Examples of Sustainability Benchmark in a sentence
IVT is committed to leadership in ESG practices and has been a Global Real Estate Sustainability Benchmark (“GRESB”) member since 2013.
In November 2019, the Investment Corporation acquired CASBEE-Wellness Office evaluation certification (Note 5) for Hulic Toranomon Building.(Note 1) The “Global Real Estate Sustainability Benchmark (GRESB)” is an annual benchmark assessment used to evaluate ESG considerations in the global real estate sector.
Within our real estate portfolio, we use the Global Real Estate Sustainability Benchmark (GRESB) to understand the climate resilience and broader sustainability of individual properties and funds.
Based on the four items (governance, strategy, risk management, and metrics and targets) of the TCFD recommendations, the Asset Manager analyzes the business risks and opportunities brought about in response to climate change and has been disclosing information concerning its initiatives since April 2022.(Note 1) The “Global Real Estate Sustainability Benchmark (GRESB)” is an annual benchmark assessment used to evaluate ESG considerations in the global real estate sector.
The Group reports on its sustainability performance each year in its Sustainability Report and via its participation in the GRESB (Global Real Estate Sustainability Benchmark), FTSE4Good, and CDP (formerly the Climate Disclosure Project) Climate Change surveys.
The Fund is the first Japanese fund that participated in GRESB (Global Real Estate Sustainability Benchmark) Infrastructure, which was implemented in 2017, and granted the third place of general evaluation among ten participants of the “renewable energy” peer group.
This is in alignment with the Global Real Estate Sustainability Benchmark (GRESB) Guidance document.
AREF’s preferred ESG performance measurement service is the Global Real Estate Sustainability Benchmark (GRESB) although it is recognised that not all funds may be able to participate in it.
Several initiatives have been developed to promote ESG practices for infrastructure projects, such as the Global Infrastructure Sustainability Benchmark (GISB) and its equivalent for real estate (GRESB – Global Real Estate Sustainability Benchmark).
Scope 3 emissions in the 2019 Global Real Estate Sustainability Benchmark (GRESB) Assessment were calculated as the emissions associated with tenant- controlled areas, electricity purchased by the tenant and indirectly managed assets if these have not been reported upon already in scope1 and scope 2 emissions.