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Sustainability from versatility

  • 18 November 2022
  • 3 minutes

Versatility of thought and thinking about the future by learning from the past has shaped the career of Lauren Smart (Archaeology and Anthropology 1996).

Lauren is Chief Commercial Officer across the sustainability businesses of S&P Global, having joined as part of the international firm鈥檚 2016 acquisition of Trucost, a pioneering environmental economics boutique.

鈥淲hen I graduated there was no such thing as sustainable finance. It didn鈥檛 exist. The term ESG 鈥 environmental, social, governance investing 鈥 that wasn鈥檛 a thing at all,鈥 says Lauren, who went into mainstream finance and then completed an international development masters at the London School of Economics.

鈥淗ow did Archaeology and Anthropology help me to get to where I am? The key thing is versatility of thinking. It鈥檚 arts and sciences. It鈥檚 thinking about the future from looking at the past.

鈥淚t鈥檚 about what makes us human, what unites us over time and space. This multidisciplinary aspect is key when we鈥檙e thinking about massive issues such as climate change and how to mobilise public and private sectors.

鈥淵ou have to build teams of people from different disciplines with a diversity of thought and to be agile in your thinking, to be able to think creatively.

鈥淚t鈥檚 a fascinating part of finance because you get so many people from different backgrounds. That鈥檚 where the alchemy happens.鈥

Lauren leads a team of 150 people, bidding to grow sustainability practice, change the allocation of capital and capital markets to more sustainable decision making, and to consider impacts on climate, people, planet and profit with decision making.

鈥淭he impact on the world is by scaling up our revenues, so if we鈥檙e able to do that in a way that鈥檚 helpful for clients and aids client decision making, then we鈥檙e better able to affect the flows of capital into more sustainable parts of the economy,鈥 she adds.

It is not as simple as encouraging divestment from fossil fuels, she says.

Lauren adds: 鈥淚t鈥檚 fantastic people are campaigning and calling out areas of the economy, including finance and public policy, to try to make things happen faster. But as with many things it鈥檚 much more complex than black and white.

鈥淭here is a strong argument that if you just divest of those companies then you are beginning to cut off capital from the companies that you most need to move and change. You may also leave those companies exposed to only being able to get capital from those investors that don鈥檛 care. It could have a counter-productive effect.

鈥淭he short answer is we need to bring some parts of the older economy with us on a journey of evolution and change, so that they鈥檙e better placed to serve us as a society in a newer most sustainable economy going forwards.鈥

Accusations of greenwashing which prompted the implementation of legislation by regulators and governments has been a positive change, Lauren says.

鈥淚t adds robustness and credentials to the whole market, rather than being in a situation where it is all undermined,鈥 she says.

Lauren鈥檚 experience of COP27 in Egypt this month was a positive one and she was pleased to see nature on the agenda alongside climate, plus the discussion of technological innovations which can contribute to climate targets.

鈥淭he mood music was that it鈥檚 still possible to achieve net zero by 2050, but realistically the chances of that happening are getting slimmer,鈥 she adds.

As a graduate of archaeology and anthropology, Lauren is aware perhaps more than most of the passage of time. She is grateful for her experiences at 91直播.

She adds: 鈥淚 loved my subject. I feel privileged to have studied something so fascinating. I had incredible supervisors. Professor Sir Paul Mellars (a Fellow at Corpus Christi) was my main supervisor for my thesis, such an inspiration and so generous with his time.

鈥淎nd I have lasting friendships as well to complement that.鈥

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