tiprankstipranks
Advertisement
Advertisement

GRESB 2026 ‘Higher Standard’ May Boost Demand for Asset-Level Climate Risk Analytics

GRESB 2026 ‘Higher Standard’ May Boost Demand for Asset-Level Climate Risk Analytics

According to a recent LinkedIn post from Jupiter Intelligence, the opening of the GRESB 2026 Assessment Portal coincides with stricter disclosure expectations under what GRESB is calling a “Higher Standard.” The post indicates that reporting is shifting from high-level policies to asset-level, evidence-based documentation of climate and risk management practices.

Claim 30% Off TipRanks

The company’s LinkedIn post highlights that asset managers are now expected to complete full four-stage assessments, update climate scenario work to the NGFS 2024 framework, and rely on asset-specific rather than group-level evidence to secure full scoring. The post suggests Jupiter’s platform is positioned to support these requirements, which may increase demand for robust, financial-grade climate risk analytics.

For investors, the tightening GRESB framework could drive additional spending by asset managers on data, modeling, and compliance tools, potentially benefiting vendors aligned with NGFS 2024 and asset-level reporting. If Jupiter Intelligence can convert this regulatory and disclosure shift into new mandates or deeper engagements with real estate and infrastructure investors, it may strengthen its recurring revenue base and competitive standing in climate risk intelligence.

More broadly, the emphasis on linking climate risk to financial impact reinforces the integration of climate metrics into portfolio valuation and capital allocation decisions. This trend may advantage specialized providers like Jupiter Intelligence that can deliver asset-level analytics at scale, while raising the bar for competitors relying on more generic or policy-level reporting solutions.

Disclaimer & DisclosureReport an Issue

1