carbon-heavy alternatives. According to Deloitte, the largest renewable energy stocks rose in value in 2020 by 145% while the largest oil, gas, and coal equities fell by 30%. (5) These economic shifts during our transition to a low-carbon economy will have winners and losers, with the carbon-heavy hitters facing the most risk.

Liability risk rounds out the types of climate risk that should be considered when pursuing ESG investing. Physical risks that might damage property and infrastructure, not to mention the services and industries that rely on them, have serious implications for insurance companies faced with more frequent claims and more extensive damages. For the financial sector as a whole, climate risk poses a huge risk to banking, with a recent study estimating that climate change will increase the frequency of banking crises from 26% to 248% (5).

We believe climate risk is the most holistic and urgent factor within ESG investing as the products, policies, and practices impact (and are impacted by) climate change. And while financial systems are designed to withstand a certain level of risk, they will become more vulnerable as those risks surpass reasonable systemic thresholds. The most compelling strategy for mitigating such risks is for companies to become genuinely compatible with a low-carbon future. Companies that factor climate risk into their risk management frameworks may not only benefit from higher ESG ratings, but might be able to better withstand market shifts. Any assessment of investment opportunities should focus on both decarbonization (to prevent the worst scenarios from occurring in the future) and adaptation (to effectively respond to current risks) as we urgently look for climate risk mitigation within ESG.

Learn more about TrueShares ESG Active Opportunities ETF (ECOZ) at www.truesharesetfs.com/ecoz.

Thought Leadership, Straight to Your Inbox
By clicking Sign Up you're confirming that you agree with our Terms and Conditions.
Thank you! Your submission has been received!
Oops! Something went wrong while submitting the form.

Thought Leadership,
Straight to Your Inbox

By clicking Sign Up you're confirming that you agree with our Terms and Conditions.
Thank you for joining our investment community
Error submitting. Please try again.

Disclosures

©2025, TrueShares, ©2025 TrueMark Investments, LLC. (“TrueMark”).

Before investing, carefully consider the TrueShares ETFs investment objectives, risks, charges and expenses. Specific information about TrueShares is contained in the prospectus and a summary prospectus, copies of which may be obtained by visiting www.www.true-shares.com. Read the prospectus carefully before you invest.

An investment in TrueShares is subject to numerous risks, including possible loss of principal. The ETFs are subject to the following principal risks: Authorized Participants, Market Makers, and Liquidity Providers Concentration Risk associated with ETFs; Equity Market Risk; Management Risk; Market Capitalization Risk (Large Cap; Mid Cap, Small Cap Stock); Market Risk; New Fund Risk: The Fund is a recently organized, non-diversified management investment company with no operating history. As a result, prospective investors have no track record or history on which to base their investment decision. Additionally, the Adviser has not previously managed a registered fund, which may increase the risks of investing in the Fund.

Depositary Receipts Risk. American Depositary Receipts (“ADRs”) have risks similar to those of foreign securities (political and economic conditions, changes in the exchange rates, etc.) and entitle the holder to all dividends and capital gains that are paid out on the underlying foreign shares.

Individual investors should contact their financial advisor or broker dealer representative for more information on TrueShares ETFs.

Investment Products and Services are: NOT FDIC INSURED / MAY LOSE VALUE / NO BANK GUARANTEE.

All registered investment companies, including TrueShares, are obliged to distribute portfolio gains to shareholders at year-end regardless of performance. Trading in TrueShares ETFs will also generate tax consequences and transaction expenses. The information provided is not intended to be tax advice. Tax consequences of dividend distributions may vary by individual taxpayer.

TrueShares ETFs are bought and sold through exchange trading at market price, not Net Asset Value (NAV), and are not individually redeemed from the fund. Shares may trade at a premium or discount to their NAV in the secondary market. Brokerage commissions will reduce returns.

ETF shares may be bought or sold throughout the day at their market price, not their NAV, on the exchange on which they are listed. Shares of ETFs are tradable on secondary markets and may trade either at a premium or a discount to their NAV on the secondary market. ETFs trade like stocks, fluctuate in market value and may trade at prices above or below the ETF’s NAV. Brokerage commissions and ETF expenses will reduce returns.

Fund Intelligence Mutual Fund Industry and ETF Award shortlists and winners are comprised of individuals and firms who have submitted entries or been nominated via the online submission process, as well as through recommendations from leading market participants. Fund Intelligence Mutual Fund Industry and ETF Award judges will use the submitted application material, as well as any uploaded supplemental information, to determine which firm, individual or product they believe to be the most suitable and deserving winners for each category. Fund Intelligence Mutual Fund Industry and ETF Award judges have the discretionary power to move nominations into alternative categories that they think may be more suitable. Fund Intelligence Mutual Fund Industry and ETF Awards were decided by an independent panel of 20 judges with expertise across the asset management space.

TrueShares ETFs (the “Funds”) are registered with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission under the Investment Company Act of 1940. The fund is distributed by Paralel Distributors LLC, Member FINRA. Paralel is not affiliated with TrueMark Investments, LLC. TrueMark Investments, LLC, is the investment advisor to the Funds and receives a fee from the Funds for its services.

TrueMark Investments, LLC is the investment advisor to the Funds and receives a fee from the Funds for its services.

TrueShares ETFs are offered only to United States residents, and information on this site is intended only for such persons. Nothing on this website should be considered a solicitation to buy nor an offer to sell shares of any fund in any jurisdiction where the offer or solicitation would be unlawful under the securities laws of such jurisdiction.