<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><rss xmlns:dc="http://purl.org/dc/elements/1.1/" xmlns:content="http://purl.org/rss/1.0/modules/content/" xmlns:atom="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom" version="2.0" xmlns:itunes="http://www.itunes.com/dtds/podcast-1.0.dtd" xmlns:googleplay="http://www.google.com/schemas/play-podcasts/1.0"><channel><title><![CDATA[The Week in Climate: Email archive]]></title><description><![CDATA[Email archive]]></description><link>https://www.weekinclimate.com/s/emailarchive</link><image><url>https://www.weekinclimate.com/img/substack.png</url><title>The Week in Climate: Email archive</title><link>https://www.weekinclimate.com/s/emailarchive</link></image><generator>Substack</generator><lastBuildDate>Sat, 11 Apr 2026 06:45:30 GMT</lastBuildDate><atom:link href="https://www.weekinclimate.com/feed" rel="self" type="application/rss+xml"/><language><![CDATA[en]]></language><webMaster><![CDATA[weekinclimate@substack.com]]></webMaster><itunes:owner><itunes:email><![CDATA[weekinclimate@substack.com]]></itunes:email><itunes:name><![CDATA[Elisabeth]]></itunes:name></itunes:owner><itunes:author><![CDATA[Elisabeth]]></itunes:author><googleplay:owner><![CDATA[weekinclimate@substack.com]]></googleplay:owner><googleplay:email><![CDATA[weekinclimate@substack.com]]></googleplay:email><googleplay:author><![CDATA[Elisabeth]]></googleplay:author><itunes:block><![CDATA[Yes]]></itunes:block><item><title><![CDATA[Planes, trains and chemical spills]]></title><description><![CDATA[World Bank goes green. Nobody wins the ESG culture war. Plus, who's responsible for the Norfolk Southern disaster?]]></description><link>https://www.weekinclimate.com/p/planes-trains-and-chemical-spills</link><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.weekinclimate.com/p/planes-trains-and-chemical-spills</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Elisabeth]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Wed, 22 Feb 2023 16:27:00 GMT</pubDate><content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>From the top</h3><p><strong>&#127974; It&#8217;s a tough job, but someone&#8217;s gotta do it. </strong>In the week since World Bank President David Malpass <a href="https://www.worldbank.org/en/news/press-release/2023/02/15/world-bank-group-president-malpass-announces-intention-to-step-down">announced</a> his premature resignation, speculation has surged about the identify of his successor. The ultimate decision lies (not uncontroversially) with the US, given its sizeable stake in the multilateral bank. The White House is expected to select a candidate for whom <a href="https://www.ft.com/content/5945ac4d-a0a9-434f-8b79-68875849b7df">climate change</a> is a priority. Increasingly, shareholders have called on the bank to avail crippling emerging-market debt and unleash its balance sheet on international green finance. Malpass, of course, <a href="https://www.nytimes.com/2023/02/15/climate/david-malpass-world-bank.html">did not</a> do that. Back in September, when asked whether he believed in global warming, the Donald Trump appointee responded &#8220;I don&#8217;t even know, I&#8217;m not a scientist.&#8221; Thanks to that gaffe, Malpass is no longer World Bank President, either. His replacement &#8212; right now, odds are on Rockefeller Foundation head <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/feb/16/rockefeller-foundation-boss-favourite-to-succeed-david-malpass-at-world-bank">Rajiv Shah</a> &#8212;  will be tasked with <a href="https://www.washingtonpost.com/business/biden-can-make-the-world-bank-a-leader-on-climate-change/2023/02/16/d7c6531e-ae2a-11ed-b0ba-9f4244c6e5da_story.html">reforming</a> the 1944 institution to meet the challenges of a 21st Century economy. Climate crisis to the left of it, a <a href="https://www.foreignaffairs.com/china/developing-worlds-coming-debt-crisis">sovereign debt</a> one to the right, the future of the bank hangs in the balance. No pressure.</p><p><strong>&#129413; Nobody wins the ESG culture war. </strong>Last week, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis announced new <a href="https://flgov.com/2023/02/13/governor-ron-desantis-announces-legislation-to-protect-floridians-from-the-woke-esg-financial-scam/">legislation</a> barring investors for state and local entities from a) considering ESG factors in any investment decision, and b) requesting ESG information from suppliers in procurement. DeSantis&#8217;s latest efforts to &#8220;protect Floridians from the woke ESG scam&#8221; may backfire. Local US banks are<a href="https://www.ft.com/content/7d305752-e2ee-420d-8883-6a9a246110f7"> fighting back</a>, as new evidence suggests blacklists drive up state borrowing costs. <a href="https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2023-02-13/guess-who-loses-after-florida-and-texas-bar-wall-street-esg-banks?">Bloomberg data</a> show that Texas and Florida are paying $1.9M and $4.3M more than California on every $1B of bonds, despite having superior credit ratings. Freedom isn&#8217;t free, and nor are large underwriters with the resources to ensure low borrowing costs and institutional capital access. The backlash may have further implications for regulation. Following BlackRock CEO <a href="https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2023-02-20/alphabet-soup-of-esg-needs-fixing-global-markets-watchdog-says">Larry Fink</a>&#8217;s recent calls for leeway, the SEC is <a href="https://www.cnbc.com/2023/02/10/sec-weighs-making-adjustments-to-controversial-climate-risk-disclosure-rule-chairman-gensler-says.html">considering</a> dropping Scope 3 emissions from its climate disclosure requirements. Things could get tricky for companies operating internationally, given the opposing routes taken by the EU and global standard-setter the <a href="https://www.edie.net/issb-to-launch-first-two-sustainability-standards-by-june/">ISSB</a>.</p><p class="button-wrapper" data-attrs="{&quot;url&quot;:&quot;https://www.weekinclimate.com/subscribe?&quot;,&quot;text&quot;:&quot;Subscribe now&quot;,&quot;action&quot;:null,&quot;class&quot;:null}" data-component-name="ButtonCreateButton"><a class="button primary" href="https://www.weekinclimate.com/subscribe?"><span>Subscribe now</span></a></p><div><hr></div><h3>Planes, trains, and chemical spills</h3><p>The debate about Scope 3 emissions is back, resurfacing uncomfortable conversations about supply chains and the planes, trains, and automobiles that link them together. From aviation&#8217;s <a href="https://www.reuters.com/business/aerospace-defense/campaigners-urge-eu-rethink-green-investment-label-aviation-2023-02-17/">bold bid</a> for green-standard taxonomy status to the <a href="https://www.europarl.europa.eu/news/en/press-room/20230210IPR74715/fit-for-55-zero-co2-emissions-for-new-cars-and-vans-in-2035">EU&#8217;s ban</a> on new combustion cars and vans from 2035, transport has been making headlines. </p><p>For once, we&#8217;re not talking exclusively about esoteric sustainable finance headlines.</p><p>Ordinarily a relative outlier in recent ESG debates &#8212; if not most investor conversations outside of Berkshire Hathaway &#8212; railroad operators have trundled into the spotlight on the back of the escalating Ohio disaster.</p><h4><strong>Driving regulation off the rails</strong></h4><p>On 3 February, a Norfolk Southern train derailed in the small town of East Palestine while on route to Pennsylvania. The train was hauling about 150 freight carriages from Illinois to Pennsylvania. Of those, around 20 were carrying hazardous materials and five vinyl chloride. Residents were evacuated, and emergency crews conducted a controlled burn of the toxic chemical to prevent further explosions. Unfortunately for residents, not to mention Norfolk Southern management and shareholders, the burning carriages released plumes of hydrogen chloride and phosgene &#8212; alternatively used as warfare agents &#8212; into the surrounding air, soil, and surface water.</p><p>The backlash has been fierce, compounded by revelations that the accident was <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2023/feb/18/ohio-train-derailment-biden-east-palestine">entirely preventable</a>. Norfolk Southern not only ignored but actively campaigned against long list of expensive preventative measures. Management spent <a href="https://newrepublic.com/post/170675/norfolk-southern-spent-roughly-100-million-politics-since-1990">hundreds of millions</a> lobbying against rail safety rules; costs it recouped, presumably, by <a href="https://www.washingtonpost.com/transportation/2023/02/18/norfolk-southern-derailment-ohio-train-safety/">adopting</a> a cost-saving &#8216;precision scheduled railroading&#8217; model that relies on fewer staff and longer trains. Norfolk Southern accidents <a href="https://www.washingtonpost.com/transportation/2023/02/18/norfolk-southern-derailment-ohio-train-safety/">multiplied</a> on the back of rising profit margins and share buybacks.</p><p>On two lobbying fronts has the company attracted particular vitriol. In 2014, Norfolk Southern  fought the Obama administration on proposed safety regulations for trains carrying hazardous materials. Then, in 2017, it persuaded the Trump administration to repeal the requirement for brakes of the type that might have stopped its car from going off the rails this month.</p><h4>New normal for plastic pollution</h4><p>This is, evidently, a story that underscores the importance of the G in ESG. Though we sometimes rail (sorry) against the methodologies underpinning traditional ratings, here&#8217;s a situation where analysis of company-specific operational risk could have saved lives and lawsuits. But it&#8217;s not <em>only</em> a story about that.</p><p>Vinyl chloride is the base material for PVC. Norfolk Southern had been transporting vinyl chloride (or attempting to) on behalf of polymer and petrochemical industry customer(s). Somewhere in Illinois, as in Pennsylvania, company lawyers are breathing a sigh of relief for having escaped scrutiny thus far. The <a href="https://www.nytimes.com/2023/02/19/opinion/train-ohio-chemical.html">New York Times</a> was one of the few national publications to take a swing at the plastics industry in light of the disaster. </p><p>In the US, reports <a href="https://www.barrons.com/articles/east-palestine-ohio-norfolk-south-train-chemical-explosion-182bf0a9">Barrons</a>, vinyl chloride is produced by <strong>Westlake</strong>; <strong>OxyChem</strong> (<strong>Occidental Petroleum</strong> subsidiary); <strong>Olin</strong>; divisions of <strong>Formosa Plastics</strong>; and <strong>Shintech</strong>, (<strong>Shin-Etsu Chemical</strong> subsidiary). Formosa Plastics and Olin claim its products weren&#8217;t involved. The others have yet to comment. For whatever it&#8217;s worth, a September 2022 <a href="https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/norfolk-southern-honors-48-customers-with-thoroughbred-chemical-safety-award-301630670.html">press release</a>, issued by Norfolk Southern, cites all three companies as winners of the 2021 &#8220;Thoroughbred Chemical Safety Award for safely handling products regulated as hazardous materials.&#8221; The reserve of companies that &#8220;safely transported or originated 100% of their shipments over Norfolk Southern&#8217;s rail network without a single incident in 2021,&#8221; the benchmark is nothing to be scoffed at.</p><p>The total ecosystem encompasses far more than a handful of PVC producers. The American Chemistry Council, which counts among its members subsidiaries of ExxonMobil, Shell, and BP, campaigns alongside the Association of American Railroads on everything from <a href="https://www.theatlantic.com/science/archive/2019/12/freight-railroads-funded-climate-denial-decades/603559/">carbon denial</a> to freight safety. It was in the engine room fighting railroad union action last year, as it was in involved in the 2014 and 2017 rail regulation showdowns for which Norfolk Southern has been criticised. </p><p>The mutual support of petrochemical and railroad industries makes sense. Of the <a href="https://www.aar.org/news/rail-traffic-for-december-and-the-week-ending-december-31-2022/#:~:text=Total%20U.S.%20carload%20traffic%20for,and%20trailers%2C%20from%20last%20year.">c.12M freight cars</a> that cross US railroads each year, about <a href="https://www.aar.org/issue/freight-rail-chemical-industry/">2.2M</a> carry chemical products. It&#8217;s not a new relationship, even if the material has changed. Freight and fossil fuel companies have been bedfellows for a very long time. </p><h4>Renewable leaders of tomorrolololol</h4><p>The purpose of a fossil fuel company is to sell fossil fuels, not to generate low-cost energy. Most assumptions otherwise are, regretfully, wishful thinking. Even as Shell fights high-profile greenwashing lawsuits (the major stands accused of inflating its renewable expenditure), petrochemicals have, quietly, been claiming an ever-growing share of its total revenue. Not that they factor into Shell&#8217;s <a href="https://www.clientearth.org/projects/the-greenwashing-files/shell/">Scope 3 net-zero target</a>, which applies only to its energy products.</p><p>The <a href="https://iea.blob.core.windows.net/assets/c282400e-00b0-4edf-9a8e-6f2ca6536ec8/WorldEnergyOutlook2022.pdf">International Energy Agency</a> claims plastic manufacturing will account for more than a third of the growth in oil demand by 2030 and nearly half by 2050, ahead of trucks, aviation, and shipping. At that point, finds the <a href="https://www.ciel.org/plasticandclimate/">Centre for International Environmental Law</a>, the cumulative greenhouse gas emissions from plastic could reach over 56 gigatons, or 10-13% of the entire remaining carbon budget. </p><p>For sustainable investors assessing the fallout of the Norfolk Southern disaster, the foremost concern is whether it represents an idiosyncratic or systemic event for the company and broader US railroad industry. But there&#8217;s another question attracting less interest, despite potentially larger ramifications: Is this an idiosyncratic or systemic event for the petrochemical and polymer industry? </p><p>In other words, is it a Deepwater Horizon spill &#8212; a potentially repeatable event that informs perceptions of risk and impact at a sector level &#8212; or a one-off for which the industry bears no responsibility? <a href="https://www.sierraclub.org/sierra/2022-3-fall/feature/these-are-new-titans-plastic-shell-pennsylvania-fracking#:~:text=Now%20it's%20the%20titans%20of,to%20the%20global%20plastic%20crisis.">Evidence on the ground</a> is conclusive. Environmental and human health hazards are no aberration but a feature of plastic production.</p>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Developing (market) polycrisis]]></title><description><![CDATA[Bright power prospects. Fossil fuel U-turn. Shy transition plans. Plus, developing markets in crisis.]]></description><link>https://www.weekinclimate.com/p/developing-market-polycrisis</link><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.weekinclimate.com/p/developing-market-polycrisis</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Elisabeth]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Wed, 15 Feb 2023 16:50:29 GMT</pubDate><content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>From the top</h3><p>&#128267; The International Energy Agency (IEA) has identified bright sparks in its annual assessment of the global power sector. The biggest carbon emitter is now leading the transition to net zero, according to the <a href="https://www.iea.org/reports/electricity-market-report-2023/executive-summary">Electricity Market Report 2023</a>, bringing the sector &#8220;close to a tipping point.&#8221; The IEA forecasts that new electricity demand will be almost entirely met by renewable and nuclear sources of energy from 2025, bringing clean energy, as a share of total generation, to 35% (2025) from 29% (2022). China is expected to account for 45% of clean-energy growth during that period, followed by the EU at 15%. It must be accompanied by greater investment in grid security, resilience, and flexibility, adds the IEA, which warns the sector will only grow more vulnerable to extreme weather events.</p><p>&#9981; Plot twist: &#8216;<a href="https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2023-02-12/saudi-aramco-says-esg-investing-threatens-energy-security">Energy security</a>&#8217; isn&#8217;t the only reason fossil fuel companies might want to defend their revenue streams. Oil companies are finally being honest about renewable energy, reports <a href="https://newrepublic.com/article/170442/oil-companies-wind-energy-looney">The New Republic</a>, as record profits prompt a rapid retreat from lofty commitments. Having pledged to cut oil and gas production to 40% by 2030, BP last week adjusted its target to a rather more modest 25% &#8212; during, incidentally, an earnings call on which the company announced its highest profits in 114 years. The about-turn is an assurance that fossil fuel production will increase well into the next decade, warns the <a href="https://www.ft.com/content/ec2918ab-d144-488d-ba66-e92137181362 announced">FT&#8217;s Simon Mundy</a>. Should that come as a surprise? As we&#8217;ve <a href="https://www.weekinimpact.com/p/what-does-big-oil-want">argued before</a>, it&#8217;s naive to expect the industry to pivot <em>voluntarily </em>from a lucrative business to one in which it has less expertise and less profit.</p><p>&#128499;&#65039; If the court of public opinion doesn&#8217;t cut it, there&#8217;s always the other kind. Non-profit group <a href="https://www.clientearth.org/">ClientEarth</a> has filed a lawsuit against all 11 directors of Shell for failing to manage &#8220;the material and foreseeable risks posed to the company by climate change.&#8221; The first-ever attempt to hold directors personally liable for transition risk has garnered support from institutional asset owners and managers, many of whom are pushing listed FTSE companies to put their transition plans to the vote under a &#8216;<a href="https://www.sayonclimate.org/">Say on Climate</a>&#8217; resolution. Meanwhile, the FCA <a href="https://www.reuters.com/business/sustainable-business/get-cracking-climate-transition-plans-uk-watchdog-tells-firms-2023-02-07/">told</a> firms to get moving with their transition plans ahead of formal regulatory guidance. There&#8217;s a lot to be done, according to a <a href="https://cdn.cdp.net/cdp-production/cms/reports/documents/000/006/785/original/Climate_transition_plan_report_2022_-_FINAL.pdf?1675678221">new report</a> from CDP. Of nearly 20,000 companies disclosing in line with its framework, just 81 have a credible strategy to reach net zero by 2050.</p><p class="button-wrapper" data-attrs="{&quot;url&quot;:&quot;https://www.weekinclimate.com/subscribe?&quot;,&quot;text&quot;:&quot;Subscribe now&quot;,&quot;action&quot;:null,&quot;class&quot;:null}" data-component-name="ButtonCreateButton"><a class="button primary" href="https://www.weekinclimate.com/subscribe?"><span>Subscribe now</span></a></p><div><hr></div><h3>Developing (market) polycrisis</h3><p>Perhaps now more than ever, the state of sustainable development depends on where you look. </p><p>On the one hand, there&#8217;s the incredible rapid fire climate action emerging from global superpowers. Leaning towards public spending and tax breaks over carbon prices and regulation, policymakers are rolling out the red carpet for green industry, innovation, and investment. The new arms race is a powerful lever for tackling climate change, writes Hugo Dixon in <a href="https://www.breakingviews.com/columns/green-subsidy-race-may-be-what-the-world-needs/">Reuters</a>. It&#8217;s also deeply unfair. </p><p>Discriminatory by definition, protectionist policies make for a rugged playing field. It&#8217;s a discomforting refutation of the Western democratic ideals represented, albeit imperfectly, by &#8216;free global trade&#8217;. In theory if not practice, the implicit promise of equal economic opportunity serves to mollify even the gross inequity of climate change, for which developing countries bear least responsibility and most brunt. </p><p>To make explicit that a country&#8217;s odds of competing in this industrial revolution were cemented in the last one? <em>You&#8217;re not supposed to say that part out loud!</em></p><p>Economic bifurcation is a risk even within &#8212; and to &#8212; the single market, say critics of the EU Green Deal Industrial Plan. Relaxed rules on state aid could widen the chasm between countries that can afford to cultivate their clean-energy industries (France, Germany) and the more fragile economies that cannot. Right now, <a href="https://www.funds-europe.com/news/esma-flags-high-risks-in-fragile-markets">warns ESMA</a>, there are quite a few of the latter.</p><p>And that&#8217;s just in Europe.</p><h4>Deepening sovereign debt crisis</h4><p>Briefing the UN General Assembly last week, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres made emerging economies the focus of his 2023 priorities. He has his work cut out. This year already, Egypt, Pakistan, and Lebanon have been forced to drop their exchange rates to unlock IMF assistance. No fewer than two dozen more countries are in the queue for bailout packages, reports <a href="https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2023-02-12/the-devaluation-run-in-emerging-markets-is-just-getting-started">Bloomberg</a>. </p><p>Cleaning up the debt mess is just part of the solution to the deepening crisis, warn the FT&#8217;s <a href="https://www.ft.com/content/889fec5a-cb62-463f-af8c-22c841bddb65">Martin Wolf</a> and <a href="https://www.ft.com/content/d767580d-2db3-43f2-a509-2b29eb81003a">Rebeca Grynspan</a>, respectively. Just as important is a better framework for financing development, without which, parts of the world risk losing a decade to escalating disasters and dwindling resources. The costs would be impossible to contain. In the context of growing environmental and geopolitical distress, says Grynspan, the debt crisis facing the developing world is one the biggest threats to global security and financial stability. </p><p>Never one to pull punches, Guterres appealed for &#8220;radical transformation&#8221; of the global financial system under &#8220;a new Bretton Woods&#8221; framework, one centred on the &#8220;dramatic needs of developing countries.&#8221; The alternative, he warned, is &#8220;global catastrophe.&#8221; Guterres sketched out several potential systemic reforms to unlock private capital flows towards developing countries and &#8220;rescue the Sustainable Development Goals&#8221; ahead of the SDG summit September. </p><h4>Fixing international financing</h4><p>At their upcoming spring meetings, the World Bank and IMF face pressure to reform international financing by easing the path for blended and &#8212; increasingly importantly &#8212; private flows. </p><p>Guterres has called on multilateral development banks to adopt first loss positions to reassure and incentivise private-sector investors. The suggestion was echoed by US Treasury secretary <a href="https://home.treasury.gov/news/press-releases/jy1258">Janet Yellen</a> in a recent speech to Washington, during which she urged the World Bank to expand its remit to &#8220;address global challenges head on&#8221; by reforming international financing &#8212; and not just by lowering borrowing costs or issuing low-interest debt instruments. Yellen was emphatic. Reforms must incentivise &#8220;stronger mobilization of private capital.&#8221; </p><blockquote><p>&#8220;International public finance alone will come nowhere close to the level of financing needed to effectively tackle global challenges and achieve the Sustainable Development Goals.&#8221;</p></blockquote><p>Lack&nbsp;of&nbsp;investable&nbsp;solutions&nbsp;is&nbsp;often&nbsp;cited as an obstacle to investing in developing economies. It&#8217;s an exaggerated claim, reports <a href="https://esgclarity.com/upping-ambition-in-sustainable-emerging-markets-investing/">Natasha Turner </a>at ESG Clarity. Nonetheless, many emerging markets can ill afford to look less investable.</p><h4>Seeing the wood for the trees</h4><p>Last week, we explored the Adani scandal in the specific context of sustainable investing. From here, the ESG complex is looking at two possible responses: a) work harder to ensure it doesn&#8217;t happen next time, or b) remove any possibility of there being a &#8216;next time&#8217; by retreating from higher-risk emerging market opportunities</p><p>The latter would be another catastrophic development for emerging markets and another characteristic one by the ESG industry.</p><p>In an utterly counterintuitive twist, &#8216;sustainable&#8217; funds are, reportedly, diverting money away from the places that need it most. Put simply &#8212; as we did in our August <a href="https://www.util.co/report-impact-investment-leaders-and-laggard">research report</a> and the <a href="https://www.ft.com/content/15008f52-0fcd-4b8e-a70e-b64316030588">FT in October 2022</a> &#8212; ESG, as practiced, is bad for emerging markets. Since the strategy once understood to mean &#8216;invest in positive change&#8217; (impact) is now practiced as &#8216;invest to avoid risk&#8217; (ESG), emerging markets are at a distinct disadvantage. Their perceived risks, coupled with scant coverage by traditional ESG data providers, exclude them from growing pools of international capital.</p><p>The annual shortfall in investment required to meet the SDGs is $4.3T and ticking upwards. To address climate change alone, emerging economies require an extra $2T each year, of which 70% must derive from private finance. The Adani scandal threatens to cast a longer shadow over the financing plans of Indian and, potentially, other emerging market companies, for which foreign investment had already been drying up. Investors must not let that happen.</p>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Adani was ESG]]></title><description><![CDATA[Clues in the capex. EU green seeds. Plus, how did Adani pass the ESG test?]]></description><link>https://www.weekinclimate.com/p/adani-was-esg</link><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.weekinclimate.com/p/adani-was-esg</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Elisabeth]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Mon, 06 Feb 2023 23:03:08 GMT</pubDate><content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>From the top</h3><p><strong>&#127466;&#127482; </strong>The EU has hit back at the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) with a <a href="https://ec.europa.eu/commission/presscorner/detail/en/ip_23_510">stimulus package</a> of its own. Designed to stimulate cleantech innovation and investment on the continent, the Green Deal Industrial Plan includes initiatives to simplify the regulatory environment of, provide faster funding to, enhance the workforce underpinning, and relax trading conditions for green energy projects. Of particular note: Measures to streamline and fast-track permitting for new production sites, as well those geared towards relaxing state-aid rules and providing more manufacturing subsidies. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen has been emphatic in her ambition to &#8220;make Europe the home of cleantech.&#8221; Given it currently <a href="https://www.euractiv.com/section/energy-environment/opinion/it-takes-longer-to-permit-a-wind-farm-than-to-build-it/">takes longer </a>to permit a wind farm than to build it, the stimulus may be the type of aggressive action that the EU needs to secure its industrial lead. In addition to stopping a potential flight of money and talent to the US, <a href="https://www.spglobal.com/marketintelligence/en/news-insights/latest-news-headlines/eu-green-plan-aims-to-rival-us-climate-law-repel-deindustrialization-fears-73884229">S&amp;P suggests</a> it could bring capacity back to Europe from lower-cost manufacturing centres in Asia. But at what cost? The <a href="https://www.ft.com/content/85b55126-e1e6-4b2c-8bb2-753d3cafcbe5">FT suggests</a> the panicked &#8216;race to the bottom&#8217; sparked by the IRA puts the entire EU economic model at risk, as relaxed state aid rules threaten to fragment the single market. For European as for world trade, then.</p><p>&#128738;&#65039; <a href="https://www.grid.news/story/climate/2023/01/31/record-2022-profits-show-the-oil-and-gas-industry-remains-strong-as-climate-change-worsens/">Record-breaking earnings</a> are in for oil and gas companies. Slated as &#8216;<a href="https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/feb/02/shell-profits-2022-surging-oil-prices-gas-ukraine">obscene</a>&#8217; (Shell, $40B) and &#8216;<a href="https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-64472806">outrageous</a>&#8217; (Exxon, $55.7B), GDP-beating 2022 profits are prompting renewed calls for <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/feb/02/shell-profits-2022-surging-oil-prices-gas-ukraine">bigger windfall taxes</a>. Oil majors are pushing back. Their case would be stronger had they a clearer plan for putting their profits to work, argues <a href="https://www.esginvestor.net/take-five-what-a-waste-of-a-windfall/">ESG Investor</a>. Conflicting <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/jan/29/shell-and-bp-face-tough-job-of-keeping-customers-and-investors-happy-as-profits-roll-in">pressure</a> from investors and customers creates a fertile ground for greenwash. The clues are in the capex. BP is reportedly planning to <a href="https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/right-on-bp-wrongfooted-by-a-different-kind-of-climate-change-kdcwl776s">pump the brakes</a> on its renewables drive. Shell, meanwhile, spends a fraction of its reported expenditure on clean energy, according to <a href="https://www.globalwitness.org/en/campaigns/fossil-gas/shell-faces-groundbreaking-complaint-misleading-us-authorities-and-investors-its-energy-transition-efforts/">Global Witness</a>. In 2021, the oil major claimed it directed 12% towards its Renewables and Energy Solutions division. Global Witness puts the figure closer to 1.5%. Having lodged a complaint with the SEC, the NGO is urging regulators to investigate Shell&#8217;s &#8220;misleading claims.&#8221; CEO Wael Sawan blames Shell&#8217;s structural complexity for any confusion, reports ESG Investor. Structural complexity can hide a multitude of sins (more on that below), but it can&#8217;t obscure the inevitability of <a href="https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2023-02-02/even-oil-giant-bp-is-calling-time-on-the-fossil-fuel-era">peak oil</a>. As <a href="https://carbontracker.org/investors-need-to-look-carefully-at-stranded-asset-risks/">Carbon Tracker</a> noted recently, &#8220;an awful lot of oil refinery capacity [is] going to have to be written down.&#8221; The mistake, however &#8212; as <a href="https://www.weekinimpact.com/p/what-does-big-oil-want">we&#8217;ve argued</a> before &#8212; is believing that oil companies will go quietly. Or cleanly.</p><p class="button-wrapper" data-attrs="{&quot;url&quot;:&quot;https://www.weekinclimate.com/subscribe?&quot;,&quot;text&quot;:&quot;Subscribe now&quot;,&quot;action&quot;:null,&quot;class&quot;:null}" data-component-name="ButtonCreateButton"><a class="button primary" href="https://www.weekinclimate.com/subscribe?"><span>Subscribe now</span></a></p><div><hr></div><h3>Adani was ESG</h3><p>Gautam Adani and his eponymous empire have had a bad week.</p><p>In late January, US short-seller <a href="https://hindenburgresearch.com/adani/">Hindenburg Research</a> published the results of its two-year investigation into Adani Group. Uncovering &#8220;brazen stock manipulation and accounting fraud scheme,&#8221; the bruising report claims the industrial conglomerate inflated its valuation artificially through a combination of offshore shell companies and engineered accounting and earnings. The state of its leverage was described as a &#8220;house of cards.&#8221;</p><p>It&#8217;s never a good time to be accused of &#8220;pulling the largest con in corporate history.&#8221; Days ahead of a planned $2.5B share sale definitely isn&#8217;t it. By Wednesday of last week, Adani Enterprises was forced to call off the sale. As of today, the rout had vaporised $112B from the market capitalisation of Adani Group&#8217;s seven listed companies. </p><p>From index providers if not investors, the response was swift. S&amp;P Dow Jones <a href="https://www.spglobal.com/spdji/en/documents/indexnews/announcements/20230202-1461140/1461140_djsi-adani-20230202.pdf">ousted</a> Adani Enterprises from its sustainability indexes, &#8220;after a media and stakeholder analysis triggered by allegations of stock manipulation and accounting fraud.&#8221; But the unaddressed question remains: Should a dedicated sustainable index or <a href="https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2023-01-30/activists-ask-bondholders-to-stop-funding-adani-s-coal-empire?leadSource=uverify%20wall">asset manager</a> have had exposure to any Adani subsidiary in the first place?</p><h4>The dubious value of an ESG score</h4><p>In its <a href="https://www.adani.com/-/media/Project/Adani/Invetsors/Adani-Response-to-Hindenburg-January-29-2023.pdf?la=en">413-page response</a> to Hindenburg&#8217;s allegations, Adani&#8217;s defence is peppered with over 100 ESG-related terms and couched in its ESG track record. Prominent coverage of the group&#8217;s adherence to various standards and frameworks doesn&#8217;t just complement the defence; it <em>is </em>the defence.</p><p>We learn about the &#8220;ESG credentials and environmental commitments of Adani Portfolio companies,&#8221; each of which has a &#8220;robust ESG framework and glide path in place, which is focused on assurance framework.&#8221; Those include &#8220;best-in-class global disclosures and standards like TCFD, SBTi, CDP, SDGs.&#8221; Its &#8220;governance standards [are aligned with] Global Best practices,&#8221; and it recently implemented a &#8220;Corporate Responsibility Committee in all&#8230; portfolio companies, which does the review of the ESG progress and framework alignment.&#8221; Adani is &#8220;fully committed to ESG aspects,&#8221; as evidenced by its practice of &#8220;[identifying] key ESG risks and [adopting] multiple mitigation measures.&#8221;</p><p>The fact it&#8217;s not all fluff says a lot more about ESG ratings than it does Adani.</p><p>In recent years, Adani has managed to master &#8216;sustainability&#8217; (albeit not, as it turns out, on the debt front) on behalf of all its subsidiaries. As recently as November 2022, Adani Ports received a top ESG score from <a href="https://www.knowesg.com/featured-article/adani-ports-achieves-a-top-esg-rating-from-moodys-esg-solutions">Moody&#8217;s ESG Solutions</a>. This is a conglomerate with operations in commodities, utilities, gas, and airports; one engaged in some of the most controversial <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2022/dec/20/india-adani-coal-mine-kete-hasdeo-arand-forest-displaced-villages">coal mining projects</a> in recent history, including the largest <a href="https://www.stopadani.com/why_stop_adani">open-pit coal mining operation</a> &#8212; christened the &#8220;most insane energy project&#8221; &#8212; in the world. </p><p>Thanks to the &#8220;convoluted structures&#8221; and &#8220;multiplicity of subsidiaries&#8221; cited in the Hindenburg report, Adani has long been able to finance its dirtier operations with the proceeds of sustainable fund flows and &#8212; more alarmingly &#8212; sustainability-linked bonds. Adani Green, a staple in ESG funds, may have funded the thermal coal exploration of its sister companies. Allegations of cross-contamination aren&#8217;t, however, new. (For what it&#8217;s worth, nor are they restricted to Adani.) </p><h4>Indexes amplify ESG failings</h4><p>Back in 2020, Ulf Erlandsson of <a href="https://anthropocenefii.org/afii-home">Anthropocene Fixed Income Institute</a> sat down with <a href="https://www.responsible-investor.com/missing-the-bigger-picture-how-a-coal-giant-scored-better-on-esg-than-a-renewables-firm-and-made-the-ftse4good/">Responsible investor</a> to discuss the curious case of Adani Group and its sky-high ESG ratings. &#8220;This is not a story about how coal companies can get it right,&#8221; said the vindicated bond vigilante, &#8220;but rather one about the ESG industry can get it wrong.&#8221;</p><p>In the same year and a younger iteration of this newsletter, we expanded on Erlandsson&#8217;s research. Our position then &#8212; as it is today &#8212; was that Adani Group isn&#8217;t a logical contender for the FTSE4Good and Dow Jones Emerging Markets sustainability indexes. Nor could we understand why the conglomerate was ranked in the 94th percentile of responsible businesses by CSRHub.   </p><p>At the time, CSRHub said it doesn&#8217;t &#8220;pretend to uncover the truth about a company&#8217;s social performance,&#8221; but instead seeks to &#8220;estimate a consensus view of a company based on the opinions of all data sources we can find,&#8221; i.e. those of incumbent ESG-as-risk data providers. Those opinions carry serious weight for any company seeking to raise finance. They inform its cost of capital and its odds of gaining entry into the type of sustainability index on which popular ETFs are modelled. </p><p>Given their influence, one would hope the ratings are well informed. Not, unfortunately, a given. </p><p><a href="https://twitter.com/Elisabeth_Steyn/status/1410898304980893703">In 2020</a>, Adani Ports secured a spot in the Dow Jones Emerging Markets Sustainability Index when CDP bumped its rating to a B- from a C. (Its stock jumped 8% on the news.) The company earned the upgrade because it answered &#8220;Yes&#8221; to the the question &#8220;Have you identified any inherent climate-related risks with the potential to have a substantive financial impact on your business?&#8221; The only other details it provided on that front were the fact the risk would be &#8220;reputational,&#8221; and, if realised, may lead to &#8220;increased stakeholder concern or negative stakeholder feedback.&#8221;</p><p>Disappointingly unimaginative for a company alleged to have pulled the &#8220;largest con in corporate history&#8221; through &#8220;brazen stock manipulation and accounting fraud scheme.&#8221; It also suggests corporate disclosures aren&#8217;t the only weak link in the ESG data market. Regardless of whether their objective was to evaluate sustainability in terms of risk or impact, plenty of ratings providers got Adani very wrong. It was an expensive mistake.</p>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Exxon kept it in the ground]]></title><description><![CDATA[Banks obfuscate. Scope 3 scrutiny. The great green reshuffle. Plus, ExxonMobil is bad at disclosures.]]></description><link>https://www.weekinclimate.com/p/exxon-kept-it-in-the-ground</link><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.weekinclimate.com/p/exxon-kept-it-in-the-ground</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Elisabeth]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Mon, 30 Jan 2023 20:29:23 GMT</pubDate><content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>From the top</h3><p>&#127974; On the question of climate, banks are battling scrutiny from every angle. Last week, Europe&#8217;s biggest pension fund warned it would divest from lenders that fail to decarbonise their portfolios in three years. ABP head of investments Dominique Dijkhuis told <a href="https://uk.finance.yahoo.com/news/europe-biggest-pension-fund-issues-090000809.html">Bloomberg</a> the sector has &#8220;really lagged&#8221; in meeting words with action. Now, the asset owner is implementing strict performance indicators to hold it accountable. Commitments by banks are notoriously difficult to evaluate, not least because portfolio exposure isn&#8217;t public knowledge. Making them even more inscrutable, financing tends to happen at the level of parent companies rather than specific projects (91% and 4% of global fossil-fuel financing, respectively, according to the <a href="https://www.ran.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/BOCC_2022_vSPREAD-1.pdf">Rainforest Action Network</a>). As pointed out by the <a href="https://www-ft-com.ezp.lib.cam.ac.uk/content/4f4032f4-5e0e-4952-a6b3-070a888fbe3e">FT</a>, that renders virtuous decisions to cut ties with fossil fuels &#8212; such as that taken by HSBC in December &#8212; largely symbolic. But it may prove harder to run rings around the regulators, which have been busy issuing climate-related risk guidance for the US and EU. Soon after the <a href="https://www.reuters.com/business/sustainable-business/fed-wants-climate-risk-analysis-6-largest-us-banks-by-july-31-2023-01-17/">Fed</a> rolled out its scenario analysis exercise for the six largest US banks, the <a href="https://www.ecb.europa.eu/press/pr/date/2023/html/ecb.pr230124~c83dbef220.en.html">ECB</a> published its first set of indicators for risks facing financial institutions.</p><p>&#129518; Get excited, accountants. The ISSB has confirmed its Global Sustainability and Climate Reporting Standards will go live in <a href="https://www.ipe.com/news/issb-to-finalise-sustainability-rules-in-february-tackles-confidentiality-concerns/10064624.article">June</a>, with re-deliberations winding up in <a href="https://tax.thomsonreuters.com/news/new-climate-and-sustainability-disclosure-rules-on-track-for-issuance-by-june/">February</a>. <a href="https://www.weekinimpact.com/p/maths-isnt-universal">Last week</a>, we touched on the single vs. double materiality debate fracturing the deceptively dull world of sustainability standards. The lightning rod is Scope 3 emissions, on which the ISSB recently <a href="https://www.ifrs.org/news-and-events/news/2022/12/issb-announces-guidance-and-reliefs-to-support-scope-3-ghg-emiss/">changed position</a> following consultation feedback. Its decision to include Scope 3 guidance is now attracting <a href="https://www.esginvestor.net/issb-straying-from-core-purpose-with-scope-3-inclusion/">counter criticism</a>. Expect increasingly divergent views on Scope 3 impact analysis, particularly as standardisation and regulation drive influence from company marketing to compliance departments. Already, reports the <a href="https://www.ft.com/content/8afc3516-8162-4b75-8793-4dd66b7c2336">FT</a>, board support is dwindling on fears of legal liabilities incurred through green accounting. For larger businesses with sprawling supply chains &#8212; and, within those, exposure to smaller developing-market companies &#8212; gathering granular Scope 3 data is no easy feat. But the alternative could bring legal headaches of a different kind, as JBS is <a href="https://www.mightyearth.org/whistleblower-complaint-to-the-securities-and-exchange-commission-against-jbs/">finding out</a>. For companies under the remit of the <a href="http://ology/blog/22670723/sap-managing-the-impact-of-the-german-supply-chain-due-diligence-act-lksg">German Supply Chain Due Diligence Act</a> &#8212; which came into effect this month &#8212; indirect risk analysis is no longer optional.</p><p>&#128202; The last quarter of 2022 put Article 9 to the test. In anticipation of stricter <a href="https://esgclarity.com/sfdr-level-2-standards-go-live-after-string-of-article-9-downgrades/">SFDR disclosure standards</a>, finds <a href="https://www.morningstar.com/en-uk/lp/sfdr-article8-article9">Morningstar</a>, 307 funds representing &#8364;175B were downgraded to Article 8. That&#8217;s 40% of the &#8216;dark green&#8217; category, which now accounts for just 3.3% of capital earmarked for sustainability. <a href="https://www.etfstream.com/news/etfs-share-of-article-9-shrinks-by-80-following-pab-and-ctb-downgrades/">Passive vehicles</a> were represented disproportionately, prompting the <a href="https://www.etfstream.com/features/can-any-etfs-be-classified-as-article-9-under-sfdr/">question</a> &#8220;can any pure sustainable fund be rules-based?&#8221; Even with a 52.2% SFDR market share, Article 8 fund providers can&#8217;t relax. ESMA is threatening a &#8220;<a href="https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2023-01-25/class-action-wave-is-coming-for-esg-claims-green-insight?">greenwashing lawsuit tsunami</a>&#8221; with its proposed <a href="https://www.esginvestor.net/esma-under-pressure-on-esg-fund-labelling-rules/">names rule</a>, under which funds claiming to be &#8216;sustainable&#8217; must be 80% sustainable. Only 27% of qualifying Article 8 funds meet that threshold. In effect, the rule would expose more providers to the challenge (one <a href="https://www.weekinimpact.com/p/nobody-wants-to-do-harm">we like to explore</a>) of satisfying fund purity and liquidity/diversification simultaneously. Thankfully, fiscal stimulus is expected to expand the investable universe with an <a href="https://www.esginvestor.net/legislative-carrot-feeds-us-climate-transition/">avalanche</a> of greennovation. Which is good, because end investors are still pouring in. In Q4, Articles 8 and 9 accrued almost &#8364;16B (+7.3% on Q3) as Article 6 shed &#8364;3.3B (-1.1% on Q3). <a href="https://www.morningstar.com/lp/global-esg-flows">Globally</a>, sustainable funds attracted $37B (+50% on Q3), even as the broader fund universe suffered $200B in outflows. </p><p class="button-wrapper" data-attrs="{&quot;url&quot;:&quot;https://www.weekinclimate.com/subscribe?&quot;,&quot;text&quot;:&quot;Subscribe now&quot;,&quot;action&quot;:null,&quot;class&quot;:null}" data-component-name="ButtonCreateButton"><a class="button primary" href="https://www.weekinclimate.com/subscribe?"><span>Subscribe now</span></a></p><div><hr></div><h3>ExxonMobil keeps it in the ground</h3><p>In 2015, <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2015/jul/08/exxon-climate-change-1981-climate-denier-funding">leaked memos</a> and an <a href="https://insideclimatenews.org/book/exxon-the-road-not-taken/">eight-month-long investigation</a> revealed ExxonMobil, in the words of <a href="https://350.org/the-department-of-justice-must-investigate-exxonmobil/">environmental campaigners</a>, &#8220;knew about climate change as early as the 1970s, but chose to mislead the public about the crisis in order to maximize their profits from fossil fuels.&#8221; </p><p>Thanks to its ambitious and well-funded research programme, the conglomerate didn&#8217;t just understand the science. It understood the science <em>over a decade</em> before climate change became a public issue in 1988, when NASA&#8217;s James Hansen testified to Congress about global warming. </p><p>It gets worse. According to <a href="https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.abk0063">analysis</a> published this month, the climate models developed by ExxonMobil either matched or surpassed those developed by contemporary independent scientists. They were more accurate than even those developed by Hansen. From the 1970s onwards, ExxonMobil climate scientists &#8220;correctly and skilfully&#8221; predicted that global temperatures would rise 0.2C per decade and become detectable between 1995 and 2005.</p><p>What did ExxonMobil do with its groundbreaking findings? Try to prevent (what its own scientists <a href="https://insideclimatenews.org/news/22092015/exxon-confirmed-global-warming-consensus-in-1982-with-in-house-climate-models/">characterised</a> as) &#8220;potentially catastrophic events&#8221; that would afflict &#8220;a substantial fraction of the earth&#8217;s population&#8221;? Take advantage of the opportunity to lead the market on clean energy? Save the economy trillions in future climate costs and itself years of lawsuits, windfall taxes, and terminal decline? </p><h4>Of course it didn&#8217;t.</h4><p>I mean, we know the rest. The facts were a profit risk and so were concealed from policymakers, shareholders, and customers. Today, ExxonMobil is among the 20 fossil fuel firms <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2019/oct/09/revealed-20-firms-third-carbon-emissions">responsible</a> for one third of all modern greenhouse gas emissions. </p><p>Together, fossil fuel companies have worked diligently to keep their role under wraps. In 1998, ExxonMobil partnered with its peers on one of the most <a href="https://www.climatefiles.com/trade-group/american-petroleum-institute/1998-global-climate-science-communications-team-action-plan/">consequential disinformation campaigns</a> in history. In their agenda plan, &#8216;success&#8217; was defined as the moment when &#8220;&#8216;climate change&#8217; becomes a non-issue, meaning the Kyoto Proposal is defeated and there are no further initiatives to thwart the threat of climate change.&#8221; </p><p>In 1996, then-<a href="https://www.climatefiles.com/exxonmobil/global-warming-who-is-right-1996/">CEO Lee Raymond</a> referred to &#8220;the unproven theory that [fossil fuels] affect the earth&#8217;s climate.&#8221; In 2013, then-<a href="https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/jan/19/exxon-climate-crisis-lawsuits-documents">CEO Rex Tillerson</a> called climate models &#8220;not competent&#8221; and &#8220;not that good.&#8221; </p><p>The oil major spent <a href="https://www.desmog.com/exxonmobil-funding-climate-science-denial">tens of millions</a> on disinformation over tens of decades, while publicly downplaying and denying the environmental impact of its business activities. PR firms were contracted, governments lobbied, and &#8212; when climate change could no longer be ignored &#8212; ExxonMobil perfected ESG reporting to help it preen for <a href="https://www.thestreet.com/etffocus/blog/sp-500-esg-index-tesla-out-exxonmobil-in">sustainability indexes</a> and investors.</p><h4>Was it worth it?</h4><p>ExxonMobil hosts its fourth-quarter earnings call tomorrow. Since 2022 was a bumper year for oil &amp; gas profits, shareholder loyalty may well be <a href="https://www.cnbc.com/2023/01/27/big-oil-earnings-preview-energy-giants-to-smash-annual-profit-records.html">rewarded</a>. But a year of windfall profits seems small consolation for four missed decades of policy, innovation, and investment.</p><p>The total cost to the company and its investors isn&#8217;t limited to climate risk. The research published in the last couple of weeks has, <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/business/2023/jan/19/exxon-climate-crisis-lawsuits-documents">reportedly</a>, strengthened existing US state lawsuits against ExxonMobil, deepening the expensive and protracted legal peril it faces on multiple fronts. </p><p>One other <a href="https://www.businesswire.com/news/home/20230124005125/en/Business-Leaders-Do-Not-Trust-Each-Others-Climate-Claims---Inmarsat-Research">interesting study</a> came out last week. Inmarsat found that 76% of business leaders distrust the ESG reporting of their competitors, while 80% believe their peers are working harder to appear sustainable than to achieve sustainable outcomes. Somewhat counterintuitively, 81% believe their own companies to be more sustainable than their competitors, yet only 47% were willing to share the entirety of their ESG data with third parties. Weird.</p>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Math(s) isn't universal]]></title><description><![CDATA[Davos hypocrisy. Proxy power. Green protectionism. Plus, what does carbon offset controversy say about disclosures?]]></description><link>https://www.weekinclimate.com/p/maths-isnt-universal</link><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.weekinclimate.com/p/maths-isnt-universal</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Elisabeth]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Mon, 23 Jan 2023 18:28:50 GMT</pubDate><content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>From the top</h3><p>&#128745;&#65039; The World Economic Forum at Davos exemplifies crony rather than free-market capitalism, writes <a href="https://www.spectator.co.uk/article/the-real-problem-with-davos-and-the-world-economic-forum/">The Spectator</a>. This year, claims of hypocrisy are louder than usual. Criticism amplified by a cost-of-living crisis, conference attendees are accused of paying lip service to economic equality while shying away from action. But not everyone need worry about bad optics. In its 2023 <a href="https://www.edelman.com/trust/2023/trust-barometer">Trust Barometer</a> &#8212; published to coincide with Davos &#8212; PR firm Edelman finds Business is &#8220;the sole institution seen as competent and ethical.&#8221; (&#8220;Government and Media,&#8221; by contrast, &#8220;Fuel Cycle of Distrust, Seen as Sources of Misleading Information.&#8221;) The only group identified as more trustworthy is Scientists, 450 of whom just published an <a href="https://cleancreatives.org/news/scientists-letter-jan-2022">open letter</a> imploring PR companies to ditch their fossil-fuel clients. Signatories cite a <a href="https://cssn.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/11/10584_2021_3244_OnlinePDF.pdf">2021 study</a> on the unsung &#8220;major players in the climate political arena.&#8221; Through their campaigns on behalf of fossil-fuel companies, PR firms have &#8220;promulgated misinformation&#8221; (in Media) and &#8220;obstructed climate action&#8221; (in Government), effectively &#8220;shifting public discourse and the prospects for [policy].&#8221;</p><p>&#128499;&#65039; Once the &#8216;Big Three&#8217; asset managers <a href="https://www.etfstream.com/news/state-street-joins-blackrock-and-vanguard-in-devolving-proxy-voting-powers/">extended proxy voting powers</a> to clients, <strong>it </strong>was only a <a href="https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-12-06/blackrock-vanguard-blasted-by-gop-senators-for-esg-proxy-voting">matter of time</a> until advisers felt the political heat. Together, ISS and Glass Lewis <a href="https://www.sec.gov/comments/s7-22-19/s72219-6702944-206071.pdf">control 97%</a> of the proxy voting market. Their recommendations carry <a href="https://corpgov.law.harvard.edu/2021/05/27/proxy-advisors-and-market-power-a-review-of-institutional-investor-robovoting/">considerable weight</a>. In a <a href="https://attorneygeneral.utah.gov/wp-content/uploads/2023/01/2023-01-17-Utah-Texas-Letter-to-Glass-Lewis-ISS.pdf">letter </a>sent to both firms on Tuesday, Republican state-attorneys general challenged those relating to &#8220;climate and diversity, equity, and inclusion.&#8221; &#8220;Climate change advocacy and goals suggests potential violations of your contractual obligation [to] consider only one goal: the economic value of the investments,&#8221; wrote the attorneys of 21 states <a href="https://www.reuters.com/business/finance/anti-esg-drive-us-could-have-cost-taxpayers-up-708-mln-study-2023-01-12/">haemorrhaging hundreds of millions</a> in higher-interest payments. The letter &#8220;reveals a fundamental misunderstanding of market forces at work,&#8221; responded ISS. Neither its <a href="https://www.etfstream.com/features/blackrock-vanguard-and-state-street-rely-on-millennial-marketing-to-enhance-market-share/">voting strategy</a> nor state activism has done BlackRock much harm. <a href="https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2023-01-17/blackrock-s-fink-says-esg-narrative-has-become-ugly-personal?sref=h5EZFUoq">Speaking last week</a>, CEO Larry Fink noted the $4B withdrawn by Republican states was more than offset by $230B in US inflows last year. &#8220;If you don&#8217;t have a lens to decarbonisation,&#8221; he added, &#8220;you&#8217;re not going to win one euro of business.&#8221;</p><p>&#127760; Fault lines are deepening between the US and EU. In rhetoric if not action, central banks are <a href="https://www.ft.com/content/986748df-55f5-46ff-8d7c-ac508870a077">diverging</a>: The Fed &#8220;<a href="https://www.nytimes.com/2023/01/10/business/economy/powell-fed-climate.html">will not be a climate policymaker</a>,&#8221; whereas the ECB has <a href="https://www.ecb.europa.eu/press/key/date/2023/html/ecb.sp230110~21c89bef1b.en.html">committed</a> to aligning all policy with the Paris Agreement. But the real battle is playing out in green trade. (<a href="https://www.euractiv.com/section/economy-jobs/news/the-geoeconomics-of-europes-answer-to-the-us-inflation-act/">Ostensibly</a> &#8216;green&#8217;, anyway. Those asking whether John Kerry were a protectionist <a href="https://www.theglobalist.com/is-john-kerry-a-protectionist/">in 2002</a> finally <a href="https://www.ft.com/content/86b5386c-79ff-4aea-81cc-f39efe8ccd7c">have an answer</a>.)  Seeking to alleviate European fears about the &#8220;discriminatory&#8221; Inflation Reduction Act, Commission president Ursula von der Leyen unveiled a <a href="https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2023/01/davos-23-special-address-by-ursula-von-der-leyen-president-of-the-european-commission/">Green Deal Industrial Plan</a> at Davos. The counter package will channel capital towards, loosen restrictions on, and accelerate permits for green projects. &#8220;The story of the cleantech economy will be written in Europe,&#8221; she concluded. This is what the US wants, <a href="https://www.ft.com/content/674a9d68-5d95-4c63-8a79-fc8d59da61a1">says the FT</a>: coaxing the EU to its preferred territory of cash over <a href="https://www.reuters.com/business/sustainable-business/fund-groups-warn-over-eu-legal-definition-greenwashing-2023-01-16/">rules</a>. Carrot over stick, public spending over carbon pricing. EU dismay is understandable <a href="https://nymag.com/intelligencer/2023/01/the-eu-european-union-inflation-reduction-act-subsidies-wto.html">if naive</a>. The ideological frontrunner has been overtaken <em>and</em> undercut by an ally that didn&#8217;t need to <a href="https://twitter.com/Elisabeth_Steyn/status/1616008061675610112">waste two years </a>arguing about definitions. In one stroke, the US <a href="https://time.com/6247230/inflation-reduction-act-global-response-climate-trade-protectionsim/">redefined 'sustainable'</a>. And the WTO.</p><p class="button-wrapper" data-attrs="{&quot;url&quot;:&quot;https://www.weekinclimate.com/subscribe?&quot;,&quot;text&quot;:&quot;Subscribe now&quot;,&quot;action&quot;:null,&quot;class&quot;:null}" data-component-name="ButtonCreateButton"><a class="button primary" href="https://www.weekinclimate.com/subscribe?"><span>Subscribe now</span></a></p><div><hr></div><h3><strong>Story of the week: Math(s) isn&#8217;t universal</strong></h3><p>Here&#8217;s a fun number. New <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2023/jan/18/revealed-forest-carbon-offsets-biggest-provider-worthless-verra-aoe">analysis</a> reveals that over 90% of rainforest carbon offsets by the world&#8217;s biggest provider are worthless. </p><p><a href="https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2023/jan/18/revealed-forest-carbon-offsets-biggest-provider-worthless-verra-aoe">The Guardian, Die Zeit and SourceMaterial </a>undertook a nine-month investigation into carbon credits approved by the world-leading Verra carbon standard, which accounts for two-thirds of the (rapidly growing) $2B voluntary offset market. Their conclusion: The vast majority are &#8216;phantom credits&#8217; and may exacerbate global warming, on top of human rights abuses such as forced evictions.</p><p>The net-zero pathways of most multinationals depend on carbon offsets. Shell &#8212; which, just last week, published a <a href="https://www.shell.com/business-customers/trading-and-supply/trading/news-and-media-releases/shell-and-bcgs-new-report-shows-accelerated-growth-in-carbon-markets.html">report</a> on the &#8220;record growth&#8221; in voluntary and regulated markets &#8212; has set aside more than $450M for offsetting projects, according to <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2023/jan/19/shell-to-spend-450m-on-carbon-offsetting-fears-grow-credits-worthless-aoe">The Guardian</a>. The oil major plans to buy the equivalent of half the current market every year, having been ordered to cut emissions by 45% by 2030 in a landmark 2021 case. The Dutch ruling marked the first time a company had been legally obliged to align its policies with the Paris Agreement targets. It won&#8217;t be the last.&nbsp;</p><p>Conceding the industry can ill afford a crisis of confidence, supporters argue that achieving net zero is impossible without offsets. Even the IPCC deems them &#8220;unavoidable.&#8221; Critics, however, say they <a href="https://theconversation.com/satellites-detect-no-real-climate-benefit-from-10-years-of-forest-carbon-offsets-in-california-193943">just don&#8217;t work</a>.&nbsp;</p><p>How you read this story depends on whether you see it as:</p><ol><li><p>an aberration in the system; or</p></li><li><p>a function of the system itself.</p></li></ol><p>&#8230; and that, in turn, has very real ramifications for how you interpret company reports.&nbsp;</p><h4><strong>Nobody wants to do harm (again)</strong></h4><p>It&#8217;s often said that sustainability is entering the mainstream. More accurately, sustainability is coming to define the mainstream, fuelled by supranational and national action of the type best exemplified by the Paris Agreement.&nbsp;</p><p>Broadly, reactions can be split into two buckets: Primarily supportive, on ideological grounds; and primarily opposing, on financial grounds. The former is best represented by the EU. To the latter, we can safely assign higher-emitting companies and economies that rely on carbon-intensive industrial activity. They might like the tenets of sustainability in theory. (This isn&#8217;t in a Marvel movie. It'&#8217;s unlikely anyone has a deep-seated planetary vendetta.) But compliance can<em> </em>be a nuisance. </p><p>Nobody in Group #2 wants to admit they&#8217;re in Group #2. The membership fee is high and rising, as governments and regulators reconfigure global financial frameworks to meet ambitious sustainability targets. Forget subsidies or taxes. Even if only reputational, there are enormous costs associated with being labelled a &#8220;brown&#8221; company (or a &#8220;do-harm&#8221; fund provider), particularly if your inclusion in an ESG-rating-weighted index depends on it. And so, they lie.</p><p>For a time, the &#8220;alphabet soup&#8221; of fragmented standards facilitated compliance arbitrage. But that form of greenwash was never going to last, which was clear to everyone involved. Investors wanted consistent and comparable disclosures, adding to the pressure on regulators to condense everything into one framework.&nbsp;</p><h4><strong>You don&#8217;t need to create standards to control them</strong></h4><p>It was this landscape into which the WEF stepped in 2019, armed with the ambition of harmonising the standard-setters (whether by mediation or co-option is a matter of opinion).</p><p>In conjunction with the Big Four, it published a report designed to serve as the basis for any ubiquitous framework: <a href="https://www.weforum.org/reports/measuring-stakeholder-capitalism-towards-common-metrics-and-consistent-reporting-of-sustainable-value-creation">Measuring Stakeholder Capitalism: Towards Common Metrics and Consistent Reporting of Sustainable Value Creation</a>. The &#8216;Common Metrics&#8217; cherry-picked elements developed by the five standard-setters of the day, which were combined into a &#8220;nested ecosystem&#8221; under WEF&#8217;s second initiative: the Impact Management Project (IMP). The IMP was ultimately folded into accounting body the IFRS Foundation, whose global framework for sustainability disclosures is expected this year.&nbsp;</p><p>The trouble is, &#8220;sustainable value creation&#8221; is not the same as sustainable development. Littering your work with SDG icons, pretty though they are, does not translate into shared international prosperity. And social and environmental risk to enterprise value (known in the accounting world as &#8216;single materiality&#8217;) is not the same as social and environmental impact (&#8216;double materiality&#8217;). </p><p>Based on the draft proposals issued by the IFRS last year &#8212; behind which the WEF has thrown its support &#8212; we can expect very little of the latter in its final framework.</p><p>Accounting regulators are among the most powerful and independent in the world. Companies manage what they measure, and they measure what accounting boards tell them matters. Between them, the WEF and IFRS have determined that means risks to enterprise value, and, of those, primarily the ones relating to climate.</p><p>It creates a fertile ground for another explicit WEF project. The highly complex carbon offsetting, sequestration, and trading market has been commoditised as a &#8216;win-win&#8217; solution to meet the net-zero obligations of the Global North under the Paris Agreement. The Global South has land and livelihoods, the Global North capital and technology. It also owns and runs the markets. </p><p>The ultimate irony is that the defendants of carbon colonialism can do so while cloaked in the unimpeachable respectability of saving the planet.</p><p>Kenneth Pucker said it best in the <a href="https://hbr.org/2021/05/overselling-sustainability-reporting">Harvard Business Review</a>. Backed by what Greta Thunberg describes as the machinery of &#8220;clever accounting and creative PR,&#8221; Sustainability Inc.&#8217;s focus on corporate reporting is not a proxy for progress. </p>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[The watershed year for H2O]]></title><description><![CDATA[Climate litigation. ESG flows. Sovereign debt woes. Plus, green investing goes blue.]]></description><link>https://www.weekinclimate.com/p/the-watershed-year-for-h2o</link><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.weekinclimate.com/p/the-watershed-year-for-h2o</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Elisabeth]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Mon, 16 Jan 2023 16:16:28 GMT</pubDate><content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>From the top</h3><p>&#128104;&#8205;&#9878;&#65039; Last year was one of the <a href="https://www.nasa.gov/press-release/nasa-says-2022-fifth-warmest-year-on-record-warming-trend-continues/">top-five warmest</a> on record, setting the stage for a 2023 characterised by <a href="https://www.esginvestor.net/live/shell-to-pay-e15-million-for-niger-delta-spillage/">climate litigation</a> (which had, already, <a href="https://www.dentons.com/en/insights/articles/2023/january/9/climate-litigation-risk-five-trends-to-watch-in-2023">doubled</a> between 2015 and 2022). <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2023/jan/04/why-2023-will-be-a-watershed-year-for-climate-litigation">The Guardian</a> spotlights a case of unprecedented magnitude, filed against the state of Montana by citizens claiming violation of their constitutional rights including to &#8220;a healthy and clean environment.&#8221; Financial rights haven&#8217;t fared much better in some states. According to a new <a href="http://econsultsolutions.com/esg-boycott-legislation-municipal-bond-impact/">study</a>,&nbsp;the boycott of ESG-friendly financial groups by Republican state officials has cost taxpayers $708M in higher-interest payments. </p><p>&#9973; Did <a href="https://www.weekinimpact.com/p/sustainable-investing-is-hard">Vanguard quit NZAM</a> because US retail customers in passive funds are less motivated by and/or able to act on climate? So <a href="https://www.reuters.com/business/sustainable-business/vanguards-climate-group-exit-shows-retail-investors-trail-esg-2023-01-12/">Reuters</a> argues. Of the $8T overseen by Vanguard, 80% sits in (mostly retail) vanilla index funds, which can&#8217;t be tailored to specific social or environmental objectives. By contrast, the other &#8216;Big Three&#8217; firms &#8212; BlackRock and State Street &#8212; are NZAM loyalists. Perhaps it&#8217;s easier to ignore the GOP backlash when you cater to a higher relative proportion of institutional (and, indeed, European) clients, who are more likely to demand sustainable products.</p><p>&#128176; The energy crisis (coupled with a tech sell off) made it a challenging year for their relative performance, but <a href="https://www.investmentweek.co.uk/news/4062591/esg-etfs-drive-bulk-flows-european-etfs-etcs-2022">2022 flow data</a> underscores the enduring appeal of sustainable investments. ESG ETFs accounted for 65% of all flows into European ETFs in 2022, up from 53% in 2021. The &#8364;51B in new capital brought total assets from &#8364;235.3B to &#8364;248.8B, or nearly 20% of the total European ETF market. Potentially a bigger threat to 2023 data, the <a href="https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2023-01-13/amundi-s-48-billion-in-esg-downgrades-puts-pressure-on-holdouts">rising benchmark</a> for sustainable products is putting pressure on providers to justify or downgrade their strategies.</p><p>&#128179; 2022 was a &#8220;brutally&#8221; expensive year for natural disasters, <a href="https://www.ft.com/content/030a6812-199b-4f44-bb27-03ca4ef2c8e6">reports the FT</a>. Munich Re recorded global losses of $270B, of which $150B were uninsured. Developing nations suffer more and yet are less likely to have coverage, warns Simon Mundy. Pakistan is an alarming case in point. Munich Re assessed its $15B in flood damage (the highest disaster bill of any event, bar Hurricane Ian) as &#8220;minor,&#8221; i.e. too low for a meaningful insurance estimate. Not even middle-income nations are insulated: In China, flooding losses came to $5B, of which only $300M were covered.</p><p>&#128506;&#65039; Pakistan&#8217;s national debt is $274B (c.90% of its GDP), of which $100B is owed to external lenders. Reeling from interest rate rises, many low-income countries are one economic or environmental shock away from <a href="https://www.livemint.com/opinion/online-views/pakistan-is-teetering-on-the-verge-of-bankruptcy-11673642536673.html">bankruptcy</a>. Unfortunately, the <a href="https://www.imf.org/en/Blogs/Articles/2023/01/16/Confronting-fragmentation-where-it-matters-most-trade-debt-and-climate-action">global sovereign debt crisis</a> comes as natural disasters are escalating in economies already in dire need of adaptation and mitigation funds. Defaults would jeopardise private investment from risk-averse institutions. Facing calls for a dramatic international <a href="https://www.esginvestor.net/work-should-start-now/">financial response</a>, the <a href="https://www.imf.org/en/Blogs/Articles/2023/01/16/Confronting-fragmentation-where-it-matters-most-trade-debt-and-climate-action">IMF</a> and <a href="https://www.ft.com/content/5089744a-152e-4fd3-a216-9358872e5491">multilateral banks</a> have a busy year ahead. </p><p class="button-wrapper" data-attrs="{&quot;url&quot;:&quot;https://www.weekinclimate.com/subscribe?&quot;,&quot;text&quot;:&quot;Subscribe now&quot;,&quot;action&quot;:null,&quot;class&quot;:null}" data-component-name="ButtonCreateButton"><a class="button primary" href="https://www.weekinclimate.com/subscribe?"><span>Subscribe now</span></a></p><div><hr></div><h3>The watershed year for H2O</h3><p>Just before the credits roll in the Big Short, a caption tells viewers that Michael Burry/Christian Bale &#8212; famous for having called time on the subprime mortgage crisis &#8212; is &#8220;focusing all his trading on one commodity: water.&#8221;</p><p>Of all the stuff covering the world&#8217;s surface, 3% is freshwater or suitable for crop irrigation. Of that, just 1% is safe for human consumption. UN data show that one quarter of the world&#8217;s population lacks access to drinking water; up to a half will live in water-stressed areas by 2025. By 2030, <a href="https://www.morganstanley.com/ideas/water-scarcity-causes-and-solutions#:~:text=By%202030%2C%20the%20gap%20between,may%20increase%20that%20deficit%20further.">finds Morgan Stanley</a>, demand will exceed supply by 40%. The dislocation presents enormous risks. It also creates opportunities. </p><p>For now, the former is dangerously underpriced by investors, <a href="https://www.reuters.com/business/sustainable-business/esg-watch-why-this-year-could-be-watershed-moment-investors-nature-related-risk-2023-01-11/">warns CDP</a>. Despite having caused 75% of recent disasters, water-related events were identified as a portfolio risk by just 18% of institutions in 2022. Sure, it&#8217;s easier to turn a blind eye to events happening in regions of the world that you can&#8217;t see &#8212; or, from an investment perspective, to which your capital isn&#8217;t exposed. But ravaging water crises risks permeate most regions and sectors. </p><p>Take the US. Having cost California $34B so far, recent floods are still <a href="https://www.reuters.com/world/us/why-weeks-rain-california-will-not-end-historic-drought-2023-01-12/">not enough</a> to mitigate the effects of record-setting droughts in 2022. The Colorado Basin, which supplies water to 40M people in seven states, remains endangered. <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2023/jan/07/jackson-mississippi-water-outage-neighbors-helping">Jackson, Mississippi</a> faces more shortages, after 150K citizens lost access in August.</p><p>It isn&#8217;t a crisis with &#8216;only&#8217; humanitarian casualties (were that the case, it&#8217;s safe to assume Burry wouldn&#8217;t be interested). Water is a vital resource and component in the production of almost everything, particularly in the agriculture, textiles, mining, and energy industries. </p><p>Some US$15.5B has been or is at risk of being been stranded. It makes access to or more efficient use of water a valuable advantage for the winnowing number of companies able to feed, clothe, or connect a growing population without interruption. Insulation from the operational and supply-chain damage wrought by droughts or floods will only grow more critical.</p><h4><strong>Financial risk is investment opportunity</strong></h4><p>Among <a href="https://www.reuters.com/business/sustainable-business/esg-watch-why-this-year-could-be-watershed-moment-investors-nature-related-risk-2023-01-11/">January outlooks</a>, there was one notable consensus view: 2023 will unleash a torrent of nature-based investments. </p><p>Though the nature and climate crises are inextricably linked, nature-related risk has long been in the shadow of its cousin. That began to change at COP 15, where the finalised Global Biodiversity Framework unlocked commitments to and capital for nature. Coming up in March is the first <a href="https://www.unwater.org/news/un-2023-water-conference">dedicated UN water conference </a>in recent memory, which is expected to fan awareness &#8212; and investment appetite. </p><p><a href="https://www.rbccm.com/en/insights/story.page?dcr=templatedata/article/insights/data/2023/01/esg_themes_for_2023">RBC Capital Markets</a> predicts forestry, agriculture, and especially water will outperform other sustainability themes in the year ahead. Beyond creating a fertile ground for companies with access to water, shortages (coupled with a growing population and industry reshoring) are a tailwind for water infrastructure, innovation, and efficiency. There, argues RBC, investors will find high-quality defensive exposure. It certainly has upside potential: Today, 80% of wastewater is released untreated.</p><p>But the early stage of adoption yields obstacles as well as opportunities. Compared to climate or emissions, investors are dealing with a data deficiency when it comes to water-related risks and impacts. Neither reporting frameworks nor regulations are fully evolved, resulting in a relative dearth of first-party company information. </p>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Nobody likes you when you’re ’23]]></title><description><![CDATA[Brace for turbulence (and market bifurcation) ahead.]]></description><link>https://www.weekinclimate.com/p/nobody-likes-you-when-youre-23</link><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.weekinclimate.com/p/nobody-likes-you-when-youre-23</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Elisabeth]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Mon, 09 Jan 2023 11:19:35 GMT</pubDate><content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>From the starting line</h3><p>Every time a year is characterised as being even more &#8216;unprecedented&#8217; than its predecessor, somewhere in the world, faith in market forecasting (and the English language) dies.&nbsp;</p><p>It&#8217;s not easy to predict the trajectory of a <a href="https://twitter.com/pmarca/status/1608993086658740224">complex adaptive economy</a>, let alone one shaped by an ever-growing fistful of exogenous factors. Climate change, global pandemics, territorial wars: none is traditional market-data fare.</p><p>This January, at least, there&#8217;s plenty of evidence to support the consensus outlook, which tells us to strap in for a rough ride. Still, you can never discount the potential for shock events. Fortunately, that includes those on the upside.</p><p class="button-wrapper" data-attrs="{&quot;url&quot;:&quot;https://www.weekinclimate.com/subscribe?&quot;,&quot;text&quot;:&quot;Subscribe now&quot;,&quot;action&quot;:null,&quot;class&quot;:null}" data-component-name="ButtonCreateButton"><a class="button primary" href="https://www.weekinclimate.com/subscribe?"><span>Subscribe now</span></a></p><h4><strong>All eyes on the Fed</strong></h4><p>Investors are bracing for one of the most <a href="https://www.bloomberg.com/graphics/2023-investment-outlooks/?leadSource=uverify%20wall">anticipated recessions</a> ever, as central banks double down on aggressive policies to tame inflation at any cost. Having slimmed down its balance sheet with the fervour of a January gym-goer trying to shed 10 years of accumulated weight, the US Federal Reserve is unlikely &#8212; at least in the near term &#8212; to let even peak inflation data derail its historic tightening campaign.</p><p>That&#8217;s bad news for growth stocks, which owe a decade of outperformance to low borrowing costs and a sprinkle of imagination. Price corrections are one thing, but an economic downturn would extend and exacerbate the terrible, horrible, no-good, very-bad year suffered by somewhat-less-Big Tech.</p><p>If the events of 2022 compound in 2023, so too will the specific challenges faced by sustainable investors. Gone are the easy victories, such as labelling as &#8216;sustainable&#8217; any fund with a performance-boosting bias towards technology.&nbsp;</p><p>Investors must look further afield for positive-impact and above-market returns.</p><h4><strong>Cementing the dichotomy</strong></h4><p>Past consensus cast a sustained market downturn as the true test of sustainable investing. Current consensus agrees it will emerge from this one, albeit in a very different shape.</p><p>Coupled with escalating political attacks in the US, an economic crunch may prompt a retreat from explicit social and environmental objectives by larger asset managers: particularly those besieged, on the third front, by the growing threat of <a href="https://www.weekinimpact.com/p/greed-can-be-good">antitrust litigation</a>. Real though they are to a specific market segment, however, headwinds are unlikely to drive sustainability off course within broader capital markets.</p><p>Every cycle is different. Baked into this one are a number of structural trends that may not only insulate sustainable finance but accelerate and &#8212; we hope &#8212; improve it.</p><h4><strong>Be wary of corporate disclosures</strong></h4><p>Regulatory activity is ramping up on both sides of the Atlantic. While banks steel themselves for climate stress tests, companies are preparing for disclosure requirements.</p><ul><li><p>&#127466;&#127482; In December, the <strong>European Financial Reporting Advisory Group (EFRAG)</strong> submitted the first set of draft <strong>EU Sustainability Reporting Standards (ESRS)</strong> to the European Commission. Marking a &#8220;major step&#8221; towards a reporting framework for companies operating in the bloc, the standards are expected to be finalised mid-2023 and apply from 2024.</p></li><li><p>&#128506;&#65039; That means many companies will have to comply with the EU rulebook ahead of the global counterpart being drawn up by the <strong>International Sustainability Standards Board (ISSB)</strong>. ISSB<strong> </strong>plans to finalise two proposed disclosure rules for climate-related risks in 2023. Despite broadening its focus to include biodiversity, the guidelines will cover fewer topics: EFRAG, by contrast, has reportedly identified around 1,000 datapoints on which companies need to report.</p></li><li><p>&#127482;&#127480; In the US, the<strong> SEC</strong> is expected to introduce rules requiring companies to disclose material climate change risk and risk management. The Biden administration has, already, made clear its support in its biannual <a href="https://news.bloomberglaw.com/environment-and-energy/bidens-latest-rules-agenda-focuses-on-climate-change-workers">regulatory to-do list</a>, issued on Wednesday. Prepare for a &#8220;<a href="https://rollcall.com/2023/01/05/investors-defend-esg-materiality-in-expectation-of-more-attacks/">robust response</a>&#8221; from the anti-ESG Republican faction, led by Florida governor (and 2024 presidential candidate frontrunner for the GOP) Ron DeSantis.</p></li></ul><p>Despite progress by regulators &#8212; and, as surfaced in a recent <a href="https://www2.deloitte.com/us/en/pages/audit/articles/esg-survey.html">Deloitte</a> study, company management &#8212; it&#8217;s the wrong time to get complacent about corporate disclosures. In 2022, greenhushing emerged as the new greenwashing. </p><p>Should the market or political landscape turn unfavourable, will disclosures continue to be a reliable proxy for data and transparency?</p><h4><strong>Regulatory requirements bound to bite</strong></h4><p>For investors preparing for (or adjusting to) their own regulatory requirements, it&#8217;s not an immaterial question.&nbsp;</p><ul><li><p>&#127466;&#127482; <strong>In the EU</strong>, Level 2 of the <strong>Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation (SFDR</strong>), introduced last week, requires fund providers to identify and disclose the principal adverse impacts (PAIs) of financial products on sustainability factors. Building on the reporting obligations outlined in Level 1, Level 2 includes a new mandatory reporting template for <a href="https://www.esma.europa.eu/sites/default/files/library/jc_2022_42_-_final_report_on_sfdr_amendments_for_nuclear_and_gas_activities.pdf">14 core and 31 additional indicators</a>. Firms will need to report on all 14 core, plus 2 additional, factors. </p></li><li><p>&#127482;&#127480; <strong>In the US</strong>, after a year of cracking down on misleading claims (see: last year&#8217;s <a href="https://www.weekinimpact.com/p/whats-in-a-fund-name">fines for GSAM and BNY Mellon</a>), the <strong>SEC</strong> is expected to provide more clarity about what, exactly, fund groups need to do to market sustainable funds safely. The regulator has already proposed changes to its Names Rule, under whose expanded remit a fund could claim the term only if 80% of assets were invested sustainably. Again, however, any SEC action is bound to be challenged in court.</p></li></ul><p>The threat of watchdog punishments prompted a retreat from sustainability in 2022, which provides some insight about what lies ahead. </p><p><a href="https://www.ussif.org/trends">US SIF</a> calculated assets in US strategies totalled $8.4T in 2022 &#8212; or less than half of the $17.1T reported for 2020 &#8212; thanks to not outflows but stricter criteria. In the EU, funds representing more than $100B were downgraded from Article 9. With <a href="https://www.etfstream.com/news/almost-no-esg-funds-meet-eu-s-ecolabel-criteria-esma-warns/">new research</a> showing just 0.5% of Article 8 and 9 funds meet a &#8220;greenness&#8221; threshold of 50%, it&#8217;s safe to bet on more downgrades in the new year.</p><h4><strong>2023 heralds market bifurcation</strong></h4><p>And yet, demand for sustainable investments is booming. Per <a href="https://www.pwc.com/gx/en/financial-services/assets/pdf/pwc-awm-revolution-2022.pdf">PwC</a>, 81% of institutional investors in the US and 83% in Europe plan to increase their allocations to sustainable products over the next two years. </p><p>Meanwhile, companies are catering to customer and employee demand: the latter of which, as the Fed is discovering, may prove hard to disempower. (Particularly if ageing demographics are forcing the tight labour market, and <em>particularly </em>if the tight labour market is unalleviated by ongoing protectionist policies.)</p><p>If sustainable flows continue to soar while the funds market shrinks, we expect an absolute bifurcation between ESG and impact in 2023. If so, it will mark the culmination of a journey that began all the way back in December 2021, when <a href="https://www.bloomberg.com/graphics/2021-what-is-esg-investing-msci-ratings-focus-on-corporate-bottom-line/?sref=jjXJRDFv">Bloomberg</a> shone the light on the chasm between ESG and impact.&nbsp;</p><p>The fact something so obvious caused such a stir &#8212; and just one year ago &#8212; seems extraordinary today. It will appear even more remarkable in 12 months.</p><blockquote><p>&#8220;Many ESG ratings evaluate: &#8220;Does this ESG issue impact the profitability of the company?&#8221; We need a system that evaluates: &#8220;Does the growth of this company have a positive impact on the world?&#8221; This evolution of ESG needs to be championed by institutional investors, rating agencies, public companies and the general public. <strong>As the world needs to strive for a substantial positive impact, we won&#8217;t be referring to ESG.</strong> <strong>Instead, we&#8217;ll talk about Impact</strong>.&#8221; </p><p><a href="https://www.tesla.com/ns_videos/2021-tesla-impact-report.pdf">Tesla Impact Report</a>, 2022</p></blockquote><p>The new nemeses of the GOP zeitgeist, defensive asset managers have been <a href="https://www.ft.com/content/e48a6e01-1734-4651-b1c2-5c9487328bf1">quick to paint</a> ESG factors as material risk and ESG strategies as risk management. That may be true, and it may warrant ESG becoming the base setting for companies and funds. But it does little for an audience of investors, institutional and retail, clamouring for true sustainability.&nbsp;</p><p>For investment firms that can no longer rely on the competitive advantage of ESG at a time when their <a href="https://www.ft.com/content/c412223d-c9c6-40ff-95ce-2ba9b041372d">future depends</a> on enshrining one, there are worse strategic ambitions than &#8216;impact&#8217; in 2023. Moreover, with protectionist fiscal policy driving explosive growth among homegrown technology and energy industries, those fund alignment targets may begin to look not-so insurmountable, after all.&nbsp;</p><p>If nothing else, social and environmental data is indispensable to anyone trying to make sense of an economy shaped, increasingly, by exogenous shocks: climate change, global pandemics, territorial wars &#8212; plus whatever else 2023 has in store.&nbsp;</p>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Sustainable investing is hard]]></title><description><![CDATA[COP 15 kicks off. Vanguard defects. Lawyers litigate. Plus, SFDR trouble creates opportunity.]]></description><link>https://www.weekinclimate.com/p/sustainable-investing-is-hard</link><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.weekinclimate.com/p/sustainable-investing-is-hard</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Elisabeth]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Mon, 12 Dec 2022 15:36:43 GMT</pubDate><content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>From the top</h3><p>&#128062; <strong>Hot on the heels of COP 27, the UN Biodiversity Conference, COP 15, is underway.</strong> Negotiating parties are working to <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2022/dec/10/cop15-what-are-the-key-targets-for-the-biodiversity-agreement">finalise</a> an agreement on the post-2020 Global Biodiversity Framework, with targets to <a href="https://www.iisd.org/articles/insight/global-biodiversity-framework-30x30-target">conserve</a> 30% of the world&#8217;s surface by 2030. In his opening remarks, UN Secretary-General Ant&#243;nio Guterres appealed for an end to the&nbsp;&#8220;orgy of destruction&#8221; and for &#8220;tough regulatory frameworks and&nbsp;<a href="https://esginvestor.us10.list-manage.com/track/click?u=31f9cb942f643a29cb96a78b9&amp;id=0a1164ffe9&amp;e=c55299fe86">disclosure measures</a>.&#8221; Those look imminent. The <a href="https://www.cbd.int/doc/c/abb5/591f/2e46096d3f0330b08ce87a45/wg2020-03-03-en.pdf">draft agreement</a>&nbsp;mandates that businesses &#8220;report on their dependencies and impacts on biodiversity,&#8221; towards which standard-setters are making progress. On top of the <a href="https://www.businesstimes.com.sg/opinion-features/seeking-natural-fit-tapping-new-tnfd-framework">TNFD</a>, which publishes its recommendations in 2023, the GRI has <a href="https://www.globalreporting.org/news/news-center/global-standard-for-biodiversity-impacts-one-step-closer/">opened</a> a consultation on biodiversity standards. Contentious biocredits will attract outsized interest this week, <a href="https://www.ft.com/content/bb067c8b-b45e-4a9d-ba8b-38bbc9a4b997">warns</a> the FT&#8217;s Patrick Temple-West, but Fr&#233;d&#233;ric Hache of the Green Finance Observatory argues there&#8217;s a less greenwash-y way to mitigate biodiversity loss: taxes on commodity exports and marine traffic. Systemic, any &#8216;<a href="https://www.weekinimpact.com/p/big-techs-big-reckoning">Paris moment</a>&#8217; for nature must attend to global value chains in the context of the energy transition. (On which note, one left-field spark of hope: Yesterday, nuclear fusion <a href="https://www.ft.com/content/4b6f0fab-66ef-4e33-adec-cfc345589dc7">achieved</a> energy breakeven.)</p><p><strong>&#9973; Forget knife catching: On Wall Street, tightrope walking is the trick to master in 2023</strong>. Having <a href="https://huizenga.house.gov/news/documentsingle.aspx?DocumentID=401506">floated</a> a bill to block SEC climate disclosure rules, Senate Republicans are &#8220;amping up efforts to rein in BlackRock, State Street and Vanguard on ESG issues,&#8221; <a href="https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-12-06/blackrock-vanguard-blasted-by-gop-senators-for-esg-proxy-voting">reports Bloomberg</a>. Their crusade is a preview of the fight to come when the GOP takes control of the House next month. In a blow to nominative determinism, Vanguard is its first major victim. Last week, the world&#8217;s second-largest asset manager pulled out of the Net-Zero Asset Managers Initiative (NZAM). Defending its commitment to help clients navigate the &#8220;far-reaching economic consequences&#8221; of climate change, Vanguard <a href="https://corporate.vanguard.com/content/corporatesite/us/en/corp/articles/update-on-nzam-engagement.html">blamed</a> &#8220;confusion about the views of individual investment firms,&#8221; particularly &#8220;regarding the applicability of net-zero approaches to broadly diversified index funds.&#8221; Blame anti-ESG politicking, <a href="https://www.ft.com/content/48c1793c-3e31-4ab4-ab02-fd5e94b64f6b">says</a> Kirsten Snow Spalding of investor network and NZAM founding partner Ceres, itself <a href="https://www.esginvestor.net/live/congress-probes-us-participants-in-ca-100/">facing</a> GOP scrutiny. Last month, Republican attorneys general <a href="https://www.spglobal.com/marketintelligence/en/news-insights/latest-news-headlines/republican-attorneys-general-target-vanguard-s-esg-policies-in-protest-with-ferc-73332273">petitioned</a> the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission to ban Vanguard from buying shares in US utilities, claiming its NZAM association would &#8220;affect the cost and reliability of energy supplies.&#8221; </p><p><strong>&#127922; Following one defection, will fellow investment firms go down or double down? </strong>Morningstar&#8217;s Hortense Bioy <a href="https://www.fnlondon.com/articles/vanguard-exit-from-66tn-net-zero-coalition-could-trigger-domino-effect-esg-expert-warns-20221208">warns</a> of a domino effect, as US &#8220;ESG polarisation reaches untenable levels.&#8221; Al Gore <a href="https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-12-08/al-gore-rips-into-vanguard-after-defection-from-climate-group">caveats</a> that Vanguard represents, in his view, an exception among firms demonstrating a &#8220;real, growing commitment&#8221; to fighting climate change. Not everyone agrees. BlackRock CEO Larry Fink <a href="https://www.ft.com/content/3bc02801-732d-46a2-b640-ad91c5b5dc24">faces</a> calls to resign by activist investor Bluebell Capital Partners, which accuses BlackRock of ESG &#8220;hypocrisy&#8221; due to its changing position on coal and ongoing support of Glencore. Activists: Join the queue &#8212; or is it a melee? On the other side of Republican <a href="https://www.dailywire.com/news/texas-subpoenas-schedules-hearing-for-blackrock-playing-politics-using-texans-hard-earned-money">legal action</a>, JPMorgan has <a href="https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-12-06/jpmorgan-says-co2-greenwashers-face-worst-purge-esg-regulations">warned</a> of snowballing regulatory crackdowns on greenwashing claims. This comes after the Australian Securities and Investments Commission <a href="https://asic.gov.au/about-asic/news-centre/find-a-media-release/2022-releases/22-336mr-asic-issues-infringement-notices-against-investment-manager-for-greenwashing/">fined</a> Vanguard for &#8220;misleading&#8221; product disclosures that overstated tobacco-related exclusions. (The funds excluded companies <em>making</em>, though not those <em>selling</em>, tobacco goods.) Between anti-ESG GOP and pro-ESG consumer-group lawsuits, <a href="https://www.ft.com/content/b050a037-9047-4f77-ad3c-ff40ed4fd5bc">reports the FT</a>, &#8220;litigious fervour&#8221; is the new &#8220;multidimensional headache&#8221; for firms caught in the crosshairs of the new culture war. It&#8217;s a lawyer&#8217;s world; we&#8217;re just living in it.  </p><div class="twitter-embed" data-attrs="{&quot;url&quot;:&quot;https://mobile.twitter.com/SMTuffy/status/1601310207791239168&quot;,&quot;full_text&quot;:&quot;The problem is that the post GFC FinReg framework did too good of a job making Wall Street boring that it has it produced any real villains. \n\nSo, instead, goobers are going after the likes of BlackRock and Vanguard (the most boring businesses imaginable) for stuff like ESG.&quot;,&quot;username&quot;:&quot;SMTuffy&quot;,&quot;name&quot;:&quot;Sean Tuffy&quot;,&quot;profile_image_url&quot;:&quot;&quot;,&quot;date&quot;:&quot;Fri Dec 09 20:17:59 +0000 2022&quot;,&quot;photos&quot;:[],&quot;quoted_tweet&quot;:{},&quot;reply_count&quot;:0,&quot;retweet_count&quot;:1,&quot;like_count&quot;:11,&quot;impression_count&quot;:0,&quot;expanded_url&quot;:{},&quot;video_url&quot;:null,&quot;belowTheFold&quot;:true}" data-component-name="Twitter2ToDOM"></div><p class="button-wrapper" data-attrs="{&quot;url&quot;:&quot;https://www.weekinclimate.com/subscribe?&quot;,&quot;text&quot;:&quot;Subscribe now&quot;,&quot;action&quot;:null,&quot;class&quot;:null}" data-component-name="ButtonCreateButton"><a class="button primary" href="https://www.weekinclimate.com/subscribe?"><span>Subscribe now</span></a></p><div><hr></div><h3>Sustainable investing is hard</h3><p>If you were a sustainable fund manager, and you had spent the last year caught between anti-ESG (as-imagined) backlash and anti-ESG (as-performed) regulation, you might think: why bother? </p><p>Sure, responsible investing is part of your DNA and your clients are at the heart of everything you do, but corporate biology is meagre insulation here. EU regulators have delivered opaque guidelines (&#8220;build sustainable funds, we just won&#8217;t tell you how&#8221;) and arbitrary action (&#8220;not knowing is part of the fun!&#8221;). US politicians have made perennially boring pensions the unexpected lightning rod in their culture war, though their action is, at least, predictable: AUM x ESG commitments = higher likelihood of a reaction.</p><p>Which is frustrating, because the assets under management (AUM) aren&#8217;t even <em>yours.</em> They belong to your clients. Most commitments to social and environmental principles are straightforward customer service. Free-market capitalism is under attack from an anti-free-market movement feigning free-market values to imply, wrongly, that an asset manager&#8217;s AUM sits on its balance sheet, leaving you with all of the suspicion of 2000s banking and none of the fun. </p><p>Of course, customer service is the reason you <em>do </em>continue to bother. Clients <a href="https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-12-08/microsoft-shareholders-to-vote-on-green-retirement-proposal?sref=TtrRgti9">really want</a> the green goods, and you really want clients &#8212; particularly those willing to pay a product premium. The irony is that AUM has a shrinking bearing on balance sheets: From 2015-2020, industry-wide revenue as share of assets fell <a href="https://www.pwc.com/gx/en/asset-management/asset-management-insights/assets/pwc-awm-revolution-pressure-on-profitability.pdf">0.45%</a> to <a href="https://web-assets.bcg.com/79/bf/d1d361854084a9624a0cbce3bf07/bcg-global-asset-management-2021-jul-2021.pdf">0.23%</a>, operating profit, <a href="https://www.ey.com/en_gl/wealth-asset-management/are-you-reframing-the-future-of-asset-management-or-is-it-reframing-you">26%</a>. To survive, asset managers need to boost either flows or fees. To thrive, they need to do both &#8212; all while cutting costs. And litigation is expensive. </p><p>Vanguard&#8217;s decision to retire from the Net-Zero Asset Manager Initiative isn&#8217;t without context. Equally, it&#8217;s unlikely to hinder sustainable investment progress in the US. As it is for corporate pledges, the risk or reward associated with corporate defections is primarily a PR thing. Changes are unlikely to manifest at a product level. In the meantime, it gets politicians off Vanguard&#8217;s back.</p><h4>Corporate decoration to product necessity</h4><p>Sustainable investing has been a salve for an industry facing long-term challenges that far outweigh those capturing headlines in 2022. End investors want and will pay for &#8212; even tolerate more risk for &#8212; innovative funds that cater to their values.</p><p>Unsurprisingly, everyone boarded the bandwagon. Regulation took a while to catch up, leaving exuberant product teams with plenty of room to reinterpret &#8216;innovative&#8217; and &#8216;sustainable&#8217;. Now it <em>has </em>caught up and yet the rules remain unclear, catalysing a backtrack among asset managers.</p><p>In Europe, firms have <a href="https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-12-05/asset-managers-seen-axing-almost-all-new-sales-of-top-esg-funds?">downgraded</a> Article 9 funds representing at least $100B since September, from a total pool of $470B. The green-standard category now accounts for 87% of reclassifications in the EU, and Jeffries <a href="https://www.pionline.com/esg/asset-managers-seen-axing-almost-all-sales-top-esg-funds">anticipates</a> &#8220;close to zero&#8221; fund launches in the new year. To date, Article 8 has absorbed the influx. Now, however, fund managers are &#8220;<a href="https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-12-11/fund-managers-brace-for-esg-correction-with-4-trillion-at-stake">bracing for an ESG correction</a>&#8221; in Article 8, after the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) issued new proposals for funds labelled &#8216;ESG&#8217; or &#8216;sustainable&#8217;. The latter will need to demonstrate that 80% of holdings are aligned to an ESG strategy and 40% of assets meet SFDR definitions of sustainable. </p><p>Article 8 funds account for $4T (and counting): far more than the drying pool of Article 9 capital. Yet, says Linklaters partner Martin Mager to Bloomberg, &#8220;asset managers can&#8217;t afford to downgrade from Article 8 if they want to keep ESG clients. &#8220;Managers realise they need it in order to do their marketing.&#8221;&#8221;</p><p>The numbers bear him out. Global sustainable funds&nbsp;<a href="https://www.morningstar.com/lp/global-esg-flows">attracted $143B</a>&nbsp;of net new money over the first nine months of 2022. The overall global fund universe, on the other hand, saw outflows of $335B.</p><p>Where do sustainable funds go from here? </p><h4>Vapid marketing to premium products</h4><p>As the window closes to deploy capital into Article 9 funds, those that remain are likely to become coveted products. But they won&#8217;t look like the vanilla ESG funds of yesteryear. </p><p>It&#8217;s over for the &#8220;rising tide strategy of the past decade of buying growth stocks,&#8221; warns the <a href="https://www.ft.com/content/40a1fe59-da38-40bc-97d7-397d2babe6fc">FT&#8217;s Alice Ross</a>. &#8220;Next year, we should find out who is actually good at sustainable investing.&#8221; Characteristics shared by a winnowing number of Article 9 funds yields clues about what &#8216;good&#8217; might look like: More VC-like, thematic objectives; <a href="https://www.investmentweek.co.uk/news/4060703/man-group-launches-firms-systematic-article-fund">Systematic</a> and multi-asset strategies; Emerging market or international exposure, to meet <a href="https://www.mercer.com/content/dam/mercer/attachments/global/investments/gl-2022-advancing-transition-potential-global-asset-manager-cop27-survey-2022-report.pdf">reported</a> asset owner demand. </p><p>For smaller players in particular, the backlash represents opportunity both ethical and financial. After years of success, the strategy favoured by larger index providers of being &#8216;all things to all people&#8217; has hit a stumbling block. While they grapple with the scrutiny that comes with size, there&#8217;s a widening gap for specialist, innovative, and premium sustainable products that qualify for the increasingly exclusive &#8212; and elusive &#8212; Article 8/9 label.</p><p>Unrelenting demand is the reward for products innovative enough to meet it.</p>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Florida man bins BlackRock]]></title><description><![CDATA[Plus, US subsidies spark global green arms race. But how clean is green?]]></description><link>https://www.weekinclimate.com/p/florida-man-bins-blackrock</link><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.weekinclimate.com/p/florida-man-bins-blackrock</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Elisabeth]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Mon, 05 Dec 2022 00:40:14 GMT</pubDate><content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>From the top</h3><p><strong>&#128024; From boom to backlash, but not to bust</strong>. Last week, Florida CFO <a href="https://twitter.com/JimmyPatronis/status/1598332294225346560?">Jimmy Patronis</a> announced plans to pull $2B from BlackRock and its &#8220;social-engineering projects.&#8221; (No word on the 11 other firms managing the state treasury portfolio, <a href="https://www.pionline.com/alternatives/floridas-treasury-portfolio-full-managers-supporting-esg-only-blackrock-targeted">10 of which</a> are signatories of the UN Principles for Responsible Investment.) &#8220;I need partners within the financial services industry who are as committed to the bottom line as we are &#8212; and I don&#8217;t trust BlackRock&#8217;s ability to deliver,&#8221; said restaurateur Patronis of the company that reported revenues of $20B in 2021. BlackRock admitted to being &#8220;surprised, given the strong returns [it] has delivered to Florida.&#8221; But this is not about <a href="https://twitter.com/Elisabeth_Steyn/status/1599420980602241029?s=20&amp;t=AhnVS6JE7sJnzjqQI2_AAw">returns</a>. Or <a href="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PSVpth7uqb4&amp;themeRefresh=1">facts</a>. This is a culture war, and culture wars only care about feelings. Though $2B is a drop in BlackRock&#8217;s $8T (as are <a href="https://www.flgov.com/2022/08/23/governor-ron-desantis-eliminates-esg-considerations-from-state-pension-investments/">Florida state pensions</a> relative to <a href="https://www.morningstar.co.uk/uk/news/229819/the-us-just-got-new-esg-rules.aspx">US private pensions</a>), the rift between the GOP and &#8220;<a href="https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-11-27/new-republican-house-majority-primed-to-pick-a-fight-over-woke-capitalism?leadSource=uverify%20wall">its longtime corporate allies</a>&#8221; is likely to deepen &#8212; particularly if Florida governor and ESG shouter <a href="https://www.ft.com/content/38f87ec9-41c6-441d-a6c2-314ff0435166">Ron DeSantis</a> becomes Republican presidential candidate.</p><p><strong>&#128176; Investors are unfazed.</strong> In a survey of 550 Terminal users, <a href="https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-12-01/esg-weathers-gop-ire-purist-dismay-to-cement-role-in-investing?leadSource=uverify%20wall">Bloomberg</a> finds broad support for ESG. &#8220;For all the talk of a backlash, sustainable-investment funds have been much more resilient than other funds during this year&#8217;s downturn,&#8221; echoes <a href="https://www.economist.com/finance-and-economics/2022/11/16/the-tenacity-of-esg-investing">The Economist</a>, even despite recent underperformance due to sector exposure. Their popularity is attributed to a customer base focused on longer term trends over short-term returns, such as those offered by oil majors in 2022. &#8220;Social values give investors a non-pecuniary reason for allocating money and sticking with their choice, a rare advantage for funds in an industry where a competitive edge normally means lower fees.&#8221; Rare &#8212; and underexploited. In a new <a href="https://www.morganstanley.com/assets/pdfs/CRC-5066630-GSF_Sustainable_Signals_AM_AO_2022_report_FINAL.pdf">report</a>, Morgan Stanley reveals a yawning gap between asset owner demands and asset manager delivery. Of the asset owners surveyed, 88% want ESG performance disclosures, 76% dedicated ESG resources, and 73% information about sustainability outcomes: needs that are met by just 39%, 41%, and 45% of asset managers, respectively.</p><p><strong>&#128681; The rules start coming and they don&#8217;t stop coming.</strong> (Here&#8217;s a <a href="https://www.jdsupra.com/legalnews/esg-regulation-monthly-round-up-6559691/">helpful recap</a> of a busy month for regulation.) The <a href="https://www.consilium.europa.eu/en/press/press-releases/2022/11/28/council-gives-final-green-light-to-corporate-sustainability-reporting-directive/">European Council</a> signed off its long-awaited corporate sustainability reporting directive (CSRD), which aligns company reporting requirements to SFDR and the EU Taxonomy. Draft Sustainability Reporting Standards have also been&nbsp;<a href="https://www.consilium.europa.eu/en/press/press-releases/2022/11/28/council-gives-final-green-light-to-corporate-sustainability-reporting-directive/">approved</a>. Under CSRD, companies must report on both their risks from and impact on a suite of social and environmental issues (i.e. double materiality) and to obtain third-party assurance or audits on those disclosures. New research published in the <a href="https://ssir.org/articles/entry/sustainability_assurance_as_greenwashing">Stanford Social Innovation Review</a>, however, pours cold water on sustainability assurances, described as a case study in &#8220;deception, obfuscation, and diversion&#8221; and &#8220;ultimately just a form of greenwashing.&#8221; They have become <a href="https://www.journalofaccountancy.com/news/2022/aug/more-companies-obtaining-esg-assurance-according-global-survey.html">a healthy source of growth</a> for the Big Four accounting firms, <a href="https://www.ft.com/content/b9821a79-3036-43d1-8be8-8910d02bb71d">notes the FT</a>. Soon required of all companies reporting in Europe and also, potentially, the US, assurances may become a healthy source of growth for law firms, too. </p><p class="button-wrapper" data-attrs="{&quot;url&quot;:&quot;https://www.weekinclimate.com/subscribe?&quot;,&quot;text&quot;:&quot;Subscribe now&quot;,&quot;action&quot;:null,&quot;class&quot;:null}" data-component-name="ButtonCreateButton"><a class="button primary" href="https://www.weekinclimate.com/subscribe?"><span>Subscribe now</span></a></p><div><hr></div><h3>How clean is the global green arms race?</h3><p>Sparked by climate awareness and turbocharged by (<a href="https://www.politico.eu/article/russia-to-ban-oil-sales-under-price-cap-kremlin-says/">fast-evolving</a>) geopolitical necessity, the global green arms race is on.</p><p>In <a href="https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-11-15/china-has-shot-at-seizing-60-share-of-global-ev-sales-this-year?leadSource=uverify%20wall">China</a>, clean energy and electric vehicle (EV) sector growth is outpacing ambitious climate (and <a href="https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-11-15/china-has-shot-at-seizing-60-share-of-global-ev-sales-this-year">sales</a>) targets. Booming renewables investment and expansion have erased energy shortages in <a href="https://www.reuters.com/business/energy/indias-electricity-shortage-erased-by-renewables-growth-kemp-2022-11-25/">India</a>. The risk threatening to &#8220;<a href="https://www.ft.com/content/a1a03af2-831a-433c-8984-b99c84018a13">fragment the West</a>,&#8221; meanwhile, is neither Russia nor oil prices (on that, there is <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/business/2022/dec/03/g7-countries-and-australia-to-cap-price-of-seaborne-russian-oil">unanimity</a>) but clean energy: In response to the US Inflation Reduction Act and its sprawling $400B in climate subsidies, the <a href="https://twitter.com/vonderleyen/status/1599389685973123084">EU</a> is seeking to change its state-aid rules and activate funding to compete for investment and industry. </p><p>The headline numbers represent a remarkable opportunity, regardless of your brand of capitalism. One consequence of the clean-energy transition entering full swing, however, is that its dirtier realities are hard to ignore &#8212; if easy to hide. Relative to other energy industries, the worst outcomes of clean energy are distributed unevenly across global supply chains. Even as European member states and environmental organisations mount legal challenges against the EU&#8217;s inclusion of <a href="https://www.iea.org/fuels-and-technologies/nuclear">(much-needed) nuclear</a> in its green taxonomy, unchallenged solar and wind are exacerbating social and environmental taxes in less visible parts of the world.</p><p>It is no secret that mining and manufacturing present an ethical &#8212; albeit unavoidable &#8212; bump in the road to decarbonisation. &#8220;Expanding mining and building supply chains for the minerals needed for the net-zero objective&#8221; is one of the four urgent challenges identified by the <a href="https://www.imf.org/en/Publications/fandd/issues/2022/12/bumps-in-the-energy-transition-yergin">IMF</a>. Burgeoning demand for commodities is driving up prices, encouraging mining giants <a href="https://www.ft.com/content/d6ea1754-1a30-46a9-a73a-40ff5cf2704b">such as BHP</a> to ditch fossil fuels for mission-critical metals. &#8220;Huge volumes of a diverse range of minerals are required to shift the world to renewable energy,&#8221; adds a <a href="https://www.nature.com/articles/s41893-022-01007-2">new study</a>. &#8220;Production of even a common material such as iron must double, copper nearly treble and lithium increase by a factor of five.&#8221; Yet: &#8220;Many of these are being sourced from the lands of vulnerable people.&#8221; </p><p>On top of <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2022/nov/29/evidence-grows-of-forced-labour-and-slavery-in-production-of-solar-panels-wind-turbines">mounting evidence</a> of <a href="https://www.nottingham.ac.uk/news/solar-the-energy-of-freedom-or-a-driver-of-modern-slavery">forced labour and slavery</a> in solar panel and wind turbine production, the <a href="https://restofworld.org/2022/indonesia-china-ev-nickel/">mining costs</a> include decimated water, land, and human health in regions escaping traditional scrutiny. Negative outcomes could compound as mining scales. But there are reasons to be optimistic. </p><p>Unlike its predecessors, this industrial revolution is happening during an era in which governments, investors, and companies have both the motive and tools to drive an equitable transition. Supply chains are complex but not inscrutable, thanks to technological progress on everything from big data to satellite imagery to blockchain. </p><p>Meanwhile, the staying power of sustainable investing has surprised detractors and supporters alike. Take the <a href="https://www.ft.com/content/c2a24202-d4ff-4ada-8bec-42a9c413453f">collaboration</a> unveiled at the the annual Principles for Responsible Investment (PRI) conference last week, where the human consequences of the low-carbon transition have garnered fresh attention. Established to galvanise &#8220;action on human rights and social issues,&#8221; the <a href="https://www.unpri.org/investment-tools/stewardship/advance">Advance</a> initiative represents 220 institutional investors.</p><p>The impact of resource extraction may be of little interest to Florida&#8217;s Jimmy Patronis when not acting in his personal capacity as seafood restaurant owner and possible <a href="https://www.govinfo.gov/app/details/USCOURTS-flnd-5_10-cv-00254">Deepwater Horizon oil spill plaintiff</a>. But it matters to the asset managers and PRI signatories managing his state treasury funds. Even as the GOP rails against climate action, the finance industry is widening its scope. </p>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Big Tech's Big Reckoning]]></title><description><![CDATA[COP27 post-mortem. Biodiversity's 'Paris moment'. The $4M greenwash bill. Plus, FAANG sustainability faces scrutiny.]]></description><link>https://www.weekinclimate.com/p/big-techs-big-reckoning</link><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.weekinclimate.com/p/big-techs-big-reckoning</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Elisabeth]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Sun, 27 Nov 2022 21:16:43 GMT</pubDate><content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>From the top</h3><p><strong>&#127777;&#65039; Post-mortem reflections on COP27 are in.</strong> Reasons to celebrate: The hard-won victory by small island states to set up a new fund for &#8220;loss and damage&#8221; resulting from climate change. Reasons for concern: Little progress &#8212; beyond that which had been decided at COP26 &#8212; towards keeping 1.5&#176;C alive. The final decision text was conspicuously absent any agreement to phase out fossil fuels, without which it will be virtually impossible to halve carbon emissions by 2030. This year was marked by a shift in focus from <a href="https://twitter.com/JenIrisAllan/status/1594586760885198848">mitigation to adaptation</a>, underscored by an acknowledgement (if unspoken) that 1.5&#176;C is &#8220;<a href="https://news.un.org/en/story/2022/09/1127381">on life support</a>.&#8221; On the one hand, as <a href="https://www.weekinimpact.com/p/nobody-wants-to-do-harm">we wrote</a> earlier this month: If 2&#176;C or more is irreversible, the conversation has got to evolve from existential abstractions to high-stakes realism. Relative to lofty pledges, adaptation has been critically overlooked and underfunded. On the other: The controversial &#8216;phase out&#8217; proposal was vetoed by a coalition of fossil fuel-producing countries led by <a href="https://www.nytimes.com/2022/11/21/climate/saudi-arabia-aramco-oil-solar-climate.html">Saudi Arabia</a>, with one delegate <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2022/nov/20/cop27-summit-climate-crisis-global-heating-fossil-fuel-industry">reported to have said</a> &#8220;we should not target sources of energy&#8230; [or] mention fossil fuels.&#8221; It makes any 1.5&#176;C obituary feel less pragmatic and more, I don&#8217;t know, purchased? Hope for more ambitious progress rests on COP28 in <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2022/nov/16/uae-cop28-host-lobby-climate-reputation-cop27">Dubai</a>, barring which, there&#8217;s always the option of distraction courtesy of FIFA. </p><p><strong>&#129443; Next up: Biodiversity in Montreal</strong>, where the <a href="https://www.unep.org/events/conference/un-biodiversity-conference-cop-15">UN Biodiversity Conference (COP 15)</a> begins in December. Organisers hope to finalise the <a href="https://www.cbd.int/article/draft-1-global-biodiversity-framework">Post-2020 Global Biodiversity Framework</a>, stylised as the &#8216;Paris moment for nature&#8217;. &#8220;Paris &#8212; or Copenhagen,&#8221; cautions <a href="https://www.climatechangenews.com/2022/11/22/un-nature-pact-nears-its-copenhagen-or-paris-moment/">Carlos Manuel Rodr&#237;guez</a>, CEO of the Global Environmental Facility. The 2009 Copenhagen summit <a href="https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-34274461">failed</a> where the 2015 Paris summit succeeded, in part because the latter ignited an <a href="https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2022/10/26/magazine/climate-change-warming-world.html">unexpected explosion</a> of innovation and decarbonisation. Implicit in the &#8216;Paris moment for nature&#8217; is an urgent hope that the <a href="https://www.eco-business.com/opinion/with-the-private-sector-now-on-board-this-is-our-year-to-turn-the-tide-on-biodiversity-loss/">private sector</a> throws its weight behind biodiversity with the same gusto that drove climate to the top of the business, investment, and political agenda. Plenty hangs in the balance. In its latest flagship publication, <a href="https://livingplanet.panda.org/en-GB/#:~:text=The%20Living%20Planet%20Report%202022,are%20to%20reverse%20nature%20loss.">The Living Planet Report 2022</a>, WWF revealed global wildlife populations have plummeted 69% since 1970. Despite a <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2022/nov/27/biodiversity-montreal-summit-nature-earth-wildlife-canada">2010 pledge</a> to halt a 2.5% annual decline in animal loss, extinction has marched on at the same pace in the intervening years. Fortunately, the biodiversity investment and disclosure landscape is growing &#8212; the TNFD recently released a <a href="https://framework.tnfd.global/">third draft</a> of its beta framework &#8212; but <a href="https://www.investmentweek.co.uk/opinion/4060763/biodiversity-turn-scientists-financiers">Will Goodhart of the CFA</a> tells investors to learn from the mistakes of ESG: More focus on real outcomes; less trying to be &#8220;all things to all people.&#8221; </p><p>&#128184; <strong>Elsewhere, coordinated regulators continue to plug away.</strong> The FCA<strong> </strong>is developing a <a href="https://www.reuters.com/business/sustainable-business/britain-takes-first-step-regulate-company-esg-raters-2022-11-22/">Code of Conduct</a> for sustainability data and ratings providers, as <a href="https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-11-23/fund-bosses-track-artificially-low-esg-ratings-to-chase-alpha?leadSource=uverify%20wall">Bloomberg</a> reports that fund managers are finding alpha among the &#8216;artificially low&#8217; scores of emerging market companies overlooked by traditional providers. ESMA, which launched a review of the data landscape earlier this year, is now seeking feedback on its <a href="https://www.esma.europa.eu/press-news/esma-news/esma-launches-consultation-guidelines-use-esg-or-sustainability-related-terms">draft guidelines</a> for fund naming conventions. The rules will establish a quantitative threshold for funds claiming to be &#8216;ESG&#8217;, &#8216;sustainable&#8217;, etc. ESMA has proposed that qualifying funds demonstrate 80% holding adherence to sustainability criteria, which aligns with the threshold set out by the SEC. &#8220;The objective is to ensure that investors are protected against unsubstantiated or exaggerated sustainability claims,&#8221; says ESMA in its press release. In other news: The SEC has fined <a href="https://www.reuters.com/world/us/sec-charges-goldman-sachs-asset-management-not-following-esg-investments-2022-11-22/">Goldman Sachs</a> $4M for rebranding as ESG some non-ESG-looking funds, following an investigation it opened in <a href="https://www.weekinimpact.com/p/whats-in-a-fund-name">June</a>. Defection from the EU&#8217;s &#8216;greenest&#8217; fund category continues unabated, with asset managers citing confusion about requirements. Amundi, Europe&#8217;s largest asset manager, announced plans to <a href="https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-11-21/amundi-is-downgrading-almost-all-funds-with-eu-s-top-esg-tag">downgrade the majority of the &#8364;45B</a>&nbsp;it holds in Article 9; <a href="https://citywire.com/selector/news/dws-downgrades-2bn-worth-of-sdg-oriented-article-9-funds/a2403110">DWS</a>, five SDG-themed funds worth &#8364;2B; and <a href="https://www.etfstream.com/news/hsbc-am-joins-rivals-in-downgrading-article-9-paris-aligned-climate-etfs/">HSBC</a>, a smaller pool of seven funds. </p><p class="button-wrapper" data-attrs="{&quot;url&quot;:&quot;https://www.weekinclimate.com/subscribe?&quot;,&quot;text&quot;:&quot;Subscribe now&quot;,&quot;action&quot;:null,&quot;class&quot;:null}" data-component-name="ButtonCreateButton"><a class="button primary" href="https://www.weekinclimate.com/subscribe?"><span>Subscribe now</span></a></p><div><hr></div><h3>Big Tech&#8217;s Big Reckoning</h3><p>For a long time, the sustainable investment mantra &#8220;doing well by doing good&#8221; owed much of its success to FAANG stocks: Meta-owned Facebook, Apple, Amazon, Netflix, Alphabet-owned Google, and now Microsoft (making it MAGMA? MAAMA? Spare a thought for the sub editors who launched <a href="https://www.google.com/search?q=faang+bite&amp;source=lnms&amp;tbm=nws&amp;sa=X&amp;ved=2ahUKEwid082blcn7AhWUbcAKHdETCsYQ_AUoAnoECAEQBA&amp;cshid=1669373588246262&amp;biw=840&amp;bih=707&amp;dpr=2">22,000 'bite' puns</a> and are left now with only <a href="https://www.google.com/search?q=investors+%22take+a+bite+out+of+apple%22&amp;ei=IqSAY4P5Dc_rgAa_ypDADw&amp;ved=0ahUKEwiDku3Dmsn7AhXPNcAKHT8lBPgQ4dUDCA8&amp;uact=5&amp;oq=investors+%22take+a+bite+out+of+apple%22&amp;gs_lcp=Cgxnd3Mtd2l6LXNlcnAQAzIFCCEQoAEyBQghEKABMgUIIRCgATIICCEQFhAeEB0yCAghEBYQHhAdMggIIRAWEB4QHToHCAAQHhCiBDoFCAAQogRKBAhBGABKBAhGGABQ1gJYjAxgqxJoAHAAeACAATqIAb8BkgEBNJgBAKABAcABAQ&amp;sclient=gws-wiz-serp">Apple</a>.). </p><p>The clutch of low-emitting Big Tech firms were a &#8220;fast fix&#8221; for the environmental objectives of ESG investors, reports <a href="https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-11-16/faang-bets-that-wiped-out-esg-returns-may-do-more-harm-in-2023?leadSource=uverify%20wall">Bloomberg</a>. They tilted <a href="https://www.util.co/esg-case-study">heavily</a> towards &#8212; and reaped the outsized returns of &#8212; a sector buoyed by low borrowing costs and high risk appetites. Then came aggressive volatility, inflation, and interest rates, which took the teeth out of FAANGs, the fire out of MAGMA. </p><p>In January, we <a href="https://www.weekinimpact.com/p/greenwash-to-wish-wash">predicted</a> an industry downturn would prompt well-timed scrutiny of its hitherto celebrated ESG credentials, just as this year witnessed sustainable investors pivot on weapons and fossil fuels just in time to take advantage of higher returns, which lends credence to the argument that &#8216;doing good&#8217; is &#8217;doing well&#8217;.</p><p>To be fair, scrutiny is overdue. For two decades, tech companies &#8212; shielded by mysticism &#8212; have been managed, engaged, and regulated with relative laxity, prompting unheeded <a href="https://www.ft.com/content/6d2e45bc-fb53-4166-bedf-b53edbc04fcb">calls</a> to <a href="https://www.economist.com/leaders/2018/01/18/how-to-tame-the-tech-titans">tame the tech titans</a>. The bear market shakeout put an end to that, dispelling blind faith in both Silicon Valley and the Silicon Valley-tilted market indexes onto which many a &#8216;sustainable&#8217; sticker has been slapped.</p><p>Beyond schadenfreude, there are a couple of reasons to pay attention to Big Tech&#8217;s Big Reckoning. Just as it became the token sector of (and eventual proxy for) sustainable finance on the way up, their respective battles are symmetrical in a cyclical downturn. Or, as <a href="https://www.protocol.com/newsletters/sourcecode/esg-big-tech">Protocol</a> put it: ESG&#8217;s struggles are Big Tech&#8217;s problem; and Big Tech&#8217;s struggles are a sustainable investor&#8217;s problem. Both must fight fires from two angles, with one set of accusations justified (&#8216;offshoring&#8217; negative impact; poor governance; absent regulation; even antitrust &#8212; all reasonable), the other, less so (&#8216;woke&#8217; culture; free-speech/market censorship &#8212; clearly political). The former must be confronted, the latter, discredited, which is a tricky tension to navigate. </p><h4>Babies and bathwater</h4><p>For Big Tech as it is for BlackRock, the priority (and challenge) is to protect the concept while repairing trust in the execution. It is against &#8216;governance&#8217; metrics, such as management, risk, and regulation, that the tech industry falls short. In terms of impact, however, the positives are frequently overlooked. </p><p>Take Microsoft. Through the direct sale of its products and services, the company turbocharges sustainable development. Computer hardware and software have transformed education globally. Digital adoption lowers barriers to Internet access, boosting literacy and academic performance in rural regions. The shift is one of both function and form. &#8216;Any time, any place, any pace&#8217; information engenders democratic, collectivist, collaborative learning. Innovations have catalysed similar leaps in healthcare quality and access and food production and security, not to mention innovation, efficiency, and productivity.</p><p>Even against gender equality and global partnerships Big Tech, on the whole, scores well &#8212; perhaps surprisingly so, given negative perceptions about social media in particular. Nonetheless, aggregated academic consensus associates it with higher adoption of healthcare and contraceptive access among women, as well as equal rights and freedom of speech generally.</p><p>As sustainable investing evolves, the &#8216;good vs. bad&#8217; binary against which companies were once evaluated looks less relevant. It grows harder to justify bundling E+S+G factors &#8212; particularly across both operations and externalities &#8212; into a cute score. Instead, argued the CFA&#8217;s <a href="https://www.investmentweek.co.uk/opinion/4060763/biodiversity-turn-scientists-financiers">Will Goodhart</a>, exercise discernment and get comfortable with nuance: Though sustainable investing cannot be &#8220;all things to all people,&#8221; it can have real impact.</p><p>In short, the world is complicated. (The argument for conglomerates <a href="https://www.esginvestor.net/taxing-times-for-tech-giants/">paying tax</a> is not.)</p>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Zero FTX given]]></title><description><![CDATA[Regulation tailwinds. COP27 divisions. Decarbonisation questions. Plus, where does the crypto crisis leave ESG?]]></description><link>https://www.weekinclimate.com/p/zero-ftx-given</link><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.weekinclimate.com/p/zero-ftx-given</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Elisabeth]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Sun, 20 Nov 2022 09:04:43 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://bucketeer-e05bbc84-baa3-437e-9518-adb32be77984.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/492545a8-9aff-4ca8-a20b-1d4ce47c9044_1200x627.png" length="0" type="image/jpeg"/><content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>From the top</h3><p><strong>&#128220; On both sides of the pond, financial regulators have been occupied with ESG-related rules.</strong> (Not much else to be getting on with.) Soon after the FCA published its well-received consultation on <a href="https://www.fca.org.uk/publication/consultation/cp22-20.pdf">UK Sustainability Disclosure Requirements</a>&#8212;which aims to build and improve on SFDR, with better investment criteria and fund labels&#8212;the EU adopted its long-awaited<a href="https://www.europarl.europa.eu/news/pt/press-room/20221107IPR49611/sustainable-economy-parliament-adopts-new-reporting-rules-for-multinationals"> Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directiv</a><a href="https://www.esgtoday.com/eu-lawmakers-adopt-corporate-sustainability-reporting-rules/">e</a> (CSRD), which applies to all European companies from 2024 onwards. <a href="https://www.esma.europa.eu/press-news/esma-news/esas-launch-joint-call-evidence-greenwashing">European watchdogs</a>, attentive to the recent raft of <a href="https://www.weekinimpact.com/p/nobody-wants-to-do-harm">Article 9 downgrades</a>, launched a &#8216;<a href="https://www.esma.europa.eu/press-news/consultations/esas-call-evidence-greenwashing">Call for Evidence</a>&#8217; to gauge the scale of greenwashing in the financial industry, while providing <a href="https://twitter.com/ESMAComms/status/1593171993196494848?s=20&amp;t=x71dAmNysrJRPt1DR4dRyg">taxonomy clarity</a> of sorts. In the US: Having reopened the comment period for amendments to its Names Rule, a busy SEC announced &#8220;<a href="https://news.bloomberglaw.com/securities-law/new-sec-rules-to-shed-light-on-blackrock-vanguard-esg-votes">the most important sustainability rule you&#8217;ve never heard of</a>,&#8221; requiring mutual funds to provide more detail about their proxy votes in line with ESG categories. Meanwhile, the emboldened US government<strong>&nbsp;</strong>isn&#8217;t waiting for SEC disclosures. The new <a href="https://www.whitehouse.gov/ceq/news-updates/2022/11/17/what-they-are-saying-business-and-climate-leaders-applaud-president-bidens-proposed-plan-to-protect-federal-supply-chain-from-climate-related-risks/">Federal Supplier Climate Risks and Resilience Rule</a> makes them mandatory for all government contractors.</p><p><strong>&#128506;&#65039; Regulation is symptomatic of a political landscape that has grown&#8212;suddenly, tentatively, relatively&#8212;favourable. </strong>Unexpected power shifts in Washington and Westminster have improved regional green policy prospects. Luiz In&#225;cio Lula da Silva&#8217;s election victory prompted a global sigh of relief for (and sponsored by) Brazil&#8217;s Amazon rainforest. Even <a href="https://www.weekinimpact.com/p/what-does-big-oil-want">deteriorating China-US relations</a> were alleviated this week, when presidents Biden and Xi <a href="https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/statements-releases/2022/11/14/readout-of-president-joe-bidens-meeting-with-president-xi-jinping-of-the-peoples-republic-of-china/">agreed</a> to cooperate on climate change. Their meeting boosted morale at a stagnant COP27, where international relations look less rosy. &#8216;Loss and damage&#8217; has been the central theme of the conference, with developed nations under pressure to mobilise <a href="https://www.un.org/en/climatechange/high-level-expert-group">trillions in public and private capital</a> toward the economies worst hit by a climate disaster for which they bear least responsibility. On Thursday, UN Secretary General Ant&#243;nio Guterres warned of a &#8220;breakdown between North and South&#8221; after financing discussions hit deadlock. Friday&#8217;s heavily criticised <a href="https://www.reuters.com/business/environment/cop27-draft-deal-published-no-proposal-yet-loss-damage-funding-2022-11-18/">draft deal</a> was absent funding details. Then came the <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2022/nov/18/eu-reversal-stance-loss-damage-china-cop27">EU's dramatic U-turn</a>. With 1.5&#176;C in doubt, <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/environment/live/2022/nov/19/cop27-fears-15c-target-danger-negotiations-overrun-live?filterKeyEvents=false&amp;page=with:block-6378a7458f088c5c88611be1#top-of-blog">will it be enough</a>?</p><p>&#128267; <strong>Decarbonisation: No longer &#8216;if&#8217;, but of &#8216;when&#8217;, &#8216;how&#8217;, and &#8216;where&#8217;.</strong> Besides financing, the <a href="https://www.reuters.com/world/europe/eu-supports-calls-phase-down-all-fossil-fuels-timmermans-2022-11-15/">contentious debate</a> of COP27 asks whether the restriction on coal should be extended to all fossil fuels. The EU and India are in favour. Not so <a href="https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-63637686">African countries</a>, which defend their right to exploit gas reserves. (Understandable, after two weeks in the company of commitment-phobic economic powerhouses that owe their strength to the stuff.) More to the point, says <a href="https://www.ft.com/content/c7416d3a-d049-4b92-8a48-bff415baa301">Goldman Sachs</a>: Though renewable funding has taken a lead, short-term underinvestment in gas will increase energy prices and coal consumption. Hope rests in public-private partnerships, such as the <a href="https://www.esginvestor.net/energy-transition-accelerator/">Energy Transition Accelerator</a> unveiled by US climate envoy John Kerry. A case study in their efficacy, the <a href="https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-11-15/battery-storage-tops-list-for-climate-tech-investors-esg-survey">Inflation Reduction Act</a> is attracting billions to clean energy and <a href="https://www.ft.com/content/05e7a6ba-bdde-4c3b-b7d1-657523204021">battery storage</a>. Cue fast-tracked permits not just for renewable projects, as the <a href="https://ec.europa.eu/commission/presscorner/detail/en/IP_22_6657">EU recently mandated</a>, but also <a href="https://www.ft.com/content/140fb908-ba2e-4fcf-8a02-74e80991b5cf">mining exploration</a>. In anticipation of the <a href="https://twitter.com/BJMbraun/status/1587879083211620353?s=20&amp;t=x5kwlzeQOlGApOAE-9xWdg">controversial sector</a> stepping onto a bigger world stage, the IEA released a <a href="https://www.iea.org/reports/critical-minerals-policy-tracker">Critical Minerals Policy Tracker</a> to enhance scrutiny of its regulatory framework.</p><p class="button-wrapper" data-attrs="{&quot;url&quot;:&quot;https://www.weekinclimate.com/subscribe?&quot;,&quot;text&quot;:&quot;Subscribe now&quot;,&quot;action&quot;:null,&quot;class&quot;:null}" data-component-name="ButtonCreateButton"><a class="button primary" href="https://www.weekinclimate.com/subscribe?"><span>Subscribe now</span></a></p><div><hr></div><h3>Story of the week: Zero FTX given</h3><p>General rule of thumb: Don&#8217;t lie about financial products.</p><p>To an extent, the substance of the product doesn&#8217;t matter. Neither <a href="https://www.risk.net/investing/7933591/ignoring-climate-risk-helps-crispin-odey-hedge-fund-jump-30">Crispin Odey</a> nor any one of the <a href="https://www.ft.com/content/e1759849-8138-4b71-8ad5-6e9f29e60404">BAD</a>- or Vice-like funds, explicit in their anti-ESG objectives, suffers the vitriol faced by funds claiming goodness or greenness, only to be unmasked. </p><p>Just be honest about it.</p><p>The colossal consequences of deception are, unsurprisingly, commensurate with its financial value. In 2008, it wasn&#8217;t credit ratings that sunk the reputation of banks: It was credit ratings squared, backed and collateralised. The subsequent crisis of faith rivalled the immediate financial impact, shaping a decade of political polarisation and generational psychology.</p><p><a href="https://www.weekinimpact.com/p/esg-self-sabotage">Back in May</a>, we talked about the distrust in the context of crypto. Humans don&#8217;t need a good reason to bet on speculative assets, nor a charitable ex-post justification, but here it comes: One of the core tenets underpinning crypto culture (anti-regulation, anti-risk management) is symptomatic of distrust in the financial establishment, which is, to some degree, a hangover from 2008. </p><p><strong>Takeaway #1:</strong> For an ESG industry in the throes of a still-resolvable trust crisis, the crypto <em>complex</em>&#8212;generally speaking&#8212;is an example of what <em>could</em> happen <em>if</em> certain mistruths are allowed to proliferate. </p><p>There&#8217;s an existential risk in selling ESG (risk management) as something it&#8217;s not (impact). It&#8217;s bad for impact providers, it&#8217;s bad for ESG providers, and, by extension, it&#8217;s bad for the people, companies, and countries who would, otherwise, benefit from <em>genuine </em>ESG or <em>genuine </em>impact. As we wrote then:</p><blockquote><p>Today&#8217;s [crypto] market is very different from the decentralised, democratised image it projects. With just a handful of people and centralised exchanges pulling the strings and evading accountability, it&#8217;s the type of market begging for risk oversight.</p></blockquote><p>And:</p><blockquote><p>Crypto culture is vehemently anti regulation and anti risk management. Unfortunately, one result is there&#8217;s little by way of a) scrutiny to prevent the type of apocalyptic crash that hit Terra Luna this month, and b) safety net to protect those left holding the bag.</p><p>If there are more Terra Lunas&#8212;and judging by the transparency of certain exchanges and their supposed reserves, it&#8217;s only a matter of time&#8212;[the distrust death spiral] could have multi-billion dollar ramifications.</p></blockquote><p><strong>Which brings us to</strong> <strong>Takeway #2</strong>: The crypto <em>crash </em>is an example of what <em>is </em>happening<em> because</em> certain mistruths are allowed to proliferate. </p><h3>Affected altruism</h3><p>There is such thing as too much honesty. Still, it makes for great entertainment.</p><p>Having brought down the crypto house of cards last week, FTX CEO Sam Bankman-Fried (SBF) decided, belatedly and against all possible legal counsel, to share his reflections in the public square. </p><p>In a Twitter interview with <a href="https://www.vox.com/future-perfect/23462333/sam-bankman-fried-ftx-cryptocurrency-effective-altruism-crypto-bahamas-philanthropy">Vox</a>, the self-described &#8220;effective altruist&#8221; (and de facto flag-flyer for both social impact and crypto regulation) aired his real feelings about ESG (&#8220;perverted beyond recognition&#8221;), regulation, and ethics and PR.</p><ul><li><p><strong>On regulation (specifically, his own, prior, pro-regulation statements):</strong> &#8220;[It&#8217;s] just PR. There&#8217;s nobody out there making sure good things happen and bad things don&#8217;t. F&#8212;k regulators. They make everything worse. They don&#8217;t protect customers at all. [Consumer protection would be good], but regulators can&#8217;t do it.&#8221;</p></li><li><p><strong>On ethics and PR (specifically, his own, prior, pro-ethics statements)</strong>: &#8220;All the dumb s&#8212;t I said. It&#8217;s not true, not really. Everyone goes around pretending perception reflects reality. It doesn&#8217;t. I had to be [good at talking about ethics]. It&#8217;s what reputations are made of. [It&#8217;s] this dumb game we woke Westerners play where we say the right [things] and so everyone likes us.&#8221;</p></li></ul><p>Radical honesty might not save SBF (or the lawyers representing him), but for sustainable investors to have on record what so many business leaders think and yet would never say out loud? Invaluable. </p><p>Statements about company purpose or ethics are PR. PR is an unreliable proxy for ESG-as-risk and<em> </em>ESG-as-impact. If there were ever a moment to reevaluate its place in traditional sustainability ratings and analysis, this is it. </p><p>Regulation will make certain disclosures easier to digest but not necessarily to trust, particularly where metric- or data-free. Both regulators and companies are responding to growing financial interest in sustainability. The difference is that one is reactive, the other, proactive. The more material a corporate disclosure, the greater the pressure on regulators to respond, sure&#8212;but equally, the greater the incentive for company management to preempt perceptions of any disclosure. Regulatory frameworks are broad and developments slow. Investor relations have the upper hand.</p><p>One misinformed rating is a <a href="https://www.fnlondon.com/articles/esg-firm-raises-eyebrows-for-ranking-collapsed-crypto-giant-ftx-higher-on-governance-than-exxon-mobil-20221117">funny meme</a>. Lots of misinformed ratings&#8212;bundled and sold as a financial product, let alone bundled and sold as an index on top of which <em>other </em>products are bundled and sold&#8212;is an existential risk to sustainable finance.</p><p>Even as it it highlights flaws in traditional measurement methods, the failure of FTX and the broader crypto ecosystem underscores why sustainability matters. In 2008, credit ratings were accused of lacking rigour, accountability and transparency. ESG ratings need not provoke a similar crisis of confidence today.</p>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Nobody wants to do harm]]></title><description><![CDATA[Paris Agreement obituary. Climate finance crunch. SFDR teething troubles.]]></description><link>https://www.weekinclimate.com/p/nobody-wants-to-do-harm</link><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.weekinclimate.com/p/nobody-wants-to-do-harm</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Elisabeth]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Sun, 13 Nov 2022 12:34:23 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://bucketeer-e05bbc84-baa3-437e-9518-adb32be77984.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/3d217a09-3a8c-4d32-b735-d0b58cb7971c_1200x627.png" length="0" type="image/jpeg"/><content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>From the top</h3><p><strong>&#127777;&#65039; 1.5&#176;C is dead in the water. (Coral doesn&#8217;t have to be.) </strong>The annual <a href="https://essd.copernicus.org/articles/14/4811/2022/">Global Carbon Budget</a> report, released Friday, puts the world on course to breach the Paris Agreement target in nine years. &#8220;Most in the field know this to be true,&#8221; reported <a href="https://www.economist.com/interactive/briefing/2022/11/05/the-world-is-going-to-miss-the-totemic-1-5c-climate-target">The Economist</a> last Saturday, when the carbon budget still permitted 10 years of emissions at today&#8217;s rates. &#8220;Very few say it in public, or on the record. But the truth needs to be faced, and its implications explored.&#8221; The <a href="https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2022/10/26/magazine/climate-change-warming-world.html">New York Times</a> observes climate rhetoric has started to soften&#8212;or rather, harden, &#8220;with existential abstractions thickening into something more like high-stakes realism.&#8221; &#8216;Realism&#8217; means  <a href="https://climateactiontracker.org/global/cat-thermometer/">2-3&#176;C</a> of warming this century, which shuts the door on continued normality. Equally, however, the dizzying pace of decarbonisation and innovation have ruled out total disaster. As the window of potential climate outcomes narrows, we get a clearer vision of a future &#8220;full of disruption, well past climate normal, and yet mercifully short of true apocalypse,&#8221; in which adaptation&#8212;<a href="https://cop27.eg/#/news/197/COP27%20Presidency%20launches%20Shar">word of the week</a> at COP27&#8212;is the new target.</p><p><strong>&#127757; Climate adaptation is most urgent in the places least responsible</strong>. The previous 26 COPs were absent that conversation. At COP27, however, developing countries are making it impossible to ignore, pushing for <a href="https://www.bbc.com/news/science-environment-63559426">compensation</a> from and threatening <a href="https://www.ft.com/content/7afaf911-5a10-4ea2-82c4-7827cefd75d6">litigation</a> on wealthy nations responsible for asymmetrical &#8220;<a href="https://www.edie.net/what-is-loss-and-damage-and-will-it-have-a-breakthrough-at-cop27/">loss and damage</a>.&#8221; If its predecessors were an exercise in itemising the climate bill, COP27 is time to pay up. Thursday, or &#8216;Finance Day&#8217;, addressed the question of how banks, investors, and insurers can better channel transition finance. In an effort to &#8220;answer the argument by private sector financiers that it&#8217;s too risky to invest in emerging markets,&#8221; UN experts published a <a href="https://www.reuters.com/business/cop/show-us-money-developing-world-cop27-seeks-climate-finance-details-2022-11-09/">list of projects</a> worth $120B that investors could back. It might not be enough. <a href="https://www.lse.ac.uk/granthaminstitute/publication/finance-for-climate-action-scaling-up-investment-for-climate-and-development/">Another report</a>, published on Tuesday, claims developing nations need an extra $1T a year in external financing by 2030. But a <a href="https://www.weforum.org/agenda/2022/11/cop27-poor-nations-call-for-financial-support-and-other-economy-stories/">shortfall in blended finance</a> has been exacerbated by a dollar bull market sucking money away from emerging markets.</p><p>&#127974; &#8220;<strong>Finance is used to feeling it&#8217;s in the driving seat,</strong>&#8221; Cambridge Associates&#8217;s Simon Hallett tells <a href="https://www.esginvestor.net/let-the-climate-finance-flow/">ESG Investor</a>. &#8220;We must acknowledge that, in the transition to net zero, finance is an enabler, not the driver.&#8221; Now their ESG honeymoon stage is over, investors are adjusting to a new role. On the one hand, 2022 volatility underscored the limits of ESG action in a framework dictated by financial vicissitudes. On the other, governments are beginning to bend that framework towards decarbonisation&#8212;<a href="https://www.ft.com/content/7797bd70-645d-4ef9-a7ee-0c90aa1a09c6">particularly in the US</a>, where fiscal support for clean energy became all-but entrenched after this week&#8217;s midterm results. For its own part, ESG investing looks more sophisticated than it did a year ago. &#8220;Private sector capital has grappled with the challenge that although it can clean its portfolios, if it&#8217;s not financing the transition in a practical way, it&#8217;s not having impact,&#8221; says ESG Investor. Now, portfolios are trending towards transition plans over linear reductions or industry screens. </p><p><strong>&#128263; Companies might not be happy about it</strong>. In its <a href="https://www.tulchangroup.com/our-news/the-state-of-stewardship-report">State of Stewardship Report</a>, communications firm Tulchan reports investor relations are &#8220;increasingly uncomfortable&#8221; over ESG. FTSE 100 bosses complain of &#8220;regulation and interference,&#8221; of which there is plenty at COP27. <a href="https://www.cdp.net/en/articles/companies/cdp-to-incorporate-issb-climate-related-disclosure-standard">CDP</a> announced plans to incorporate ISSB standards into its reporting system, while the <a href="https://www.un.org/sites/un2.un.org/files/high-level_expert_group_n7b.pdf">UN</a> unveiled a High-Level Expert Group on Net-Zero Commitments (UNHLEG) to hold businesses to account on net-zero commitments. With a nod to <a href="https://www.weekinimpact.com/p/util-raises-6m-investment">GFANZ</a>, <a href="https://www.un.org/sg/en/content/sg/statement/2022-11-08/secretary-generals-remarks-launch-of-report-of-high-level-expert-group-net-zero-commitments-delivered">UN Secretary General Ant&#243;nio Guterres</a> announced UNHLEG would address &#8220;bogus net-zero pledges&#8221; with &#8220;loopholes wide enough to drive a diesel truck through.&#8221; Take heart, readers of the <a href="https://www.edelman.com/trust/2022-trust-barometer/special-report-trust-climate/reporting-rallying">Edelman Trust and Climate Change report</a>, which claims &#8220;that Business, normally the most trusted institution in the world,&#8221; [really, asks <a href="https://www.linkedin.com/posts/followalisont_trust-and-climate-change-from-reporting-activity-6994622860895866880-A1I9?">Alison Taylor</a>?] are now the least trusted spokespeople on climate. Edelman would know: The PR firm has an entire <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edelman_(firm)">SubWiki</a> dedicated to its &#8216;Controversies / Fossil fuel companies and climate change deniers&#8217;.</p><p class="button-wrapper" data-attrs="{&quot;url&quot;:&quot;https://www.weekinclimate.com/subscribe?&quot;,&quot;text&quot;:&quot;Subscribe now&quot;,&quot;action&quot;:null,&quot;class&quot;:null}" data-component-name="ButtonCreateButton"><a class="button primary" href="https://www.weekinclimate.com/subscribe?"><span>Subscribe now</span></a></p><div><hr></div><h3>Story of the week: Nobody wants to do harm</h3><p>Here&#8217;s a scenario. You decide you want to park your funds in a mutual fund or ETF&#8212;perhaps an unregulated crypto exchange wasn&#8217;t for you&#8212;and so you approach a fund adviser or provider. They ask you about your risk tolerance, as well as your sustainability preferences, as is now required under <a href="https://www.esma.europa.eu/press-news/esma-news/esma-publishes-final-guidelines-mifid-ii-suitability-requirements-0">MiFID II</a> regulation. </p><p>You don&#8217;t know what an Article 6, 8, or 9 fund is. Your adviser&#8212;required, too, to elucidate sustainable products while &#8220;avoiding technical language&#8221;&#8212;explains there&#8217;s a spectrum: On one end is unsustainable, or brown, on the other is super sustainable, or bright green, and somewhere in between is light green, which, like, pick a side.</p><p>&#8220;What does sustainable mean?&#8221; you ask. &#8220;Nobody really knows,&#8221; responds your adviser. &#8220;Broadly, however, somewhere between 0.1% and 100% of its holding companies should either: contribute to an environmental or social objective; not significantly harm other environmental or social objectives; and be well governed.&#8221;</p><p>Maybe you cheered on Elon Musk during that Twitter feud with S&amp;P, and so you say &#8220;not interested, thanks, I like badly governed brown harm.&#8221; More likely, however, is that you self select &#8216;do-no-harm&#8217; sustainable over the implicitly &#8216;do-harm&#8217; non-sustainable.</p><h4>Asset managers are nervous.</h4><p>The &#8220;billions chasing contested ESG funds leave insiders &#8220;mystified,&#8221;&#8221; bemoans <a href="https://finance.yahoo.com/news/billions-chasing-contested-esg-funds-072540914.html">one headline</a>. Puzzling and puzzling 'till their puzzlers are sore, blindsided &#8220;industry insiders confess they don&#8217;t understand why investors aren&#8217;t being cautious&#8221; anymore. </p><p>Even as Article 8 outflows hit <strong>&#8364;29B</strong> in Q3 (YTD outflows: <strong>&#8364;120B</strong> (<a href="https://www.morningstar.com/en-uk/lp/sfdr-article8-article9">Morningstar</a>); <strong>&#8364;173B</strong> (<a href="https://lipperalpha.refinitiv.com/reports/2022/11/monday-morning-memo-european-esg-fund-market-report-year-to-date-q3-2022/">Refinitiv</a>)), Morningstar data show Article 9 <em>inflows</em> reached <strong>&#8364;13B</strong> (YTD inflows: <strong>&#8364;29B</strong> (Morningstar); <strong>&#8364;33bn</strong> (Refinitiv)). Spooked by the greenwash associated with broad-brush ESG funds, investors are fleeing Article 8 for the greener pastures promised by dedicated impact or thematic sustainable funds. </p><p>But does Article 9 plug the gap?</p><p>Their popularity is unsurprising, but dark-green funds aren&#8217;t secure in their status. Those &#8220;industry insider&#8221; jitters are justified. Absent clarity from ESMA, asset managers are &#8220;struggling to guess&#8221; what qualifies as &#8220;sustainable,&#8221; prompting preemptive action. In the time since Q3 data were published, the <a href="https://www.etfstream.com/news/etf-wrap-the-sfdr-green-reaper/">SFDR Green Reaper</a> has been hard at work: Last week, BlackRock, UBS and Invesco announced plans to downgrade Article 9 funds housing tens of billions of dollars.</p><h4>Article 9 has two problems.</h4><p>The first and widely accepted version is that the category may not be as sustainable as it appears. Some questions, such as whether weapons qualify as &#8220;sustainable,&#8221; shouldn&#8217;t be up for debate and yet are for at least 165 Article 9 funds. Morningstar warns that fewer than 5% of Article 9 funds &#8220;target sustainable-investment exposure between 90% and 100%.&#8221; <strong>Our own analysis yields some suspect activity under their bonnet, including hundreds of millions in exposure to Coca Cola, which&#8212;<a href="https://www.weekinimpact.com/p/util-raises-6m-investment">as we discussed last week</a>&#8212;does quite a bit of harm, actually. </strong>Hundreds of millions may not sound like much, but it isn&#8217;t insignificant in the context of a relatively compact <strong>&#8364;</strong>400B in Article 9 assets.</p><p>And that&#8217;s the second issue. </p><p>In terms of impact, it&#8217;s harder to find pure&#8212;and established, and liquid&#8212;&#8216;green&#8217; companies than it is to find &#8216;complicated&#8217; companies. Blame an economy in the early stages of change. Blame a messy one. Supportive fiscal policy, <a href="https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2022/10/26/magazine/climate-change-warming-world.html">rapidly advancing innovation</a>, and blended finance solutions all help. In the interim, however, there&#8217;s a lot of interest in a rather small universe.</p><h4>It&#8217;s hard being good.</h4><p>By our own analysis (data as at October 2022), <strong>the 18 largest Article 9 funds by AUM represent &#8364;86.9B, or around 20% of the total pot&#8212;a share that grows as the number of funds shrinks</strong>. By median average, <strong>their top-ten holdings represent a chunky 32% of total portfolio size. </strong>These are concentrated funds! And they sit in the eye of a perfect storm. If money keeps pouring in, and funds keep dropping out, then flows will accelerate towards the remaining highest-impact thematic funds, many of which have a necessary bias to smaller cap companies.</p><p>It&#8217;s a scenario that could expose Article 9&#8212;and the companies to which they funnel capital&#8212;to regulatory as well as volatility risk of the type that destabilised the iShares Global Clean Energy ETF last year (and of which <a href="https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2021-10-11/clean-energy-stocks-are-being-diluted-by-huge-cash-inflows-green-insight">we warned Bloomberg</a> at the time). One of the biggest Article 9 funds, its top-ten holdings represent almost 50% of its total exposure today. Its impact may be best-in-class, but are there enough undervalued best-in-class opportunities to meet demand?</p><p>Critics have been quick to blast Article 9 funds for their perceived inadequacy, but could the problem be the labels rather than the products? Is it realistic to shoehorn investment vehicles into highly marketable categories that don&#8217;t, comfortably, exist? Might it make more sense, at least for now, to access the full&#8212;often messy, rarely unimpeachable&#8212;value chain of sustainable themes, understand and communicate the tradeoffs, and engage with companies to improve their impact over time?</p>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Who’s in the COP 27 Club?]]></title><description><![CDATA[Plus, Util raises $6m investment round.]]></description><link>https://www.weekinclimate.com/p/util-raises-6m-investment</link><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.weekinclimate.com/p/util-raises-6m-investment</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Elisabeth]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Fri, 04 Nov 2022 21:26:40 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://bucketeer-e05bbc84-baa3-437e-9518-adb32be77984.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/841b8831-e434-4c3a-b19b-1ce3d9d46bc9_1200x627.png" length="0" type="image/jpeg"/><content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>From the top</h3><p><strong>&#128680; Who&#8217;s in the COP 27 Club? </strong>On the eve of the climate summit in Sharm el Sheikh, COP 26 net-zero pledges are back in the spotlight and their progress&#8212;or what little there is&#8212;under scrutiny. Most (93%) corporate commitments are on track to fail without more aggressive action, finds <a href="https://www.accenture.com/us-en/insights/sustainability/reaching-net-zero-by-2050?c=acn_glb_netzeroby2050mediarelations_13237252&amp;n=mrl_1022">Accenture</a>, though 59% will fall short even if they double their rate of progress. One of the bigger disappointments to come out of Glasgow was once its most promising coalition. Last week, GFANZ published its <a href="https://assets.bbhub.io/company/sites/63/2022/10/GFANZ-2022-Progress-Report.pdf">first annual progress report</a>, in which it dropped the requirement that signatories align with UN-approved membership criteria. Effectively making emissions reduction voluntarily, the pivot comes after <a href="https://www.weekinimpact.com/p/greed-can-be-good">months of escalating pressure</a> from members claiming that collective net-zero action violates anti-trust law.</p><p><strong>&#128499;&#65039; Let them all vote.</strong> One day after <a href="https://corporate.vanguard.com/content/corporatesite/us/en/corp/articles/piloting-proxy-choice-for-individual-investors.html">Vanguard</a> unveiled a trial program providing new proxy voting rights to its retail clients, <a href="https://www.blackrock.com/corporate/about-us/investment-stewardship/blackrock-voting-choice/proxy-voting-power-of-choice">BlackRock</a> announced plans to extend its &#8216;Voting Choice&#8217; program to individual investors. BlackRock describes it a &#8220;revolution in shareholder democracy,&#8221; but handing proxy power to the people is, most likely, a pragmatic response to backlash against ESG and (what <a href="https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2022-11-03/blackrock-lets-its-clients-vote">Matt Levine</a> describes as) &#8220;the general idea that big asset managers should influence companies.&#8221; In any event, shareholder democracy is unlikely to move the needle on any major AGM issues, because dispersed voting doesn&#8217;t carry much weight. The mechanisms to hold companies to account &#8220;tend to rely on concentration and bigness&#8221; of the type afforded to the three biggest index-fund managers, each of whom is a top-five shareholder in most S&amp;P 500 companies. Except, you know, antitrust.&nbsp;</p><p><strong>&#128024; When is antitrust not antitrust? </strong>When it&#8217;s anti-ESG, apparently. Republicans are amplifying their attacks on sustainable finance as the US midterms approach.<strong> </strong>&#8220;This is going to escalate,&#8221; warns <a href="https://www.wvtreasury.com/About-The-Office/Press-Releases/ID/394/WV-Treasurer-Moore-Leads-15-State-Coalition-to-Push-Back-Against-Bank-Boycotts-of-Traditional-Energy-Industries">West Virginia Treasurer Riley Moore</a>. &#8220;We are going full throttle once we get into 2023. You&#8217;re really going to start to reach critical mass as it relates to AUM and capital that can be leveraged against the ESG movement.&#8221; Ostensibly, the concept of a uniform &#8216;critical mass&#8217; of &#8216;capital leveraged against stuff&#8217; is the very thing against which Republicans are reacting, which is confusing. Generally, however, the &#8216;anti-ESG is pro-finance&#8217; argument is looking harder to justify in the face of mounting evidence to the contrary, including hundreds of millions in <a href="https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=4123366">state interest payments</a> in addition to the lost returns and overlooked risk.</p><p><strong>&#127777;&#65039; 2022 has been a &#8220;wasted year&#8221; for emissions reduction</strong>, declares the UN Environment Programme (UNEP) in its&nbsp;<a href="https://esginvestor.us10.list-manage.com/track/click?u=31f9cb942f643a29cb96a78b9&amp;id=cc488eb972&amp;e=c55299fe86">Emissions Gap Report 2022</a>. The net-zero transition requires some $4&#8211;$6T of annual investment&#8212;particularly into critically underfunded developing countries&#8212;from a necessarily &#8220;coordinated and cooperative&#8221; financial system. To date, however, &#8220;financial actors have shown limited action on climate change mitigation.&#8221; Despite interest, finance flows are not&nbsp;<a href="https://www.esginvestor.net/blended-finance-market-for-climate-shrinking-in-2022/">finding their mark</a>. Thanks to its focus on risk mitigation, traditional ESG investing may, <a href="https://mobilistglobal.com/research-data/drivers-of-investment-flows-to-emerging-and-frontier-markets/">in fact</a>, be diverting capital <em>away</em> from in-need developing nations. Navigating the &#8220;narrow but achievable&#8221; path to net zero hinges, too, on policymakers stoking demand for renewables, reports the International Energy Agency in its <a href="https://www.iea.org/topics/world-energy-outlook">World Energy Outlook 2022</a>. </p><p class="button-wrapper" data-attrs="{&quot;url&quot;:&quot;https://www.weekinclimate.com/subscribe?&quot;,&quot;text&quot;:&quot;Subscribe now&quot;,&quot;action&quot;:null,&quot;class&quot;:null}" data-component-name="ButtonCreateButton"><a class="button primary" href="https://www.weekinclimate.com/subscribe?"><span>Subscribe now</span></a></p><div><hr></div><h3>There&#8217;s a new coal in Sharm el Sheikh</h3><p>Delegates have yet to arrive, yet they&#8217;re already creating a headache for COP 27 sponsor Coca Cola. </p><p>The world&#8217;s largest non-alcoholic beverage company is also the world&#8217;s largest plastic polluter, as it has been for each of the last four years. (In 2021, Coca Cola only narrowly overtook COP 26 sponsor Unilever.) New <a href="https://ellenmacarthurfoundation.org/global-commitment-2021/signatory-reports/ppu/the-coca-cola-company">research</a> from the Ellen MacArthur Foundation finds its plastic use increased by 3.5% during that time. In 2021 alone, Coca Cola produced nearly 3M tonnes of plastic packaging and decreased reusable plastic packaging by 1.3% from the previous year.</p><p>Environmental groups are, unsurprisingly, unimpressed. &#8220;COP 27 is supposed to focus on solutions for fighting the catastrophic climate crisis,&#8221; declared <a href="https://www.beyondplastics.org/press-releases/groups-call-on-cop-to-kick-out-coke">Beyond Plastics</a>: one of the groups urging the UN Climate Change Conference to drop Coca Cola. &#8220;Instead, we&#8217;re allowing it to be a stage for corporate greenwashing.&#8221;</p><h4>Corporate pledges: What are they good for?</h4><p>Defending their decision, <a href="https://earth.org/cop27-sponsor-plastic/">event organisers</a> cited Coca Cola&#8217;s efforts to reach net zero by 2050. </p><p>ESG ratings reinforce their faith. Just recently bumped up to an AAA-rating from <a href="https://www.coca-colahellenic.com/en/media/news/sustainability_news/2022/coca-cola-hbc-receives-aaa-rating-from-msci-esg-for-eighth-consecutive-year">MSCI</a>, Coca Cola also receives credit from <a href="https://www.sustainalytics.com/esg-rating/the-coca-cola-co/1007904888">Sustainalytics</a> for its &#8220;strong management&#8221; of &#8216;ESG material risk&#8217;. In fairness, being appointed sponsor of the world&#8217;s biggest climate conference certainly demonstrates &#8216;strong management&#8217; of enterprise value in the face of reputational risk, regardless of whose responsibility it is.</p><p>By 2050, the same date at which Coca Cola directs its net-zero ambitions, the <a href="https://iea.blob.core.windows.net/assets/c282400e-00b0-4edf-9a8e-6f2ca6536ec8/WorldEnergyOutlook2022.pdf">International Energy Agency</a> (IEA) predicts plastics&#8212;which are made from fossil fuels&#8212;will drive nearly 50% of oil demand growth: more than aviation and shipping. At that point, finds the <a href="https://www.ciel.org/plasticandclimate/">Centre for International Environmental Law</a>, the cumulative greenhouse gas emissions from plastic could reach over 56 gigatons, or 10-13% of the entire remaining carbon budget. </p><p>For its own part, Coca Cola touts its reusable plastic target of 100% by 2025 as evidence of its commitment to the cause. Behind closed doors, its activities paint a different picture. In 2016, a leaked internal map of the company&#8217;s lobbying priorities showed that &#8220;collection and recycling targets&#8221; was one public policy on which Coca Cola planned to &#8220;fight back.&#8221; As well it might: <a href="https://www.greenpeace.org/usa/reports/circular-claims-fall-flat-again/">Most recyclable plastic</a> isn&#8217;t, actually, recyclable. <a href="https://www.oecd.org/newsroom/plastic-pollution-is-growing-relentlessly-as-waste-management-and-recycling-fall-short.htm">Just 9%</a> gets a shot at a second life, because there&#8217;s no cheap or realistic way to repurpose plastic at scale. </p><div class="captioned-image-container"><figure><a class="image-link image2 is-viewable-img" target="_blank" href="https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/$s_!aguG!,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fbucketeer-e05bbc84-baa3-437e-9518-adb32be77984.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2F9815829e-c31a-4704-bb0c-ab99faf96f55_1400x989.jpeg" data-component-name="Image2ToDOM"><div class="image2-inset"><picture><source type="image/webp" srcset="https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/$s_!aguG!,w_424,c_limit,f_webp,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fbucketeer-e05bbc84-baa3-437e-9518-adb32be77984.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2F9815829e-c31a-4704-bb0c-ab99faf96f55_1400x989.jpeg 424w, https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/$s_!aguG!,w_848,c_limit,f_webp,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fbucketeer-e05bbc84-baa3-437e-9518-adb32be77984.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2F9815829e-c31a-4704-bb0c-ab99faf96f55_1400x989.jpeg 848w, https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/$s_!aguG!,w_1272,c_limit,f_webp,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fbucketeer-e05bbc84-baa3-437e-9518-adb32be77984.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2F9815829e-c31a-4704-bb0c-ab99faf96f55_1400x989.jpeg 1272w, https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/$s_!aguG!,w_1456,c_limit,f_webp,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fbucketeer-e05bbc84-baa3-437e-9518-adb32be77984.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2F9815829e-c31a-4704-bb0c-ab99faf96f55_1400x989.jpeg 1456w" sizes="100vw"><img src="https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/$s_!aguG!,w_1456,c_limit,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fbucketeer-e05bbc84-baa3-437e-9518-adb32be77984.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2F9815829e-c31a-4704-bb0c-ab99faf96f55_1400x989.jpeg" width="1400" height="989" data-attrs="{&quot;src&quot;:&quot;https://bucketeer-e05bbc84-baa3-437e-9518-adb32be77984.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/9815829e-c31a-4704-bb0c-ab99faf96f55_1400x989.jpeg&quot;,&quot;srcNoWatermark&quot;:null,&quot;fullscreen&quot;:null,&quot;imageSize&quot;:null,&quot;height&quot;:989,&quot;width&quot;:1400,&quot;resizeWidth&quot;:null,&quot;bytes&quot;:268091,&quot;alt&quot;:null,&quot;title&quot;:null,&quot;type&quot;:&quot;image/jpeg&quot;,&quot;href&quot;:null,&quot;belowTheFold&quot;:true,&quot;topImage&quot;:false,&quot;internalRedirect&quot;:null,&quot;isProcessing&quot;:false,&quot;align&quot;:null,&quot;offset&quot;:false}" class="sizing-normal" alt="" srcset="https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/$s_!aguG!,w_424,c_limit,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fbucketeer-e05bbc84-baa3-437e-9518-adb32be77984.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2F9815829e-c31a-4704-bb0c-ab99faf96f55_1400x989.jpeg 424w, https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/$s_!aguG!,w_848,c_limit,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fbucketeer-e05bbc84-baa3-437e-9518-adb32be77984.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2F9815829e-c31a-4704-bb0c-ab99faf96f55_1400x989.jpeg 848w, https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/$s_!aguG!,w_1272,c_limit,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fbucketeer-e05bbc84-baa3-437e-9518-adb32be77984.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2F9815829e-c31a-4704-bb0c-ab99faf96f55_1400x989.jpeg 1272w, https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/$s_!aguG!,w_1456,c_limit,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fbucketeer-e05bbc84-baa3-437e-9518-adb32be77984.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2F9815829e-c31a-4704-bb0c-ab99faf96f55_1400x989.jpeg 1456w" sizes="100vw" loading="lazy"></picture><div class="image-link-expand"><div class="pencraft pc-display-flex pc-gap-8 pc-reset"><button tabindex="0" type="button" class="pencraft pc-reset pencraft icon-container restack-image"><svg role="img" width="20" height="20" viewBox="0 0 20 20" fill="none" stroke-width="1.5" stroke="var(--color-fg-primary)" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round" xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg"><g><title></title><path d="M2.53001 7.81595C3.49179 4.73911 6.43281 2.5 9.91173 2.5C13.1684 2.5 15.9537 4.46214 17.0852 7.23684L17.6179 8.67647M17.6179 8.67647L18.5002 4.26471M17.6179 8.67647L13.6473 6.91176M17.4995 12.1841C16.5378 15.2609 13.5967 17.5 10.1178 17.5C6.86118 17.5 4.07589 15.5379 2.94432 12.7632L2.41165 11.3235M2.41165 11.3235L1.5293 15.7353M2.41165 11.3235L6.38224 13.0882"></path></g></svg></button><button tabindex="0" type="button" class="pencraft pc-reset pencraft icon-container view-image"><svg xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2000/svg" width="20" height="20" viewBox="0 0 24 24" fill="none" stroke="currentColor" stroke-width="2" stroke-linecap="round" stroke-linejoin="round" class="lucide lucide-maximize2 lucide-maximize-2"><polyline points="15 3 21 3 21 9"></polyline><polyline points="9 21 3 21 3 15"></polyline><line x1="21" x2="14" y1="3" y2="10"></line><line x1="3" x2="10" y1="21" y2="14"></line></svg></button></div></div></div></a><figcaption class="image-caption">Coca Cola has had six meetings with policymakers on the EU Green Deal and Circular Economy Action Plan, and spent &#8364;600K-700K on European lobbying in 2021. Lobby group PlasticsEurope, which counts the biggest oil &amp; gas majors among its members, has attended 14. It spent &#8364;3.5-4M on lobbying last year alone.</figcaption></figure></div><p>The &#8220;recycling myth,&#8221; reports <a href="https://www.reuters.com/investigates/special-report/environment-plastic-oil-recycling/">Reuters</a>, is an invention of the oil industry&#8212;organised under the lobbying banner The American Chemistry Council&#8212;for which plastic production is the new biggest growth market.</p><p>We&#8217;ve <a href="https://www.weekinimpact.com/p/what-does-big-oil-want">discussed this before</a>. The narrative of &#8216;oil companies of today being the renewable leaders of tomorrow&#8217; is simplistic, if not deceptive. The DNA of a fossil fuel company is to sell fossil fuels, not to generate low-cost energy. As the world shifts to new sources of energy&#8212;well, those fossil fuels need a new type of customer.</p><h4>The next generation of climate colonialism</h4><p>&#8220;<a href="https://www.beyondplastics.org/plastics-and-climate">The new coal</a>&#8221; will, like its predecessors, have negative environmental impacts most keenly felt in the regions least responsible. Demand for plastics varies significantly between countries. The IEA finds 250kg of plastic is used per capita every year in the US, relative to 25kg in India. </p><p>For an event at which the gap between developed and developing nations takes centre stage, those statistics should give pause.</p><p>Coca Cola is a textbook example of why corporate pledges are no substitute for systems-wide scrutiny, particularly when they a) target a distant future that outpaces the average management tenure to the tune of some several decades, and b) overlook Scope 3 emissions. Plastic pollution is decimating biodiversity today, and, through its value chain, poses one of the greatest threats to the self-same emissions goals to which its biggest producers and consumers claim to strive. </p><p>The world may be weaning itself off fossil-fuel energy, but it doesn&#8217;t follow that fossil fuel companies are weaning themselves off the world. Coca Cola may have laudable reputational risk management and well-selected corporate sponsorship opportunities, but none negates its growing market share of negative environmental impact.</p>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[When is important not urgent?]]></title><description><![CDATA[Banks quiet quitting. Companies green hushing. Investors transitioning.]]></description><link>https://www.weekinclimate.com/p/esg-important-not-urgent</link><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.weekinclimate.com/p/esg-important-not-urgent</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Elisabeth]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Thu, 20 Oct 2022 13:00:00 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://bucketeer-e05bbc84-baa3-437e-9518-adb32be77984.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/5820d083-ea9c-496c-bec7-b66cb38a8d9d_1200x627.png" length="0" type="image/jpeg"/><content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>From the top</h3><p><strong>&#128679; Demand for sustainable funds is outstripping supply</strong>. The impact investment market recently hit the <a href="https://thegiin.org/research/publication/impact-investing-market-size-2022/">$1T mark</a>, for which&#8212;according to <a href="https://www.fa-mag.com/news/goldman-says-esg-investors-yet-to-grasp-full-climate-bill-impact-70083.html">analysts at Goldman Sachs</a>&#8212;there&#8217;s no dearth of upside opportunity among the &#8220;under-appreciated&#8221; industries benefitting from the US climate bill. Of the institutional investors surveyed for the PwC <a href="https://www.pwc.com/gx/en/industries/financial-services/asset-management/publications/asset-and-wealth-management-revolution-2022.html">Asset and Wealth Management Revolution 2022 report</a>, 88% want more ESG products, for which 78% are willing to pay higher fees. So, <strong>why are 55% of asset managers dragging their feet? </strong>Fear of greenwash, apparently. Institutional investors tell PwC the answer is stricter regulation. For asset managers, it&#8217;s more complicated. &#8220;Rarely intentional,&#8221; mislabelling is attributed to insufficient regulation, unreliable disclosures, and inconsistent standards. But concrete regulation is no panacea: <strong>Given compliance costs are up 10%</strong> <strong>already</strong>, more rules could prove prohibitive for small providers. Not that they can afford inaction. Globally, 79% of investors plan to increase their allocation to sustainable products, while 90% have rejected or would reject an asset manager on the basis of product shortcomings.</p><p><strong>&#9198;&#65039; Institutional investors are doubling down</strong>. Half of those polled in the ISS <a href="https://www.issgovernance.com/file/policy/2022/2022-ISS-Benchmark-Survey-Summary.pdf">2022 Global Benchmark Policy Survey</a> recommended voting against directors at fossil fuel companies without Scope 1 and 2 targets, while 79% said the same of directors failing to report in line with TCFD. That&#8217;s a lot of directors<strong>. </strong>In its <a href="https://www.fsb-tcfd.org/publications/">2022 Status Report</a>, TCFD claims a mere 4% of companies meet all reporting requirements. <strong>Despite shareholder pressure, &#8220;green hushing&#8221; is driving data underground. </strong>Consultancy <a href="https://www.southpole.com/publications/net-zero-and-beyond">South Pole</a> finds a quarter of companies are hiding climate targets to avoid scrutiny and greenwash allegations&#8212;as well they might, seeing as <strong>decarbonisation strategies are trailing pledges</strong>. The Climate Action 100+ <a href="https://www.climateaction100.org/news/climate-action-100-net-zero-company-benchmark-shows-continued-progress-on-net-zero-commitments-is-not-matched-by-development-and-implementation-of-credible-decarbonisation-strategies/">Net Zero Company Benchmark</a> reveals just 10% of target firms are Paris-aligned. <strong>Banks are &#8220;quiet quitting&#8221; net zero,</strong> says <a href="https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-10-14/banks-try-quiet-quitting-net-zero-as-fortune-favors-fossil-fuels?leadSource=uverify%20wall">Bloomberg</a>, their resolve weakened by the &#8220;revived fortunes of fossil fuels.&#8221; In the KPMG <a href="https://www.institutionalinvestor.com/article/b2055mpjjss6qj/Regulations-and-Recession-Fears-Are-Making-Managers-Rethink-ESG">2022 US CEO outlook</a>, some 48% of CEOs plan to &#8220;pause or reconsider their ESG strategies&#8221; due to regulation and recession. &#8220;As focus shifts from words to deeds,&#8221; concludes the <a href="https://www.economist.com/leaders/2022/09/29/the-fundamental-contradiction-of-esg-is-being-laid-bare">Economist</a>, &#8220;the contradictions in ESG are becoming brutally clear.&#8221;</p><p><strong>&#127466;&#127482; Not to be left out, some governments are back-pedalling.</strong> It may be the mother of invention, but necessity has a complicated relationship with cooperation. &#8220;<strong>Record growth in wind and solar capacity</strong>&#8221; has powered a quarter of EU electricity since the outset of war, according to a <a href="https://ember-climate.org/press-releases/eus-record-growth-in-wind-and-solar-avoids-e11bn-in-gas-costs-during-war/">study by E3G and Ember</a>, wiping &#8364;11B from the EU&#8217;s gas bill. (Not just the EU: <a href="https://ember-climate.org/insights/research/global-electricity-mid-year-insights-2022/">Ember</a> finds global growth in electricity demand was met entirely by renewables in H2, amounting to $40B in fossil-fuel savings.) But with a winter (<a href="https://www.ft.com/content/96611190-3c09-48b7-8ded-7b2651590f94">or two</a>) coming, member states are considering &#8220;<a href="https://www.euractiv.com/section/energy/news/eu-countries-eye-scrapping-45-renewables-target-document/">watering down</a>&#8221; their <a href="https://www.consilium.europa.eu/en/press/press-releases/2022/10/04/repowereu-council-agrees-its-position/">REPowerEU</a> target of 45% renewable energy by 2030, on which the European Council agreed just this month. <strong>The amendments could slow permits</strong>, which is something the EU can little afford. For context: It takes four and nine years to get a permit for solar and wind projects, respectively, according to <a href="https://www.schroders.com/en/us/insights/sustainability/what-role-can-renewables-play-in-strengthening-europes-energy-security/">Schroders</a>. There&#8217;s growing fission on <a href="https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-63245112">nuclear</a>, too, with <a href="https://www.spglobal.com/marketintelligence/en/news-insights/latest-news-headlines/legal-dispute-over-eu-s-green-label-for-nuclear-gas-could-last-over-2-years-72481244">S&amp;P</a> projecting two years of disputes regarding its inclusion in the green taxonomy. One week before its <a href="https://www.iea.org/events/world-energy-outlook-2022">World Energy Outlook 2022</a> goes to print, the IEA urges energy &#8220;<a href="https://twitter.com/fbirol/status/1580147315096293376">solidarity</a>.&#8221; <strong>The EU is finding theirs tested</strong>, <a href="https://www.cnbc.com/2022/10/17/putins-war-on-energy-is-testing-solidarity-between-eu-nations.html">reports CNBC</a>.</p><p class="button-wrapper" data-attrs="{&quot;url&quot;:&quot;https://www.weekinclimate.com/subscribe?&quot;,&quot;text&quot;:&quot;Subscribe now&quot;,&quot;action&quot;:null,&quot;class&quot;:null}" data-component-name="ButtonCreateButton"><a class="button primary" href="https://www.weekinclimate.com/subscribe?"><span>Subscribe now</span></a></p><div><hr></div><h3>When is important not urgent?</h3><p>People overestimate the pace of change in the next two years and underestimate the pace of change in the next ten. The observation&#8212;attributed to Bill Gates, shared by LinkedIn influencers the world over&#8212;applies to many things. Technological innovation. Investment returns. The <a href="https://twitter.com/Ed_Miliband/status/1580931307185401856">2015 UK general election</a>. </p><p>Our inability to conceptualise compound change, according to Gates (according to LinkedIn), lulls us into inaction. In financial terms, it leads to the type of short-termism associated with higher risk and lower returns. Systemic social and environmental risks, on the other hand, are long term. Inherently so. &#8216;Extra-financial&#8217; factors tend to be extra-financial only in the sense that their financial effects have yet to be priced in, compounding over a timescale very different from the one against which S&amp;P 500 performance is measured. </p><p>Dramatic as it is, climate risk can feel incremental relative to financial risk&#8212;which is why capital reallocation depends on frameworks imposed from the top, be it fiscal spending (US), energy regulation (EU), or blended finance solutions (<a href="https://www.ft.com/content/dbbe5c56-e08b-4309-a1d2-4b4b582af45d">World Bank</a>, maybe). But although supportive frameworks are invaluable, their economic value, too, takes a while to materialise. High-impact projects are long-term investments. Renewable development spans the better half of a decade, and that&#8217;s before taking into account the time it takes to train a workforce big enough to meet demand. </p><p>Investors and businesses have short-term financial obligations. If those diverge from longer term considerations&#8212;say, when markets sour, inflation and interest rates rise, and energy gets expensive&#8212;it presents a dilemma. Investment firms may frame their U-turn on fossil fuels as a social imperative (it is); critics, decry it financial opportunism (it is); but, ultimately, the debate is meaningless&#8212;unless it&#8217;s one about the value of authentic communications. This, says <a href="https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-10-14/banks-try-quiet-quitting-net-zero-as-fortune-favors-fossil-fuels">Bloomberg</a>, is Wall Street just doing its job: making money. Not just making money; making money <em>now. </em></p><h4>Tale of two investment approaches</h4><p>One solution, outlined by <a href="https://www.wsj.com/articles/why-esg-funds-fail-and-how-they-could-succeed-impact-investing-financial-value-divest-dei-emissions-brown-green-11666038061">Terrence Keeley of 1Point6</a>&#8212;among many others&#8212;is for investors to &#8220;find value by turning &#8216;brown&#8217; companies &#8216;green&#8217;.&#8221; </p><blockquote><p>&#8220;Investors, asset managers, portfolio companies and policymakers have begun to draw distinctions between their short-term and long-term strategies for ESG. The shift in sentiment is reflected in the inclusion of nuclear power and natural gas in the EU Taxonomy and the increased allocation of oil and gas companies within a number of asset managers&#8217; portfolios while, at the same time, these asset managers also work with energy providers to build efforts around a longer-term transition.&#8221; (<a href="https://www.pwc.com/gx/en/financial-services/assets/pdf/pwc-awm-revolution-2022.pdf">PwC</a>, <a href="https://www.pwc.com/gx/en/industries/financial-services/asset-management/publications/asset-and-wealth-management-revolution-2022.html">Asset and Wealth Management Revolution 2022</a>)</p></blockquote><p>In theory, it sounds like having your cake and eating it. You get the short-term returns (and social points). You get the long-term returns (and environmental points, which are also social points). You could even get bigger bang <em>and </em>bigger buck if successful in steering the company from (A) to (B). <strong>See: &#216;rsted.</strong> </p><blockquote><p>&#8220;The $40 billion Danish wind farm operator is a favourite of asset managers eager to swap their fossil fuel investments for more sustainable energy providers. But the really smart investors were those who <a href="https://www.breakingviews.com/considered-view/bps-hard-baptism-goes-with-transition-territory/">owned</a> DONG Energy, Orsted&#8217;s fossil fuel-burning predecessor, when it transitioned from oil and gas to renewable energy. Anyone who invested in DONG at the time of its 2016 listing, before it rebranded and sold its fossil fuel operations, would have made a total return of 200%. By contrast, investors who bought Orsted shares in early 2021, when they were trading at more than 40 times earnings, have lost money.&#8221; (<a href="https://www.reuters.com/breakingviews/green-investors-need-get-their-hands-dirty-2022-06-22/">Reuters</a>)</p></blockquote><p>There&#8217;s a case to be made for engagement over divestment. Theoretically, it makes sense that activism&#8212;not avoidance&#8212;is an effective way to capture returns and mitigate risks associated with the transition, while, at the same time, catalysing it. Too frequently, however, it fails in practice, when company actions&#8212;and asset management votes&#8212;fall short of ambitious pledges.</p><p>Institutional investors seeking transparency from transition plans might put the Gates Law in reverse: Put less store in pledges about tomorrow or absolute performance today; and more in the evidenced ability of an asset manager or business to deliver relative improvements over a meaningful timeframe. </p>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Untangling the polycrisis]]></title><description><![CDATA[Plus, auto companies get creative with Scope 3 accounting.]]></description><link>https://www.weekinclimate.com/p/untangling-the-polycrisis</link><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.weekinclimate.com/p/untangling-the-polycrisis</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Elisabeth]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Wed, 12 Oct 2022 12:55:22 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://bucketeer-e05bbc84-baa3-437e-9518-adb32be77984.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/6aa80242-8314-4978-a6cc-75931fb1199c_1200x627.png" length="0" type="image/jpeg"/><content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>From the top</h3><p><strong>&#127760; High on the agenda at IMF and World Bank annual meetings this week:</strong> The escalating global &#8216;<a href="https://cascadeinstitute.org/technical-paper/what-is-a-global-polycrisis/#:~:text=A%20global%20polycrisis%20occurs%20when,systems%20not%20so%20deeply%20interconnected.">polycrisis</a>&#8217;. Faced with the unenviable responsibility of untangling &#8220;causally entangled&#8221; social, environmental, and economic crises, finance ministers are getting serious about the financial cost of &#8216;extra-financial&#8217; disruption. The IMF tackles the macroeconomic impact of decarbonisation in its <a href="https://www.imf.org/en/Publications/WEO/Issues/2022/10/11/world-economic-outlook-october-2022">World Economic Outlook</a> and <a href="https://www.imf.org/en/Blogs/Articles/2022/10/05/further-delaying-climate-policies-will-hurt-economic-growth">adjunct blog</a>, attaching figures to the lost output and additional inflation created by the transition&#8212;which, while very real, are dwarfed by the price of inaction. Battered by <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/business/2022/oct/06/world-bank-has-given-nearly-15bn-to-fossil-fuel-projects-since-paris-deal">revelations</a> that it provided $15B to fossil fuel projects, the World Bank is under pressure to step into a &#8220;<a href="https://www.reuters.com/markets/us/yellen-calls-world-bank-revamp-tackle-global-challenges-2022-10-06/">revamped</a>&#8221; or &#8220;<a href="https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/2022/10/05/imf-world-bank-meetings-prepare-economic-downtown/">reinvented</a>&#8221; role with a wider lens on the systemic risks now wreaking havoc on the world economy. Expect more focus on the price tag of <a href="https://www.esginvestor.net/adaptation-on-the-agenda/">climate change</a> and <a href="https://www.environmental-finance.com/content/news/ecb-we-can-no-longer-drag-our-feet-with-nature-risks.html">biodiversity loss</a> at COP27, as policymakers move closer to <a href="https://www.finance-watch.org/publication/a-safer-transition-for-fossil-banking/">climate-related capital requirements</a> for banks.</p><p><strong>&#9876;&#65039; Who wins the ESG culture war?</strong> There are three ways to invest, writes <a href="https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2022-09-21/don-t-read-the-proxy-statement">Matt Levine</a>: (1) Invest just to make money; (2) Invest to promote your values (and you&#8217;re a Democrat); (3) Invest to promote your values (and you&#8217;re a Republican). Proponents of (3) argue that (2) undercuts (1), though anti-ESG law is now <a href="https://www.ft.com/content/68bf29db-2d32-403d-bad2-d38b7a7e6ea3">accused</a> of &#8220;endangering financial stability&#8221; by encouraging firms to sacrifice risk management to appease state governments. Long-suffering BlackRock, however, is still in the crosshairs. Having withdrawn a reported $1B from the $10T investor, Republicans must take their business elsewhere. South Carolina state treasurer Curtis Loftis <a href="https://www.ft.com/content/41de28af-a487-473e-bc17-5e8cb71f4ced?accessToken=zwAAAYPCHWGUkc9B3iivpIdHPtO8F16Mtx9M7Q.MEYCIQCaWB0xXJdR1_5P8XL09-OnWjlqmmWqxj7sbSglS5mddgIhAI07rgEAV0zjmwIAGvAG3T0s8htCDvCZaUGDDk7bLIxp&amp;sharetype=gift&amp;token=02430558-cf9f-4493-8d6b-54279419e87f">tells the FT</a> his concerns led him to Federated Hermes, a self-described &#8220;global leader in responsible investment,&#8221; which doesn&#8217;t sound very anti-woke. Still, it <em>was</em> a &#8216;platinum sponsor&#8217; of the anti-ESG State Financial Officers Foundation&#8212;which counts Loftis among its members&#8212;until <a href="https://www.investmentweek.co.uk/news/4056508/federated-hermes-cuts-ties-anti-esg-us-nonprofit">Dutch pension clients</a> turned the screw last month. So there&#8217;s that.</p><p><strong>&#9878;&#65039; It&#8217;s hard to please everyone.</strong> Let&#8217;s say you (an asset manager) have a priority (risk-adjusted returns) but cater to a client base (asset owners) with additional priorities (values). If your clients are aligned, great! If they&#8217;re ideologically opposed, however, your global strategy meetings just got a lot longer.<strong> </strong>Get comfortable. <a href="https://www.morningstar.com/lp/issb-sustainability-standards">Morningstar</a>&nbsp;finds asset managers are divided along ideologic and geographic lines: European investors want a disclosure framework that includes double materiality and mandatory Scope 3 emission; their US peers do not. It gets complicated for an industry in the throes of consolidation. Federated Hermes, for instance, is the union of one UK and one US firm, each with a set of principles moulded by its respective market. You can merge companies and cultures, but how do global firms meet <a href="https://klementoninvesting.substack.com/p/the-voting-record-of-asset-managers">diverging regional demands</a>? Ironically, both &#8216;values investing&#8217; and M&amp;A are born of the same challenge: How to scale international distribution in spite of fee pressure. Talk about polycrisis.</p><p class="button-wrapper" data-attrs="{&quot;url&quot;:&quot;https://www.weekinclimate.com/subscribe?&quot;,&quot;text&quot;:&quot;Subscribe now&quot;,&quot;action&quot;:null,&quot;class&quot;:null}" data-component-name="ButtonCreateButton"><a class="button primary" href="https://www.weekinclimate.com/subscribe?"><span>Subscribe now</span></a></p><div><hr></div><h2><strong>Car companies get creative</strong></h2><p>This week, finance leaders in Washington begin the breezy task of fixing the world economy. IMF and World Bank meetings happen every year and through every downturn. This time, however, the challenges are more complex. Besieged by geopolitical, environmental, and social crises, the economy is exposed to a chaos of &#8220;causally entangled&#8221; financial and &#8216;extra-financial&#8217; risk. </p><p>Look beyond the &#8220;hurly burly&#8221; of market volatility, says <a href="https://www.economist.com/leaders/2022/10/06/a-new-macroeconomic-era-is-emerging-what-will-it-look-like">The Economist</a>, and long-term fundamentals suggest we&#8217;re on the precipice of a macroeconomic transformation. Prepare to see influence shift from monetary to fiscal policy, as governments boost spending on a suite of factors that have a less direct, but no less significant, bearing on financial markets. </p><blockquote><p>&#8220;The biggest mistakes in economics are failures of imagination that reflect an assumption that today&#8217;s regime will last for ever. It never does. Change is coming. Get ready.&#8221;</p></blockquote><p>Climate change and energy security are chief among them. The US Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) was just the beginning.</p><h4>Companies must get creative</h4><p>For companies able to capitalise on the flood of new investment, structural change yields big opportunities. Many others are exposed to transition risk, defined by the BoE as &#8220;big shifts in asset values or higher costs of doing business.&#8221;</p><p>At the extreme, stranded assets push &#8216;old economy&#8217; industries into terminal decline, while &#8216;new economy&#8217; companies with first-mover advantage seize market dominance. Falling somewhere in between, however, most companies exposed must adjust to a new share price and cost of capital. Cue creative accounting, currently on dazzling display with emissions disclosures. </p><h4>Gearing up for Dieselgate 2.0 </h4><p>Mandatory Scope 3 reporting reaches Europe in January 2023, at which point asset managers will begin feeling pressure to decarbonise their portfolios. </p><p>In a <a href="https://www.transportenvironment.org/discover/carmakers-lifetime-emissions-50-higher-than-reported/">new report</a>, campaign group Transport &amp; Environment (T&amp;E) finds mandatory Scope 3 reporting represents a &#8220;ticking carbon bomb&#8221; for investors in car companies. At present, the auto industry reports fewer than 50% of the lifetime or indirect emissions for which it&#8217;s responsible, &#8220;misleading investors&#8221; by drastically underestimating the fuel consumption and travelling distance of its vehicles.</p><p>Given 98% of auto industry emissions fall under Scope 3, those oversights have some pretty big ramifications when disclosures become compulsory. T&amp;E warns of valuation shocks and selloffs. </p><p>Investors need &#8220;reliable&#8221; corporate disclosures. Instead, says T&amp;E, they get data lacking in &#8220;quantity, quality and comparability.&#8221; This is a persistent problem for Scope 3 assessments. Product impact data is harder to evaluate, and far easier to manipulate, than the company-level equivalent. </p><p>One problem is that global automakers are &#8220;using the flexibility&#8221; of different reporting frameworks to select the most favourable numbers. Climate risk may be universal, but interpretations are&#8212;for now&#8212;regional.</p><h4>If you can&#8217;t beat it, short it</h4><p>Here&#8217;s a different scenario. Carson Block, founder of hedge fund Muddy Waters, recently spoke to <a href="https://www.ft.com/content/9659b5f1-dc54-48f2-a53c-20417d037657">FT Moral Money</a> about his newest shorting target: solar power provider Sunrun, accused of overstating customer conversion. </p><p>Block claims &#8220;misleading&#8221; and &#8220;aggressive&#8221; accounting methods are widespread in a US residential solar sector recently buoyed by IRA stimulus. Not surprisingly, one perpetuates the other. Hefty tax credit sales boost Sunrun&#8217;s bottom line; the policy tailwind, its share price. </p><blockquote><p>&#8220;Misleading practices are widespread in the US residential solar sector, Block claims, blaming an obsession with rapid growth at the expense of standards.&#8221;</p></blockquote><p>Both &#8216;clean&#8217; and &#8216;dirty&#8217; companies are vulnerable to the type of creative accounting that catalyses price shocks. For short sellers with access to comprehensive product data, they represent a profitable opportunity via which to hold companies to account. </p><p>Sustainability reporting requirements won&#8217;t stop at emissions. The mounting food crisis portends what could happen if biodiversity loss spirals, which will, in likelihood, accelerate government and investor focus on resource use. If and when companies are required to address both pre-production material and post-production carbon footprints, it won&#8217;t just be combustion engine vehicles in the spotlight.</p>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Greed is good]]></title><description><![CDATA[GFANZ hits hurdles. Climate lawsuits escalate. Plus, are renewables in the crosshairs of biodiversity?]]></description><link>https://www.weekinclimate.com/p/greed-can-be-good</link><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.weekinclimate.com/p/greed-can-be-good</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Elisabeth]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Mon, 03 Oct 2022 21:01:05 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://bucketeer-e05bbc84-baa3-437e-9518-adb32be77984.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/c30083f0-c8ea-48ec-914c-618fdae355ba_1200x627.png" length="0" type="image/jpeg"/><content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>From the top</h3><p><strong>&#128184; Here&#8217;s a story about the limits of company action in a framework that not only fails to mandate but undercuts it. </strong>It was to much fanfare that Mark Carney unveiled the Glasgow Financial Alliance for Net Zero (GFANZ) at COP26. Having attracted commitments from 450 financial institutions representing $130T, the coalition <a href="https://www.gfanzero.com/press/amount-of-finance-committed-to-achieving-1-5c-now-at-scale-needed-to-deliver-the-transition/">announced</a> that the &#8220;capital committed to net zero [is] now at over $130 trillion.&#8221; Sort of. In reality, just a fraction of the $130T was earmarked for the Paris Agreement. Members were free to keep financing fossil fuels with the rest. Still, what&#8217;s a few dozen trillion between financial firms? Quite a bit, actually&#8212;if you&#8217;re a competition lawyer. Meet the latest challenge to climate action: antitrust law, a.k.a. the framework protecting consumers from monopolies. It turns out that collaborating on fossil fuel activity constitutes an antitrust violation if prices rise and you&#8217;re not in OPEC, making <a href="https://www.ft.com/content/b21e9104-9f03-4a63-b915-9647c84b8e24">covert green cartels</a> of coalitions facing pressure to coalesce and commit to net zero all $130T of the $130T previously committed to net zero. Which is what happened to GFANZ in June, when standard-setter Race to Zero added the mandate &#8220;no new coal projects&#8221; to <a href="https://climatechampions.unfccc.int/wp-content/uploads/2022/06/EPRG-interpretation-guide-2.pdf">membership criteria</a>. Cue a tide of defection by <a href="https://www.reuters.com/business/finance/major-us-banks-threaten-leave-mark-carneys-climate-alliance-ft-2022-09-21/">banks</a> and <a href="https://www.pionline.com/esg/al-gore-calls-out-greenwashing-risks-funds-quit-gfanz">pension funds</a> citing litigation fears. Rebuked as a &#8220;flimsy legal pretext&#8221; for inaction by <a href="https://www.climatechangenews.com/2022/09/28/corporate-pushback-against-climate-action-is-getting-desperate/">Race to Zero</a>, the risk was sufficient to force a <a href="https://climatechampions.unfccc.int/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/EPRG-interpretation-guide.pdf">U-turn on coal</a> and strict targets.</p><p><strong>&#129337; Antitrust litigation is just one factor behind the</strong> <strong>recent retreat from sustainability initiatives.</strong> Thanks to the <a href="https://www.etfstream.com/features/goodbye-greenwash/">anti-ESG rhetoric</a> sweeping the US, coupled with an uptick in <a href="https://www.reuters.com/legal/legalindustry/greenwashing-wave-hits-securities-litigation-2022-09-22/">greenwash-related lawsuits</a>, &#8216;going green&#8217; isn&#8217;t the strategic slam dunk it once was. Nor, however, can corporate exhibitionism be retracted. Following GFANZ defections, ECB supervisor <a href="https://www.reuters.com/markets/europe/banks-face-legal-risks-if-they-dont-stick-climate-goals-ecb-says-2022-09-22/">Anneli Tuominen</a> warned banks risk being sued if they fail to &#8220;meet the targets they have announced,&#8221; or &#8220;follow the strategy they have communicated.&#8221; It&#8217;s bad news for firms in the habit of saying one thing (e.g.: &#8220;we&#8217;re a global leader in responsible investing&#8221;) while doing another (e.g.: sponsoring foundations that campaign against responsible investing), regardless of affiliation or litigation. &#8220;The real harm is the reputational risk,&#8221; <a href="https://www.ft.com/content/716a039b-4267-4946-aa9e-389600c47937#comments-anchor">lawyers told the FT</a>, and reputational risk is as much a consequence of wish-wash as it is greenwash. &#8220;Companies with fuzzy net zero targets, trying to keep both sides happy, will be in the crosshairs,&#8221; said <a href="https://www.climatechangenews.com/2022/09/28/corporate-pushback-against-climate-action-is-getting-desperate/">Race to Zero&#8217;s Hale</a>&#8212;as, indeed, <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2022/sep/25/head-of-world-bank-under-pressure-after-white-house-condemns-his-climate-denial-comments">World Bank president David Malpass</a> and <a href="https://twitter.com/NYCComptroller/status/1573096909425737731?s=20&amp;t=FhVrbIWrJ9-8PFXdCxlYXw">BlackRock</a> discovered at UNGA. The system needs an overhaul, reports the <a href="https://www.nytimes.com/2022/09/29/opinion/esg-investing-responsibility.html">New York Times</a>, which begins with better rules for companies and investors. &#8220;Voluntary action builds momentum,&#8221; says Hale, but it needs the backing of mandatory policy and regulation. He concludes: &#8220;The rules governing the economy need to catch up.&#8221;</p><p class="button-wrapper" data-attrs="{&quot;url&quot;:&quot;https://www.weekinclimate.com/subscribe?&quot;,&quot;text&quot;:&quot;Subscribe now&quot;,&quot;action&quot;:null,&quot;class&quot;:null}" data-component-name="ButtonCreateButton"><a class="button primary" href="https://www.weekinclimate.com/subscribe?"><span>Subscribe now</span></a></p><div><hr></div><h3>Story of the week: Greed is good</h3><p>&#8220;It&#8217;s insane for the world to rely on underfunded NGOs to police capital markets,&#8221; Race to Zero&#8217;s <a href="https://www.ft.com/content/58575db9-5670-4b2d-a555-2c3aed0fdd6d">Nigel Topping told the FT</a> recently. &#8220;Governments need to step up.&#8221; </p><p>It&#8217;s insane, too, to rely on capital markets to police capital markets. In a framework that directs competition towards profit, voluntary corporate action is no match for market dynamics and no substitute for political parameters. On its own, ESG isn&#8217;t going to move the needle. Fiduciary duty (and capitalism, and human nature) dictates that financial statements take precedence over climate disclosures. </p><p>Denial about the limits of capital markets isn&#8217;t badly intentioned. In the court of public opinion, greed isn&#8217;t good. Green is. Those connotations matter to business leaders and fund managers, because our reward systems go wild for social approval.</p><h4>Denial has two consequences.</h4><p>First, governments are less likely to act, because the private sector has it in hand. This is great for politicians, for whom social rewards are the personal <em>and </em>professional incentive: Green policies may have hefty price tags or downside risks that prove unpopular. It&#8217;s less great for the climate, however, because the private sector isn&#8217;t equipped to limit temperatures to 2&#176;C above pre-industrial levels, singlehandedly.</p><p>Second, the myth that greenness satisfies goodness <em>and</em> greediness makes related tradeoffs harder to accept. &#8216;Green capitalism&#8217; is a misnomer. Economic growth = resource consumption = environmental degradation, even for the greenest societies with the cleanest technologies. Steeped in economic and environmental costs, the energy transition is a case of relative&#8212;not absolute&#8212;benefits.</p><p>Do you: 1. Reject reality (&#8220;Capital markets have it under control&#8221;), 2. Reject the system (&#8220;Capital markets can&#8217;t get it under control&#8221;), or 3. Accept the reality of the system and bend it to your objectives (&#8220;Under the right conditions, capital markets could get it under control&#8221;)? </p><h4><strong>How do you change incentives?</strong></h4><p>One extraordinary advantage of capitalism is its capacity to drive innovation&#8212;at least, under the right (read: financially compelling) conditions. Industrial revolutions are turbocharged by economic carrots, not social sticks, though the fact they happen at all is a testament to what good greed can achieve. </p><p>Outside of natural events, governments alone can cultivate the right conditions for low-emission products and industries. Boosting demand, as per the recent Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), is a popular and effective lever. Despite rising costs of capital, renewable energy is booming on the back of <a href="https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2022-09-25/the-third-energy-crisis-shows-gasoline-in-decline-and-renewables-on-the-rise?">soaring fossil fuel prices</a> and supportive stimulus. It makes economic sense &#8220;even if you&#8217;re a climate denier,&#8221; according to a new <a href="https://www.cell.com/joule/fulltext/S2542-4351(22)00410-X">Oxford University study</a>. In the US, tax breaks present an opportunity too good for investors and oil majors to ignore. Not only those based in the US, either: <a href="https://www.ft.com/content/d9b89a67-46b7-4d28-b5d6-546fdc720b50">Global companies</a> are steering renewable energy projects to American soil. </p><h4>Popular decisions have unpopular consequences.</h4><p>IRA-induced demand for renewables has put enormous strain on supply, as evidenced by the 500,000 clean energy jobs that have been cited as a &#8220;a major bottleneck&#8221; by<a href="https://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/Energy-Jobs-Are-Finally-Recovering-With-Renewables-Leading-The-Way.html"> 80% of solar companies</a> in the US and an &#8220;<a href="https://www.spglobal.com/marketintelligence/en/news-insights/latest-news-headlines/skills-shortage-imperils-global-energy-transition-71565735">underestimated element of the energy transition</a>.&#8221; </p><p>The critical link in the renewable supply chain, mining companies, too, are under growing pressure to scale. That could<em> </em>prove politically unpopular. We&#8217;ve <a href="https://www.weekinimpact.com/p/esg-is-dead">said it before</a>: Building renewables is a mine-digging, energy-burning, acid-leaching, waste-dumping&#8212;but incontrovertibly<em> necessary</em>&#8212;business. Mining isn&#8217;t the only environmentally contentious part of production. Natural habitats are doubly damaged by renewable park development.</p><p>For a constituency that believes in the dichotomy of green-good and brown-bad, will those tradeoffs be readily accepted? How about in the year when biodiversity is in the spotlight, as, allegedly, &#8220;<a href="https://www.ft.com/content/abbcec95-0154-40cd-83b9-d988bd3271b9">the fastest developing ESG theme in global capital markets</a>,&#8221; and set to soar on the back of an impending nature-related <a href="https://www.mckinsey.com/capabilities/sustainability/our-insights/where-the-worlds-largest-companies-stand-on-nature">corporate disclosure framework</a>?</p><blockquote><p><a href="https://www.ft.com/content/abbcec95-0154-40cd-83b9-d988bd3271b9">From the FT</a>: &#8220;Nils Torvalds, a European Parliament member working on the EU&#8217;s Renewable Energy Directive, says the environmental lobby can be obstructive. &#8220;Everyone knows some small species on the verge of extinction and that emotionality makes it difficult to find functioning solutions.&#8221;&#8221;</p></blockquote><p>On p.19 of our latest research report, <a href="https://uploads-ssl.webflow.com/5cf4f70073a623716fb74c59/62fcd5a72b7443f8b96252f0_Util%20Report%20082022%20SDG%20Leaders%20Laggards%20%20(4).pdf">Impact Investment Leaders &amp; Laggards</a>, we uncover the extent of the paradox: For investors, metal mining has the worst direct impact on biodiversity, yet further along their value chain, renewables&#8212;bar wind farms!&#8212;have the best.</p><p>If governments direct markets towards low-carbon projects, investors and businesses can pursue growth (and greed) without shame and exert their &#8216;powers for good&#8217; on something within their wheelhouse: managing value chains responsibly. Should they gloss over the politically unpopular drawbacks of the transition, however, nature-related corporate action will fall into the same traps of its climate-related predecessor.</p>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Pecuniary investments for a pecuniary world]]></title><description><![CDATA[The GOP hates ESG; BlackRock hits back; untangling ESG and impact (again).]]></description><link>https://www.weekinclimate.com/p/pecuniary-investments-for-a-pecuniary</link><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.weekinclimate.com/p/pecuniary-investments-for-a-pecuniary</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Elisabeth]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Tue, 13 Sep 2022 13:10:08 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://bucketeer-e05bbc84-baa3-437e-9518-adb32be77984.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/9257c180-bc20-4b60-a647-24412def2145_1200x627.png" length="0" type="image/jpeg"/><content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>From the top</h3><p>&#129413; <strong>Whose ideological agenda is it, anyway?</strong> In recent weeks, Virginia, Idaho, and Oklahoma have outlined policies to punish ESG investors, while Texas moved to ban 10 asset managers &#8212; most notably BlackRock &#8212; from managing state investments, because what better way to signal your distaste for boycotting than to boycott the boycotters? In any event, BlackRock doesn&#8217;t see itself as one, pointing to its <a href="https://www.cnbc.com/2022/08/25/texas-says-10-companies-including-blackrock-boycotting-energy-.html">$100B allocation</a> to Texas energy companies as proof. That shouldn&#8217;t be news to anyone who read CEO Larry Fink&#8217;s <a href="https://www.weekinimpact.com/p/greenwash-to-wish-wash">January letter to shareholders</a>, in which he stated the firm &#8220;does not pursue divestment from oil and gas companies,&#8221; but it wasn&#8217;t enough to placate the 19 Republican state attorneys general who, last month, <a href="https://www.texasattorneygeneral.gov/sites/default/files/images/executive-management/BlackRock%20Letter.pdf">accused</a> BlackRock of sacrificing its fiduciary duties. More recently, Florida governor Ron DeSantis <a href="https://www.flgov.com/2022/08/23/governor-ron-desantis-eliminates-esg-considerations-from-state-pension-investments/">blocked</a> state pension fund managers from incorporating ESG factors into their investment decisions. The new resolution requires state administrators to rely &#8220;only on pecuniary factors,&#8221; otherwise defined as a factor &#8220;expected to have a material effect on the risk and return of an investment.&#8221; Rings a bell.</p><p><strong>&#9878;&#65039; Last week, the Empire clapped back.</strong> BlackRock confronted red state &#8220;misconceptions&#8221; in a <a href="https://www.ft.com/content/a4af6919-b1cc-4c15-b17c-46186fddbd4c">letter of its own</a>, defending its climate policies as being &#8220;entirely consistent&#8221; with its fiduciary obligations. That implies one of two things: Either, climate action is synonymous with financial returns; or, those &#8220;climate policies&#8221; exist only to the extent they support financial returns. BlackRock appeared to take the safer route, writing that it does not &#8220;dictate to companies what specific emission targets they should meet,&#8221; and that end investors &#8212; including state pension schemes &#8212; have the final say on how to vote on their shares. It&#8217;s &#8220;a line that understates the huge influence that BlackRock wields through its voting decisions and engagement,&#8221; <a href="https://www.ft.com/content/3a064db9-1e88-4397-98c8-e9d25db9bb84">writes the FT&#8217;s Simon Mundy</a>, and one that sidesteps the uncomfortable debate at the heart of all this. It may be that there&#8217;s a &#8220;perfect match&#8221; in environmental and financial objectives, but what about when they diverge? The question of whether climate action is &#8216;homework or an extra-curricular activity&#8217; is one with which <a href="https://www.ft.com/content/d663856c-f432-4d49-805a-4a469fe7811b">the ECB</a>, facing double-digit inflation, is now grappling.</p><p><strong>&#128681; To what extent are any &#8220;misconceptions&#8221; a beast of the industry&#8217;s own making?</strong> The problem &#8212; which we discuss a lot (most recently in <a href="https://wealthbriefingasia.com/article.php?id=195604#.YyBPw-zMK3I">WealthBriefing</a>), as have, lately, <a href="https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2022-08-23/amc-goes-ape#xj4y7vzkg">Matt Levine</a> and <a href="https://www.ft.com/content/4d5ab95e-177e-42d6-a52f-572cdbc2eff2">Stuart Kirk</a> &#8212; is that ESG has two very different meanings. One frames ESG as risk management, with E + S + G factors, or inputs, that provide clues about the potential risk-adjusted returns of an asset. The other characterises ESG as impact investing, with E + S + G objectives, or outcomes, to be achieved. In smoother markets, when &#8216;doing well was doing good&#8217;, it was tempting to sell the former as the latter &#8212; presumably because the &#8216;iShares ESG Aware MSCI USA ETF&#8217; sounds cooler than the &#8216;iShares Pecuniary Factors Aware MSCI USA ETF&#8217;. Unfortunately, however, it created the distrust death spiral, as we titled events back in May. Which goes something like this: 1. ESG marketing machine implies ESG = impact. 2. Success! ESG goes mainstream. 3. Backlash! Investors branded &#8216;out of touch&#8217; (GOP); ESG, &#8220;a scam&#8221; (Elon Musk). 4. People, once again, feel alienated from the finance industry. 5. ESG and impact risk being tossed with the bathwater.</p><p class="button-wrapper" data-attrs="{&quot;url&quot;:&quot;https://www.weekinclimate.com/subscribe?&quot;,&quot;text&quot;:&quot;Subscribe now&quot;,&quot;action&quot;:null,&quot;class&quot;:null}" data-component-name="ButtonCreateButton"><a class="button primary" href="https://www.weekinclimate.com/subscribe?"><span>Subscribe now</span></a></p><div><hr></div><h3>Time to get real</h3><p>It&#8217;s been a turbulent year in the world of sustainable investing.</p><p>A series of high-profile greenwashing scandals rocked trust in its providers. The speed with which index providers responded to Russia&#8217;s invasion of Ukraine prompted criticism about its efficacy. And the ensuing debate about weapons and fossil fuels in portfolios called into question its very definition.</p><p>Yet client demand has remained resilient. Sustainable funds <a href="https://www.morningstar.com/lp/global-esg-flows">attracted</a> US$32.6B in Q2, holding up better than the broader market. In Europe, those figures are expected to grow on the back of the new MiFID II obligation requiring fund managers to take clients&#8217; sustainability preferences into account.&nbsp;</p><p>As the worst effects of climate change are felt across the world, and an emerging generation of retail investors makes their values known, expect more interest in products that meet sustainable objectives.</p><h4><strong>Treading carefully</strong></h4><p>Nevertheless, fund providers are wary. Morningstar found just 45 funds were repurposed in Q2: the second-lowest number in three years. Caution is understandable. For a long time, there were no rules mandating the contents of a sustainable fund. Recent investigations levelled at industry behemoths, however, signal those days are over.&nbsp;</p><p>A multi-million dollar fine is not the only cause for concern. A year ago, there was less fluency around sustainable investing. Today, customers, journalists, and third-party data providers are scrutinising portfolios independently. Fund providers face mounting pressure to provide clarity about what, exactly, &#8216;sustainable&#8217; means and achieves.</p><p>For products hooked around a clear theme, such as clean energy, it&#8217;s a straightforward task. For those with the dubious &#8216;ESG integration&#8217; moniker, however, it becomes more complicated. Unsurprising, then, that Article 8 funds have fallen out of favour among fund providers, whereas Article 9 funds have not. The scope for Article 8 funds is too vague.</p><p>A framework for communicating products will help mitigate risk. So too the CSRD, due in 2024, with which asset managers can, more confidently, build products that do what they say on the tin. As pointed out by<a href="https://www.bnpparibas-am.com/viewpoint/mifid-ii-and-esg-preferences-a-paradigm-change-in-europe/"> BNP Paribas</a>, however, &#8220;the order of the regulations could have been better. If, first companies disclose their ESG data&#8230; asset managers could use them in the construction of [funds], and finally, distributors could assess investor preferences for sustainable investments.&#8221;</p><h4><strong>50 shades of greenwash</strong></h4><p>In the meantime, some pitfalls are easy to avoid.</p><p>Citing &#8216;consideration&#8217; or &#8216;integration&#8217;, without reporting on <em>how</em> factors have been considered or integrated, is one. Selling as &#8216;sustainable&#8217; any product that hugs an index is another. And conflating ESG risk assessments with &#8216;sustainable&#8217;, &#8216;green&#8217;, or &#8216;ethical&#8217; investment objectives is an open invitation to criticism.</p><p>Pending clarification about corporate disclosures and product labels, calls to unbundle &#8216;ESG&#8217; are gaining ground. Each letter represents a distinct concept with disparate, sometimes conflicting, objectives. Lumping them into a catchall acronym obscures inevitable tradeoffs. What&#8217;s more, companies may be incentivised to counterbalance weakness on one metric with an unrelated initiative. </p><p>Working at the intersection of finance and machine learning, we often hear the phrase &#8220;if you can&#8217;t explain it to your grandmother / six-year old / dog, then you don&#8217;t understand it.&#8221; Asset management needs a similar guiding principle. If you cannot explain to a non-financially literate observer why a sustainable fund is sustainable, it is, perhaps, not.</p><h4>Self sabotage is systemic</h4><p>Eschewing clarity, whether wilfully or not, is a dangerous game. Not unlike emissions, the real risk isn&#8217;t isolated to individual companies. It&#8217;s system-wide.</p><p>Already, marketing greenwash has been weaponised. The little white lie &#8212; that ESG ratings, and the ESG indices they underpin, have a relationship with social and environmental outcomes &#8212; has been taken at face value by the GOP, and sustainable finance made the unlikely target of its campaign vitriol.</p><p>MSCI&#8217;s &#8220;Better portfolios for a better world&#8221; walked, so that Elon Musk&#8217;s &#8220;ESG ratings make no sense&#8221; could drive, so that Ron DeSantis&#8217;s &#8220;Corporate power has been utilized to impose an ideological agenda on the American people through the perversion of financial investment priorities under the euphemistic banners of environmental, social, and corporate governance and diversity, inclusion, and equity&#8221; could soar, like a big bald eagle.</p><p>To paraphrase <a href="https://www.ft.com/content/4d5ab95e-177e-42d6-a52f-572cdbc2eff2#comments-anchor">Stuart Kirk</a>: ESG carries two meanings. Both have value. To bury clarity about the function of each on its own terms, however, is to bury <em>meaningful</em> debate about &#8212; as well as the future of &#8212; any version of sustainable investing.</p>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[What does Big Oil want?]]></title><description><![CDATA[Clean energy gets a boost. Disclosure frameworks face off. Plus: Has Big Oil found its Big Heart?]]></description><link>https://www.weekinclimate.com/p/what-does-big-oil-want</link><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.weekinclimate.com/p/what-does-big-oil-want</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Elisabeth]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Mon, 15 Aug 2022 12:17:29 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://bucketeer-e05bbc84-baa3-437e-9518-adb32be77984.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/e7a55504-015b-49d1-b2ef-d3a6068ef66b_1200x627.png" length="0" type="image/jpeg"/><content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>From the top</h3><p>&#127482;&#127480; On Friday, President Biden&#8217;s <a href="https://www.economist.com/leaders/2022/08/08/americas-climate-plus-spending-bill-is-flawed-but-essential">Inflation Reduction Act</a> received final approval from US Congress. At the heart of the sweeping climate and healthcare bill is $370B earmarked for climate solutions over the next 10 years, aimed at moving consumers and companies from fossil fuels to clean energy. Spending, tax credits and loans will bolster investment into, and uptake of, clean-energy technology, energy efficiency, emissions reduction, air pollution controls, and climate-friendly agriculture. <a href="https://rhg.com/research/inflation-reduction-act/">Independent analysis</a> shows it could slash US emissions 40% by 2030 from 2005 levels. But climate change mitigation is a global effort. And, last week, Beijing <a href="https://www.reuters.com/business/environment/un-warns-no-way-tackle-climate-change-without-us-china-cooperation-2022-08-05/">suspended</a> bilateral talks with the US on climate change in response to Nancy Pelosi&#8217;s Taiwan vacay. Policy cooperation between the two highest-emitting countries isn&#8217;t the only casualty of &#8220;letting geopolitics be the tail that wags the climate dog.&#8221; The US&#8217;s clean-energy ambitions depend on access to rare earth metals, on which China has a near-total monopoly. In an effort to end its dependence, the US is <a href="https://www.reuters.com/markets/us/us-wants-end-dependence-china-rare-earths-yellen-2022-07-18/">scaling up</a> its own mining, processing, and refining operations &#8212; but those projects take a <a href="https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-03-30/despite-biden-battery-metal-push-mine-permits-still-take-years#:~:text=It%20takes%20a%20about%20seven,business%20group%20National%20Mining%20Association.">long time</a>. Even longer to train an <a href="https://qz.com/the-critical-minerals-industry-desperately-needs-new-en-1849341695">entire workforce</a>. And a decade is not very long. </p><p>&#9878;&#65039; <strong>Investors are one step closer to a global disclosure framework. </strong>The consultation period has closed for two proposals left in the ring: the IFRS Foundation&#8217;s <a href="https://www.ifrs.org/news-and-events/news/2022/08/issb-receives-global-response-on-proposed-sustainability-disclosure-standards/">ISSB</a> Climate and General Sustainability-Related disclosures (Team Single Materiality); and&nbsp;the <a href="https://www.efrag.org/lab3?AspxAutoDetectCookieSupport=1">EFRAG</a> European Sustainability Reporting Standards (ESRS) (Team Double Materiality). &#8220;It is an exciting time in the world of setting standards for sustainability reporting,&#8221; <a href="https://corpgov.law.harvard.edu/2022/07/20/the-long-and-winding-road-to-financial-reporting-standards/">enthuses</a> Robert Eccles, who goes on to squeeze &#8220;fascinating&#8221; and &#8220;accounting&#8221; into the same sentence. The 2,000 responses to both consultations reach a similar consensus: Global standardisation is crucial. But it requires compromise. Feedback urges better alignment between the two: <a href="https://www.responsible-investor.com/asset-owners-and-esma-urge-efrag-to-align-disclosure-drafts-with-issb/">EFRAG is warned</a> of insufficient &#8220;<strong>interoperability</strong>,&#8221; and <a href="https://news.bloomberglaw.com/financial-accounting/global-esg-reporting-standards-too-narrow-unclear-critics-say">IFRS</a>, criticised for being too light on <strong>detail</strong> <em>[says <a href="https://www.icaew.com/technical/non-financial-reporting/international-sustainability-reporting-standards/mission-critical-matters-for-the-issb">ICAEW</a>: If you want companies to disclose &#8220;significant sustainability-related risks to enterprise value,&#8221; you may need to define &#8220;significant,&#8221; &#8220;sustainability-related,&#8221; and &#8220;enterprise value&#8221;]</em> and on <strong>double materiality</strong> <em>[says <a href="https://www.ifrs.org/content/dam/ifrs/project/general-sustainability-related-disclosures/exposure-draft-comment-letters/h/hsbc-bank--uk--pension-scheme-b4b6fe9a-4784-4d8c-a1a7-5c4ac4c0a017/ifrs-consultation-hsbc-bank--uk--pension-scheme-submission.docx.pdf">HSBC</a>, which needs no such definition: &#8220;Enterprise Value is a backward-looking, lagging indicator unsuitable for the needs of asset owners&#8230; [who] need double materiality to inform decision making&#8221;].</em> </p><p>&#127991;&#65039; R<strong>egulated corporate disclosures will be welcomed by asset managers and advisers</strong> grappling with <a href="https://capitalmonitor.ai/regions/europe/mifid-ii-greenwashing-concerns-rise-as-new-rule-kicks-in/">new MiFID requirements</a>, on top of SFDR teething troubles. In its drive to direct capital to sustainable activities, European regulation has moved fast. Too fast, warn fund distributors, now mandated to assess &#8212; in addition to risk &#8212; the sustainability preferences of clients as part of the existing MiFID II suitability assessment. Responses must be translated into a concrete product offering, which is something of a challenge in the absence of rules dictating how fund providers should communicate Article 8 and 9 funds (due 2023), let alone the Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (due 2024) for which ESRS is designed. &#8220;The order of the regulations could have been better,&#8221; says <a href="https://www.bnpparibas-am.com/viewpoint/mifid-ii-and-esg-preferences-a-paradigm-change-in-europe/">BNP Paribas</a>. &#8220;If first companies disclose their ESG data&#8230; asset managers could use them in the construction of [funds], and finally, distributors could assess investor preferences for sustainable investments.&#8221; Wary of greenwash accusations, firms are <a href="https://www.pionline.com/esg/managers-treading-lightly-esg-scrutiny-grows">pulling back</a> from product development. &#8220;Ultimately,&#8221; reports <a href="https://www.investmentweek.co.uk/news-analysis/4054206/mifid-ii-goes-live-asset-managers-confused">Investment Week</a>, &#8220;the firms [with] solid data architecture in place are those [that] will stand against the winds of regulatory change.&#8221; </p><p class="button-wrapper" data-attrs="{&quot;url&quot;:&quot;https://www.weekinclimate.com/subscribe?&quot;,&quot;text&quot;:&quot;Subscribe now&quot;,&quot;action&quot;:null,&quot;class&quot;:null}" data-component-name="ButtonCreateButton"><a class="button primary" href="https://www.weekinclimate.com/subscribe?"><span>Subscribe now</span></a></p><div><hr></div><h3>Story of the week: Who&#8217;s in charge of the transition?</h3><p>&#8220;ESG investing is not designed to save the planet,&#8221; writes Ken Pucker in <a href="https://hbr.org/2022/08/esg-investing-isnt-designed-to-save-the-planet">HBR</a>. &#8220;Instead, [set] appropriate boundaries for capitalism and [let] the market innovate to help solve our global challenges.&#8221; He outlines four. In brief:</p><ol><li><p><strong>Asset managers</strong> need better incentives. &#8220;It is na&#239;ve and unreasonable to expect investors to put public interests ahead of private interests.&#8221;</p></li><li><p><strong>Regulators</strong> must address outcomes. &#8220;Regulatory action must shift from input-based disclosures to outcome-based impacts.&#8221;</p></li><li><p><strong>Governments</strong> must mobilise public-private partnerships. &#8220;The current scale of investment required for the transition is insufficient.&#8221;</p></li><li><p><strong>Companies </strong>must<strong> </strong>address systems-wide change. &#8220;A problem like climate does not get solved by cleaning up the home office.&#8221;</p></li></ol><p>Capitalism is a nebula of innovation &#8212; provided the right blend of incentives are in place. Last week, the US clean-energy bill jumpstarted (3). But all four pillars require urgent attention for it to work. Here&#8217;s why. </p><h4>Oil and wind are different beasts</h4><p>The rose-tinted view of the energy transition goes something like this: As investors throw money (and governments, subsidies) at renewable companies, their fossil fuel peers will want<em> </em>to take the helm.<em> </em>Putting to good use its wealth of infrastructure, enterprise, and labour, Big Oil will discover its Big Heart and usher the world into a new age. </p><p>Proponents point to the recent supermajor shopping spree as evidence. US and EU oil companies have spent billions on renewable acquisitions. Why pay, hand over fist, for companies, brands, and technology for which you have no ambition?</p><p>Yet there are few concrete signs of ambition. Despite lofty pledges, companies are investing a fraction of their profits into renewables. Nor has a season of bumper earnings changed spending habits. Oil companies have channelled record profits into record dividends, prompting UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres to accuse the sector of &#8220;<a href="https://www.reuters.com/business/energy/un-chief-urges-tax-grotesque-greed-oil-gas-companies-2022-08-03/">grotesque greed</a>,&#8221; and governments to threaten windfall taxes.</p><p>Let&#8217;s take first question first.<strong> Q1. Why invest in renewables at all?</strong></p><p>First, there&#8217;s the ROI. Supermajors with a toe in renewables can reap the benefits of <a href="https://www.fastcompany.com/90776050/who-exactly-benefits-from-renewable-energy-subsidies-the-answer-will-surprise-you">clean-energy stimulus</a> and attract kinder shareholders. </p><p>Second, they&#8217;re not paying hand over fist. &#8220;The deals are tiny compared with the tens of billions that would be needed to strike a deal for a &#8216;green energy major&#8217;,&#8221; <a href="https://www.ft.com/content/760ba17c-3437-45eb-841a-e5980bf3ae22#comments-anchor">reports the FT</a>. They&#8217;re tiny, too, relative to total expenditure. Renewables &#8220;continue to be a rounding error in <a href="https://www.carbonbrief.org/oil-majors-not-walking-the-talk-on-climate-action-study-confirms/">most annual reports</a>,&#8221; reports <a href="https://bright-green.org/2022/08/06/oil-companies-securing-record-profits-is-bad-news-for-absolutely-everyone/">Bright Green</a>. &#8220;In 2021, it ranged from 1-4% of spending.&#8221;</p><p><strong>Q2.</strong> <strong>If you have them, though, why not scale them? </strong></p><p>Here&#8217;s a fact frequently overlooked: They do a similar job, but renewable and oil companies are very different types of operation <em>and</em> investment.<em> </em>The former is all about growth, with a product that experiences little price volatility (though it relies on a commodity that experiences <a href="https://www.mining-technology.com/news/eurometaux-metals-eu-closures/">plenty of it</a>). The latter is all about value, with a product that experiences high price volatility. </p><p>By some estimates, reducing oil returns to the level of utilities would reduce net income up to a third. Meanwhile, renewables require high upfront costs. Early movers, such as &#216;rsted and Equinor, were able to fund renewable growth by a) selling oil businesses, and b) &#8216;farming down&#8217;, or selling, wind projects to oil majors post development. The margins on both will depreciate as the transition gathers pace. </p><p>Of course, fossil fuels are in terminal decline. It no longer makes sense to funnel profits into oil exploration. But if renewables aren&#8217;t the obvious replacement for expenditure, what is?</p><p><strong>Q3.</strong> <strong>What about shareholders?</strong></p><p>The long-term implications of deserting customers and investors, respectively, means more investment risk and less ESG pressure. </p><p>To compensate investors for risk (and secure management bonuses), oil companies are paying it forward with <a href="https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-08-05/big-oil-is-paying-out-years-of-dividends-in-one-day#xj4y7vzkg">unprecedented dividends</a> and share buybacks. <a href="https://www.morningstar.com/articles/1078579/why-energy-stocks-are-gushing-high-dividends">Morningstar</a> finds that, since 2018, dividends have grown by over 50%. Since 2016, they&#8217;re up 80%. Most recently, <a href="https://www.bp.com/en/global/corporate/investors/results-and-presentations/quarterly-results-and-webcast.html">BP</a> promised a $3.5B share buyback and 10% dividend &#8212; 10x its expenditure on low-carbon energy this year. </p><p>Few shareholders appear inclined to vote against dividends in favour of low-carbon projects (those who would, have, in all likelihood, divested). Can you blame them? </p><p>&#8220;When the markets are rising 20% a year, people tend to forget about dividends,&#8221; <a href="https://www.nytimes.com/2022/08/13/business/stocks-climate-bill-tax-1-percent.html">T. Rowe Price&#8217;s John Linehan told the NYT</a>. &#8220;But the longer your investment horizon, the more important dividends are for you.&#8221;</p><p>There&#8217;s a reason &#216;rsted and Equinor are state owned.</p><h4>Incentives matter</h4><p>Here&#8217;s what happens if clean-energy stimulus isn&#8217;t met with boundaries elsewhere.</p><ol><li><p><strong>Asset managers </strong>are judged by their returns, company leaders, by their investors. Result: Companies are incentivised to spend their profits on dividends, not expensive growth projects. Particularly in a volatile market.</p></li><li><p><strong>Regulation</strong> doesn&#8217;t moderate company impact, only disclosures &#8212; and, if ISSB has its way, only single materiality at that. Result: Companies have no incentive to reduce fossil fuel sales. Particularly if there are fewer ESG shareholders.</p></li><li><p><strong>Companies</strong> need only clean up house to improve public perceptions. Result: Companies are incentivised to buy clean energy companies. Not to scale or sell clean energy. Particularly if doing so comes at a cost to shareholders.</p></li></ol><h4>How do you fix it?</h4><p>Ideally, companies with one foot in dirty and one foot in clean activities would split their operations.</p><p>It would reduce pressure on oil companies to be &#8216;all things to all people&#8217;, which can result in the &#8216;clean&#8217; business being underfunded or mismanaged. It allows the &#8216;dirty&#8217; business to focus, without distraction, on cashflow, and &#8216;clean&#8217; business, growth, with profits moving from the former to the latter. It broadens the number of companies to which sustainability-focused talent and investors can flock: an urgent priority for an industry whose capacity is creaking under demand.</p><p>Investors could make it happen, as they did with Ford last month. It requires focus on relevant metrics. Absolute capital expenditure &#8212; like lofty commitments &#8212; is a misleading indicator of intent. The EU Taxonomy, not to mention ISSB, is an inadequate indicator of sustainability. Whether at the point of investment or engagement, shareholders need insight into the real impact of a company&#8217;s real business lines. </p>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[Don't tread on ESG]]></title><description><![CDATA[ESG in US political crosshairs; Emissions aren't enough; Time to face energy transition tradeoffs.]]></description><link>https://www.weekinclimate.com/p/dont-step-on-esg</link><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.weekinclimate.com/p/dont-step-on-esg</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Elisabeth]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Sat, 30 Jul 2022 18:28:13 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://bucketeer-e05bbc84-baa3-437e-9518-adb32be77984.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/0311d89a-09a1-4bc9-b42c-f0eee3211f6b_1200x627.png" length="0" type="image/jpeg"/><content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>From the top</h3><p>&#127482;&#127480; Be warned, ye <a href="https://advancingamericanfreedom.com/republicans-can-stop-esg-political-bias/">Cabals of Bureaucrats</a> and <a href="https://flgov.com/2022/07/27/governor-ron-desantis-announces-initiatives-to-protect-floridians-from-esg-financial-fraud/">Woke Financial Titans</a>: The GOP is coming for your Radical ESG Agenda&#8482;. From constraints on fund managers to boycotts on banks boycotting fossil fuels, recent <a href="https://www.ft.com/content/c159885e-f9bb-4ed4-8155-5f21ae007c88">anti-ESG state proposals</a> exacerbate the rift between the GOP and <a href="https://edition.cnn.com/2022/07/01/politics/abortion-republicans-company-benefits/index.html">corporate America</a>. A vacuous distraction from any <a href="https://www.barrons.com/articles/esg-impact-investing-climate-51659129755">valuable debate</a> about ESG, the <a href="https://www.ft.com/content/248941e5-c95c-439a-a160-1ea344ddd2c0?shareType=nongift">unwinnable culture war</a> is a harbinger of political risk. But it also signals how entrenched stakeholder capitalism has become. Consider: If you&#8217;re opposed to Big Government and like free markets, dismantling social and environmental protections at a federal level is &#8212; for better or worse &#8212; ideologically coherent. Not so to throw Big Government weight against markets acting freely, by attacking a) private companies codifying those protections to attract employees; b) financial institutions integrating those principles to attract customers; latterly c) shrinking the finance available to your state and, according to <a href="https://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/article/texas-fought-against-esg-heres-what-it-cost/">Wharton research</a>, costing your taxpayers millions in borrowing costs. The GOP argues, rightly, that the primary function of business is to maximise shareholder value. But this<em> is </em>businesses maximising shareholder value. Anti-ESG politicians have a new favourite soundbite: ESG represents a suite of goals the Corporate Cartel Elites&#8482; could &#8220;not achieve at the ballot box.&#8221; If a <a href="https://www.pewresearch.org/science/2019/11/25/u-s-public-views-on-climate-and-energy/">majority of constituents</a> does, in fact, care about those issues, then perhaps there&#8217;s something wrong with your ballot box &#8212; ESG or no ESG.</p><p>&#127777;&#65039; Is ESG a distraction from climate change? As <a href="https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-07-24/fund-managers-face-rapidly-closing-window-to-fix-co2-math#xj4y7vzkg">net-zero pledges</a> come <a href="https://www.ethicalsystems.org/the-concept-of-net-zero-is-deceptively-simple-and-a-dangerous-trap/">under fire </a>during a summer of record heatwaves, the question is generating renewed scrutiny. In a widely circulated article, <a href="https://www.economist.com/leaders/2022/07/21/esg-should-be-boiled-down-to-one-simple-measure-emissions">The Economist</a> argues ESG &#8220;risks setting conflicting goals&#8221; and recommends investors instead &#8220;drop the S and the G, and shift the E from &#8220;environment&#8221; to &#8220;emissions&#8221;&#8221; to make carbon exposure easier to measure and manage. If that seems reductive, at the very least, &#8220;it makes sense to split up the E and the S and the G to create a customised approach to materiality,&#8221; as &#8220;lumping three disparate categories into a single scoring system ignores inevitable trade-offs.&#8221;<strong> </strong>Case in point: <a href="https://www.reuters.com/business/sustainable-business/return-coal-threat-european-companies-esg-ratings-2022-07-26/">Reuters</a> reports that European companies, forced by cost pressures or national policy to use coal, are protecting their ESG scores by &#8220;finding other ways to burnish their environmental credentials, or by focusing on the S and G in ESG.&#8221; Of course, no &#8220;fantastic commitment&#8221; can &#8220;counterbalance&#8221; the impact of burning coal. Equally, however, a singular focus on emissions without a view to its myriad interrelated issues (energy security, social welfare) seems retrogressive. Sustainability data offers value not as an authority on what constitutes a &#8216;good&#8217; investment, but rather, as a source of contextual information. Neither <a href="https://www.esma.europa.eu/press-news/esma-news/esma-publishes-results-its-call-evidence-esg-ratings">EU</a> and <a href="https://www.insuranceinsider.com/article/2adt72d0ila485r0lxibk/london-market-section/fca-requests-remit-to-regulate-esg-ratings-providers">UK</a> regulation of third-party data nor <a href="https://www.unepfi.org/news/unep-fi-response-to-the-ifrs-issb-general-requirements-exposure-draft/">disclosure standardisation</a> will answer the real question demanding attention from <a href="https://www.sustainableviews.com/incentivising-esg-what-does-it-really-take/">companies</a> and <a href="https://www.ipe.com/comment/lets-not-get-carried-away-about-esg-ratings/10060725.article">investors</a>: What data matters <em>to you</em>, and why?</p><p class="button-wrapper" data-attrs="{&quot;url&quot;:&quot;https://www.weekinclimate.com/subscribe?&quot;,&quot;text&quot;:&quot;Subscribe now&quot;,&quot;action&quot;:null,&quot;class&quot;:null}" data-component-name="ButtonCreateButton"><a class="button primary" href="https://www.weekinclimate.com/subscribe?"><span>Subscribe now</span></a></p><div><hr></div><h3>Story of the week: It&#8217;s all political</h3><h5><strong>Collective action or collective suicide? </strong></h5><p>UN Secretary General Ant&#243;nio Guterres was talking about fossil fuel-induced climate change when he posed the question to 40 governments this month, but he could have been talking about the energy crisis.</p><p>As they battle heatwaves and droughts, countries have put on the back burner a looming winter fraught by scarce and expensive energy. The EU is in &#8220;an incredibly precarious situation&#8221;, says the <a href="https://www.iea.org/commentaries/coordinated-actions-across-europe-are-essential-to-prevent-a-major-gas-crunch-here-are-5-immediate-measures">IEA</a>, with renewables &#8220;not enough&#8221; to plug the gap filled by Russian gas. On Tuesday, member states agreed to curb gas use by 15%. If that, too, is not enough, the bloc will backslide into coal.&nbsp;</p><p>When it elected to include gas and nuclear in its list of sustainable economic activities recently, the EU was criticised for reneging on its climate commitments. The <a href="https://www.ft.com/content/0df04289-1014-406e-81c7-1e4a6b1ea5bc">FT</a> observed that Russia&#8217;s newfound pariah status introduced an &#8220;intensely political debate [to] an initiative that was meant to be purely science based.&#8221; But <em>every </em>policy is couched in context, and as such, inherently political. The EU Green Deal is not, nor ever was, an exception.&nbsp;</p><p>The energy transition is steeped in contextual tradeoffs. They may be acceptable, and they may have been easier to ignore before a global energy crisis and near double-digit inflation, but pretending they don&#8217;t exist is problematic. It&#8217;s not only disingenuous, warned <a href="https://pebble.finance/newsletter">Pebble Finance&#8217;s James Esdaile</a> back in January, but dangerous. Selling green policy as an apolitical win-win is kryptonite for anti-green political backlash.</p><p>The reality of the energy transition is it a) requires sacrifices for distant outcomes, b) will hit some communities more than others, and c) won&#8217;t be green. </p><p>No company or industry exists in a vacuum. Insight into the emissions generated by the wind power industry is meaningless without data on the emissions generated by its metals suppliers. Insight into the environmental impact of the fossil fuel industry is incomplete without information about its social impact. </p><p>Basic emissions data, as proposed by the Economist, does nothing to expose the tradeoffs. Nor, do &#8216;green&#8217; and &#8216;brown&#8217; labels. And nor do aggregated ESG scores.</p><p>At a legislative level, failure to address the inevitable tensions yields policies criticised for being either lightweight (the UK&#8217;s vague and &#8220;unlawful&#8221; <a href="https://www.cliffordchance.com/briefings/2022/07/uk-net-zero-strategy-ruled-unlawful-leaving-uncertainty-over-uk-.html">Net Zero Strategy</a>), hypocritical (the <a href="https://www.ft.com/content/94427f06-78a6-42ed-b9c6-7fb534dfea50">European Commission</a>), or tone deaf (the <a href="https://www.ft.com/content/94427f06-78a6-42ed-b9c6-7fb534dfea50">ECB</a>). </p><p>In <em>that </em>context, last week&#8217;s unexpected tailwind for US President Joe Biden&#8217;s <a href="https://www.nytimes.com/2022/07/30/climate/manchin-climate-deal.html">climate change bill </a>was a positive step. The $369B earmarked for climate-change mitigation &#8212; including tax credits and investment in renewables and resilience infrastructure &#8212; may not come close to the $4T originally promised. It may have been reframed in terms of energy security and inflation. But it sure is a point for collective action.</p>]]></content:encoded></item><item><title><![CDATA[What's in a (fund) name?]]></title><description><![CDATA[SEC comes for rebranded funds. ESG blocks economic development. We show best and worst funds for climate.]]></description><link>https://www.weekinclimate.com/p/whats-in-a-fund-name</link><guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.weekinclimate.com/p/whats-in-a-fund-name</guid><dc:creator><![CDATA[Elisabeth]]></dc:creator><pubDate>Sat, 18 Jun 2022 15:05:20 GMT</pubDate><enclosure url="https://bucketeer-e05bbc84-baa3-437e-9518-adb32be77984.s3.amazonaws.com/public/images/93361ef1-1327-40c7-8578-33fe664f5f83_1200x627.png" length="0" type="image/jpeg"/><content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>From the top</h3><p><strong>&#128300; The SEC works hard, but fund marketers work harder.</strong> Having charged BNY Mellon $1.5M for implying all mutual fund investments had undergone an ESG quality review, the regulator is investigating <a href="https://www.wsj.com/articles/sec-is-investigating-goldman-sachs-over-esg-funds-sources-say-11654895917?mod=Searchresults_pos1&amp;page=1">Goldman Sachs</a> over &#8220;at least four funds that have clean-energy or ESG in their names.&#8221; Under scrutiny is the tech-heavy GS US Equity ESG Fund, formerly known as a Blue Chip Fund. It was rebranded in 2020, a simpler time. Back then, blue chip was tech, tech was ESG, and &#8216;doing well&#8217; really <em>was</em> &#8216;doing good&#8217;. You could even say &#8220;my definition of &#8216;doing good&#8217; is &#8216;doing well&#8217;,&#8221; and that would be A-OK in the eyes of the SEC, provided you didn&#8217;t label as &#8216;good&#8217; a fund that hadn&#8217;t met your definition. That&#8217;s where BNY tripped, and GSAM, technically, didn&#8217;t? For its <a href="https://www.gsam.com/content/gsam/us/en/advisors/fund-center/fund-finder/gs-international-equity-esg-fund.html">International ESG Equity</a> and <a href="https://www.gsam.com/content/gsam/us/en/advisors/fund-center/fund-finder/gs-esg-emerging-markets-equity-fund.html">EM ESG Equity funds</a>, GSAM defines &#8216;ESG Focus&#8217; as &#8220;<strong>[seeking] to invest in</strong> <strong>sustainable businesses</strong>.&#8221; In the <a href="https://www.gsam.com/content/gsam/us/en/advisors/fund-center/fund-finder/gs-u-s--equity-esg-fund.html">GS US Equity ESG Fund</a>, however, an &#8216;ESG Focus&#8217; is, apparently, &#8220;<strong>[seeking] to invest in</strong> <strong>industry leading, durable franchises</strong>.&#8221; AKA blue chip. Perhaps <a href="https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-05-04/goldman-sachs-investment-manager-calls-out-lazy-esg-tech-bets#xj4y7vzkg">lazy</a> in the eyes of one GSAM fund manager, but it&#8217;s not miss-selling. <a href="https://citywire.com/wealth-manager/news/huge-growth-in-esg-funds-draws-questions-about-standards/a1574365">Take note</a>, issuers of the 1,096 new ESG strategies since 2019. Particularly if you represent one of the 606 rebranded ones.</p><p><strong>&#128681; There&#8217;s more at stake than a regulatory wrist slap. </strong>ESG equity funds are bleeding. <a href="https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-06-01/esg-equity-funds-had-worst-month-of-outflows-on-record-in-may#xj4y7vzkg">Bloomberg Intelligence</a> shows May was a record month for outflows, with ETFs losing an &#8220;extreme&#8221; $2B. Yes, all funds are suffering. No, ESG was never going to be popular in a recession ruled by eye-watering oil prices. The energy transition isn&#8217;t linear, and nor, by definition, are market cycles, so a volatile period wouldn&#8217;t be existential&#8212;were performance the only problem. Having peddled and profited from <a href="https://www.ft.com/content/6356cc05-93a5-4f56-9d18-85218bc8bb0c">the myth</a> that the world can be divided into &#8216;good&#8217; and &#8216;bad&#8217;, the industry now faces a <a href="https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-06-15/investors-are-increasingly-skeptical-of-esg-this-is-why#xj4y7vzkg">PR crisis</a> of its <a href="https://www.weekinimpact.com/p/esg-self-sabotage">own making</a>. Those <em>can</em> be existential and <em>can&#8217;t</em> be waived with a $1.5M fee. So, how do you save sustainable finance? Focus on flexibility and communication, says <a href="https://www.barrons.com/articles/dont-let-esg-become-the-latest-casualty-of-russias-war-51655409603">Barron&#8217;s</a>. Unexpected developments and mixed signals? It&#8217;s called a &#8216;market&#8217;. Case-by-case decisions? It&#8217;s called &#8216;investing&#8217;. Time to accept &#8216;sustainability&#8217; is mutable, depending on economic context and investor opinion. Exclusionary lists don&#8217;t represent change. Rigid ratings don&#8217;t represent diverse thought. Hey, according to <a href="https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2022-06-16/private-markets-will-pump-the-oil">Matt Levine</a>, holding <em>all </em>the oil may, in fact, be the best way for a climate-conscious investor to do well (maximise margins) by doing good (blocking wells).</p><p><strong>&#128680; Let the regulators focus on the rules</strong>. There&#8217;s plenty in the <a href="https://qz.com/emails/quartz-weekend-brief/2179465/the-era-of-esg-fraud/">pipeline</a>. While the SEC proposes new rules changes to <a href="https://www.sec.gov/news/press-release/2022-91?utm_medium=email&amp;amp;utm_source=govdelivery">prevent misleading or deceptive claims</a> and <a href="https://www.sec.gov/news/press-release/2022-91?utm_medium=email&amp;amp;utm_source=govdelivery">increase disclosure requirements</a>, the EU and ISSB are racing ahead with <a href="https://www.thomsonreuters.com/en-us/posts/investigation-fraud-and-risk/global-sustainability-standards/">diverging standards</a> for corporate disclosures. Ratings providers are up next. Last week, the European Commission closed the comment period on its consultation for ESG ratings. It comes as a <a href="https://2degrees-investing.org/resource/survey-esg-ratings/">2&#176; Investing Initiative</a> report reveals over 50% of investors think aggregate ESG ratings should be abolished and over 80% think individual &#8216;E&#8217; &#8216;S&#8217; and &#8216;G&#8217; scores should be <a href="https://theconversation.com/how-a-sustainability-index-can-keep-exxon-but-drop-tesla-and-3-ways-to-fix-esg-ratings-to-meet-investors-expectations-183705">unbundled</a>. All this regulation is expected to be <a href="https://www.environmental-finance.com/content/news/sec-requirements-could-drive-investors-away-from-esg-ratings.html">headwind</a> for traditional ESG ratings but a <a href="https://pitchbook.com/news/articles/esg-ratings-sustainability-platforms-EcoVadis">tailwind</a> for granular and impact data. About time, too. Last week, a study from <a href="https://mobilistglobal.com/research-data/drivers-of-investment-flows-to-emerging-and-frontier-markets/">Intellidex</a> revealed ESG is a major impediment to flows into developing countries. Because ESG is about mitigating risk rather than achieving impact, investors have underweighted and avoided developing markets due to perceived social and governance flaws and a straightforward lack of data.&nbsp;&#8220;It was a surprise to me, to what extent ESG&#8212;as it&#8217;s practised&#8212;is not aligned with the SDGs,&#8221; Intellidex co-founder Stuart Theobald told <a href="https://www.ft.com/content/24968d6e-4344-4185-aea4-c351460e3605">FT Moral Money</a>. (<a href="https://uploads-ssl.webflow.com/5cf4f70073a623716fb74c59/614c7813194a097955433eb5_Util%20Report%20How%20SDG%20is%20ESG%3F%20.pdf">Discover just how misaligned</a>.)</p><p class="button-wrapper" data-attrs="{&quot;url&quot;:&quot;https://www.weekinclimate.com/subscribe?&quot;,&quot;text&quot;:&quot;Subscribe now&quot;,&quot;action&quot;:null,&quot;class&quot;:null}" data-component-name="ButtonCreateButton"><a class="button primary" href="https://www.weekinclimate.com/subscribe?"><span>Subscribe now</span></a></p><div><hr></div><h3>What&#8217;s in a fund name?</h3><p>The regulators are coming for ESG. That&#8217;s good news if it means fewer funds doing ESG badly. It&#8217;s bad news if it means fewer funds doing ESG at all.</p><p>Markets might be cyclical, but the principles driving sustainable investing are structural. Climate change could cost <a href="https://link.axios.com/click/28104442.281694/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cubnl0aW1lcy5jb20vMjAyMS8wNC8yMi9jbGltYXRlL2NsaW1hdGUtY2hhbmdlLWVjb25vbXkuaHRtbD91dG1fc291cmNlPW5ld3NsZXR0ZXImdXRtX21lZGl1bT1lbWFpbCZ1dG1fY2FtcGFpZ249bmV3c2xldHRlcl9heGlvc21hcmtldHMmc3RyZWFtPWJ1c2luZXNz/602c5869ff1028248d492088Be4f123d8">$23 trillion per year</a>&nbsp;in 2050. Mitigation and adaptation will cost many trillions more. Given the scale of capital deployment, it&#8217;s not a challenge the investment industry can sit out. The long-term risks, and corresponding returns, are both financial and existential. </p><p>Too little rulemaking is, evidently, bad, but too much could stymie innovation and investment in climate solutions. Take the SEC&#8217;s proposal that funds only be labelled &#8216;sustainable&#8217; if sustainable factors are weighted higher than financial. Given their legal obligation to act in the financial best interest of their clients, how then does a US adviser choose the sustainable option without inviting a lawsuit? And then there&#8217;s the onus on asset managers to detail ever more information and align to yet more rigid parameters, even as their budgets shrink under fee pressure.</p><h4>In defence of chaos</h4><p>A straightforward score or standard is valuable in that it minimises debate, but sometimes those debates are worth having. We&#8217;re hardwired to make shortcuts. Easier to focus on Stuart Kirk&#8217;s &#8220;who cares if Miami is six metres underwater in 100 years?&#8221; than his follow up &#8220;we spend way too much on mitigation financing and not enough on adaption financing.&#8221; The annual cost of adaptation could reach $300B by 2030. While all attention is on mitigation, less than 2% of adaptation finance currently comes from private sources. Surely a more valuable conversation than the outrage on which vats of ink and miles of column inches were, instead, spilled?</p><p>SEC chair Gary Gensler has said he wants to make a sustainable fund label as easy to decipher as a &#8216;fat free&#8217; label on a milk carton. The trouble is, sustainability isn&#8217;t fat content. There&#8217;s divergence between E and S and G, and there&#8217;s divergence in opinion about their relative importance. You can criticise ratings providers for obscuring the former with aggregated scores, but for representing the latter with relative weighting? Not sure.</p><p>In his infamous speech, Kirk joked about &#8220;the amount of work these people make me do.&#8221; As sustainable finance evolves into a sophisticated market, it&#8217;s not going to get any easier.</p>]]></content:encoded></item></channel></rss>