ESG and Green Business

Bill Gates says investment in innovation is the important part of ESG

Watch CNBC's full interview with Breakthrough Energy Founder Bill Gates
VIDEO10:3710:37
Watch CNBC's full interview with Breakthrough Energy Founder Bill Gates

In this article

Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates on Tuesday addressed the issue of businesses that exaggerate environmental, social and governance credentials, arguing that though corporate sustainability credentials are often controversial, they are still critical for assessing whether to invest in a company.

"The part that I believe in is where you accelerate the innovation. To me, it's not so much who you don't invest in but who you do invest in," Gates said during an interview with CNBC's Diana Olick.

The comments come after the Securities and Exchange Commission earlier this year proposed new rules that would prevent misleading or deceptive claims by U.S. funds on their ESG qualifications and increase disclosure requirements for those funds.

Gates, who is also the founder of Breakthrough Energy Ventures, a leading climate technology investment company, said there is a modest number of companies that will drive down the cost of choosing clean technology over alternatives that emit more planet-warming greenhouse gases.

"I give people strong points where they're making those investments and becoming customers of those green technologies," Gates said. "The 'E' part — lot of controversy, but there is a way to measure it, and it should be one of the factors people look at when they invest in companies."

Global ESG funds received a record $649 billion in investments in 2021 through Nov. 30, up from $542 billion in 2020 and $285 billion in 2019, according to financial services firm Refinitiv Lipper. Definitions of ESG often vary and difficult to measure, creating issues for businesses looking to boast their sustainability credentials to investors.

  • "The whole measurement thing is a little immature," Gates said of ESG criteria. "The field is going to get mature on that. But having that environmental incentive — a lot of investors really do want to get that information."