Private Equity Propels Top ESG Hires Into 7-Digit Pay League

Private equity firms, along with hedge funds, are significantly ramping up the amount they’re willing to pay specialists in sustainable finance, as a field once at the lower end of the pay scale moves closer to the top.

According to headhunters, a growing number of ESG specialists are now being propelled into a completely different income bracket from the one they inhabited just a few years ago. That’s as the market for environmental, social and governance assets hurtles past $35 trillion.

Kate Goodall, a consultant at London-based Private Equity Recruitment Ltd., said she’s seeing more cases of top ESG jobs getting access to carried interest, on top of already substantial salaries and bonuses. Carry, which is the slice of profits from successful investments that deal-makers receive, can run well into seven-digit territory and beyond.

Pay levels compared with a year ago are “easily up 50%, maybe 100%,” she said in an interview. “It is incredible. The other big piece is that the pool of talent is very small.”

Emma Penny, a London-based partner at executive search firm Heidrick & Struggles, said a head of ESG can now command 1 million pounds ($1.3 million) in annual pay, with the lowest salaries at around 350,000 pounds. Penny also pointed to profit sharing as a remuneration model for top ESG roles as something that’s starting to appear in more contracts.