Climate Change. Please read the attached articles and let me know what can be done by individuals as well as governments to affect change. Write a 350-word paper on this
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May8, 2020
The Paths to Net Zero
foreignaffairs.com/articles/2020-04-13/paths-net-zero
For 30 years, diplomats and policymakers have called for decisive action on climate change—
and for 30 years, the climate crisis has grown worse. There are a multitude of reasons for this
failure. The benefits of climate action lie mostly in the future, they are diffuse and hard to pin
down, and they will accrue above all to poor populations that do not have much of a voice in
politics, whether in those countries that emit most of the world’s warming pollution or at the
global level. The costs of climate action, on the other hand, are evident here and now, and
they fall on well-organized interest groups with real political power. In a multipolar world
without a responsible hegemon, any collective effort is difficult to organize. And the profound
uncertainty about what lies ahead makes it hard to move decisively.
These political hurdles are formidable. The good news is that technological progress can
make it much easier to clear them by driving down the costs of action. In the decades to
come, innovation could make severe cuts in emissions, also known as “deep
decarbonization,” achievable at reasonable costs. That will mean reshaping about ten sectors
A wind farm near the Nufenen Pass, Switzerland, September 2016
Denis Balibouse / Reuters
https://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/2020-04-13/paths-net-zero
http://www.energy-transitions.org/content/accelerating-low-carbon-transition
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in the global economy—including electric power, transportation, and parts of agriculture—by
reinforcing positive change where it is already happening and investing heavily wherever it
isn’t.
In a few sectors, especially electric power, a major transformation is already underway, and
low-emission technologies are quickly becoming more widespread, at least in China, India,
and most Western countries. The right policy interventions in wind, solar, and nuclear
power, among other technologies, could soon make countries’ power grids far less
dependent on conventional fossil fuels and radically reduce emissions in the process.
Technological progress in clean electricity has already set off a virtuous circle, with each new
innovation creating more political will to do even more. Replicating this symbiosis of
technology and politics in other sectors is essential. In most other high-emission industries,
however, deep decarbonization has been much slower to arrive. In sectors such
as transportation, steel, cement, and plastics, companies will continue to resist profound
change unless they are convinced that decarbonization represents not only costs and risks for
investors but also an opportunity to increase value and revenue. Only a handful have grasped
the need for action and begun to test zero-emission technologies at the appropriate scale.
Unless governments and businesses come together now to change that—not simply with
bold-sounding international agreements and marginal tweaks such as mild carbon taxes but
also with a comprehensive industrial policy—there will be little hope of reaching net-zero
emissions before it’s too late.
THE FUTURE IS ELECTRIC
From today’s vantage point, no single domain offers greater opportunities for deep
decarbonization than electric power. The use of electricity does not increase or reduce
emissions in itself; electricity delivers energy that may or may not be clean depending on how
it was generated. An electric car, for instance, doesn’t do much good against global warming
if all the electricity comes from conventional coal plants. Still, electrifying the economy—in
other words, designing more processes to run on electricity rather than the direct combustion
of fuels—is essential. This is because, compared with trying to reduce emissions in millions of
places where they might occur, it is far easier and more efficient to reduce emissions at a
modest number of power plants before distributing the clean electricity by wire. Today,
Western economies convert about 30 percent of their energy into electric power. If they want
to get serious about decarbonization, that fraction will need to double or more.
No single domain offers greater opportunities for decarbonization than electric power.
Getting there will require progress on two fronts. The first is the electrification of tasks that
use vast amounts of energy but still rely on fossil fuels, such as transportation and heating.
Overall, transportation accounts for 27 percent of global energy use, and nearly all of it relies
on oil. The car industry has had some success in changing this: the latest electric vehicles
rival high-end conventional cars in performance and cost, and electric cars now make up
http://www.energy-transitions.org/mission-possible
http://deepdecarbonization.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/09/US_DDPP_Report_Final
https://www.evolved.energy/post/2019/05/08/350-ppm-pathways-for-the-united-states
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around eight percent of new sales in California (although only 1.3 percent nationwide) and
nearly 56 percent in Norway, where the government offers massive subsidies to buyers.
With improved batteries, heavier-duty vehicles, including buses and trucks, could soon
follow. In fact, China already fields a fleet of over 420,000 electric buses. By contrast,
aviation—which makes up only two percent of global emissions but is growing rapidly and
creates condensation trails in the sky that double its warming effect—presents a tougher
challenge. A modern battery can store only two percent of the energy contained in a
comparable weight of jet fuel, meaning that any electric airplane would need to carry an
extremely heavy load in batteries to travel any reasonable distance. Even in the best-case
scenario, commercial electric aviation at significant scale is likely decades away, at least for
long-haul flights. Long-distance shipping also faces challenges so daunting that
electrification is unlikely to be the best route. And in each of these areas, electrification is all
the more difficult because it requires not only changing the conveyances but also building
new charging infrastructures.
Besides transportation, the most important electrification frontier is heating—not just in
buildings but as part of industrial production, too. All told, heating consumes about half the
raw energy that people and firms around the world use. Of that fraction, some 50 percent
goes into industrial processes that require very high temperatures, such as the production of
cement and steel and the refining of oil (including for plastics). These sectors will continue to
rely on on-site fossil fuel combustion for the foreseeable future, since electricity cannot
match the temperature and flexibility of direct fuel combustion. Yet in other areas, such as
lower-temperature industrial processes and space heating for buildings, electrification is
more practical. Heat pumps are a case in point: whereas conventional heaters work by
heating up indoor air, heat pumps act like reversible air conditioners, moving heat (or, if
necessary, cold) indoors or outdoors—a far more efficient approach.
Electrification, of course, will not on its own reduce emissions by much unless the power grid
that generates and distributes the electricity gets cleaner, too. Ironically, some countries have
made modest progress on this front even as they have doubled down on fossil fuels. China,
for instance, has swapped out aging coal plants with newer, more efficient ones, cutting
emission rates in the process. (The country’s most efficient coal plants now emit less
carbon dioxide per unit of electricity than comparable U.S. plants.) The United States, for its
part, has cut down on its emissions thanks to innovations in horizontal drilling and fracking
that have made it economically viable to extract shale gas. In 2005, when this technology first
became commercially relevant, coal accounted for half of all the electricity produced in the
United States; today, coal’s share is down to one-quarter, with much cleaner and inexpensive
natural gas and renewables making up the difference.
https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2019-05-15/in-shift-to-electric-bus-it-s-china-ahead-of-u-s-421-000-to-300
https://www.iea.org/reports/renewables-2019/heat
https://www.eia.gov/todayinenergy/detail.php?id=42755
https://www.eia.gov/environment/emissions/carbon/
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A blast furnace at a steel factory in Duisburg, Germany, January 2020
Wolfgang Rattay / Reuters
In theory, fossil fuels could still become much cleaner, even nearly emission free. This could
be possible with the help of so-called carbon capture and storage (CCS) technologies, which
capture the carbon dioxide emissions created by industrial processes and pump it safely
underground. In practice, investors have remained wary of this approach, but in both the
United States and some European countries, recently introduced subsidies are expected to
unleash a wave of new CCS projects in the years ahead. One CCS scheme, currently being
tested by a group of engineering and energy firms, completely rethinks the design of power
plants, efficiently generating electricity from natural gas while capturing nearly all the carbon
dioxide produced in the process at little extra cost. In regions where natural gas is cheap and
abundant, this technology could be a game changer.
For now, improved fossil fuel technology has amounted to shallow decarbonization: it has
reduced emissions enough to slow the rate of climate change—in the United States, emissions
from the power sector have dropped by 29 percent since 2005 thanks mainly to the shale gas
revolution and growth of renewables—but not enough to stop it. To prevent the world from
warming further will require much more focus on technologies that have essentially zero
emissions, such as wind, solar, hydroelectric, and nuclear power, in addition to CCS, if it
proves commercially scalable. According to the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change, these low-carbon technologies would need to generate 80 percent of the
world’s electricity by 2050 (up from about one-third today) in order to limit warming to two
degrees Celsius above preindustrial levels.
https://www.iea.org/fuels-and-technologies/renewables
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Renewables, in particular, will play a central role. Thanks to decreases in the cost of wind and
solar power equipment—and thanks to a mature hydroelectric power industry—renewable
energy already accounts for over one-quarter of global electricity production. (Nuclear
provides another ten percent.) In the United States, the cost of electricity from large solar
farms has tumbled by 90 percent since 2009, and wind energy prices have fallen by nearly 70
percent—and both continue to drop.
Given those plunging costs, the main challenge is no longer to make renewables cheap; it is
to integrate them into the power grid without disruptions. To avoid blackouts, a power grid
must align supply and demand at all times. Energy output from wind and solar plants,
however, varies with the weather, the season, and the daily rise of the sun. The more a power
grid relies on renewables, then, the more often the supply will not match the demand. In the
extreme, extra power must be dumped—meaning that valuable capital and land were used
inefficiently. To be less vulnerable to such shocks, utility companies will need to expand the
size of their power grids, so that each can draw on a larger and more diverse array of energy
sources. In order to deal with excess supply from renewables—a condition that will become
much more frequent as the share of renewables rises—they must also create incentives for
users to vary their demand for power more actively and find ways to store surplus electricity
on a much larger scale. Today, nearly all bulk storage capacity takes the form of hydroelectric
pumps, which store electricity by moving water uphill and recovering about 80 percent of the
power when it flows back down. In the years ahead, soaring demand for electric vehicles will
drive down the cost of lithium-ion batteries; those batteries could become an affordable way
to store energy at the grid level, too. And as the need for storage increases, even cheaper
methods may come on the market.
The main challenge is no longer to make renewables cheap; it is to integrate them into the
power grid without disruptions.
To better integrate renewables, policymakers can also rely on the strategic use of another
zero-emission technology: nuclear energy. Although most efficient when running flat out
24 hours a day, nuclear power plants can also operate flexibly to cover the supply gaps from
wind and solar power. Some of France’s nuclear reactors, for instance, already cycle from
about one-quarter to full power and back again, sometimes twice a day, to compensate for
fluctuations in the supply and demand of renewables.
Independent of renewables, nuclear power already contributes massively to cleaner grids.
Every year, some 440 operational nuclear reactors account for lower global carbon dioxide
emissions of an estimated 1.2 billion metric tons. In the United States, research suggests that
keeping most existing nuclear plants open would be far less expensive than many other policy
options. In fact, most countries would do well to expand their nuclear power even further to
cut back on their emissions. In the West, however, major expansions are not on the
horizon: public opposition is strong, and the cost of building new reactors is high, in
part because countries have built too few reactors to benefit from the savings that come with
repetition and standardization. Yet in other parts of the world—especially China and South
https://www.lazard.com/media/451086/lazards-levelized-cost-of-energy-version-130-vf
https://www.vox.com/2015/6/19/8808545/wind-solar-grid-integration
https://www.sdcwa.org/sites/default/files/White%20Paper%20-%20Pumped%20Energy%20Storage%20V.16
https://world-nuclear.org/information-library/facts-and-figures/world-nuclear-power-reactors-and-uranium-requireme.aspx
https://www.carbonbrief.org/mapped-the-us-nuclear-power-plants-at-risk-of-shutting-down
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Korea, which have more active nuclear power programs—the costs are much lower and public
opposition is less pronounced. Moreover, whereas countries once designed and built their
own reactors, today many simply import them. That model can create new risks—the sector’s
leading exporter today is Russia, a country not renowned for its diligence regarding reactor
safety or the security of nuclear materials—but it also has the potential to make commercial
nuclear technology available to many countries that could not develop and deploy it safely on
their own. Abu Dhabi’s purchase of four gigantic South Korean–built reactors, the first of
which is set to start operating next year, shows the promise of this model. The same approach
could work for other countries that currently satisfy their large energy needs with fossil fuels,
such as Saudi Arabia.
When it comes to the precise technological makeup of a future decarbonized economy, expert
opinions diverge. Engineers and economists, for the most part, imagine solutions that bundle
several approaches, with both CCS and nuclear power acting as important complements to
renewables. Political scientists, on the other hand, tend to see a bigger role for renewables—
one of the few areas in energy policy that usually garners support from across the ideological
spectrum, including in the United States. Yet even this rather popular solution can prove
divisive. Fierce debates rage over where to locate generators such as wind turbines, including
among putative environmentalists who support the technology only if they don’t have to look
at it. Public opposition to new wind turbines in Norway—even in already industrialized areas
—and to offshore wind parks in the eastern United States are harbingers of tough siting fights
to come. The same issue arises when it comes to power lines: making the most of
renewables requires longer, more numerous power lines that can move renewable
power wherever it will be needed, but public opposition can make such grid expansions a
bureaucratic nightmare. In California, for example, the most recent big power line designed
to move renewable power where it will be useful—in that case, from the sunny desert to San
Diego—took a decade to build, even though the technical engineering and construction
portion of the project should have consumed no more than two years. China, by contrast, has
blown past the efforts of the United States and Europe, with dozens of ultrahigh-
voltage lines, most of them built in the last decade, crisscrossing the country.
THE GREAT UNKNOWNS
Political obstacles notwithstanding, expanding the electrification of transportation and heat
and the production of low-carbon electricity offers the surest path to a clean economy to date.
The latest analysis by the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, for instance, suggests
that more pervasive use of clean electricity in the global economy would cover more than half
the cuts needed for deep decarbonization. Yet just how big a role electrification will
ultimately play is hard to predict—in part because its impact will depend on the future
trajectory of rival solutions that are only just beginning to emerge and whose potential is
impossible to assess precisely.
https://www.enec.gov.ae/barakah-plant/
https://www.ipcc.ch/site/assets/uploads/2018/02/ipcc_wg3_ar5_chapter6
https://www.technologyreview.com/2018/11/08/138280/chinas-giant-transmission-grid-could-be-the-key-to-cutting-climate-emissions/
https://www.ipcc.ch/site/assets/uploads/2018/02/SYR_AR5_FINAL_full
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Hydrogen, in particular, could serve much the same function as electricity does now in
carrying energy from producers to users—and it offers crucial advantages. It is easier to store,
making it ideal for power systems dependent on ever-fluctuatingsupplies of
renewable energy. And it can be burned—without producing any new emissions—to generate
the high levels of heat needed in heavy industry, meaning that it could replace on-site fossil
fuel combustion in sectors that are hard to electrify. Hydrogen (either in its pure form or
mixed with other chemicals) could also serve as liquid fuel to power cars, trucks, ships, and
airplanes. A zero-emission economy could integrate the two carriers—electricity
and hydrogen—using each depending on its suitability for different sectors.
The technology needed to turn hydrogen into an energy carrier already exists in principle.
One option is to break up (or electrolyze) water into its constituent elements, hydrogen and
oxygen. The hydrogen could then be stored or transported through the natural gas pipeline
networks that already string across all advanced economies. Once it reached its user, it would
be burned for heat or used as an input for a variety of chemical processes. So far, this
approach is too expensive to be viable on a large scale, but growing investment, especially in
Europe, is poised to drive down the cost rapidly. Initial tests, including planned networks of
hydrogen pipelines outside Stockholm (for making steel), Port Arthur in Texas (for industrial
chemistry), the British city of Leeds (for residential heat), and the Teesside area (for several
applications, including power generation) and numerous other ventures, will soon yield more
insights into how a real-world hydrogen economy would fare.
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Pipelines at an oil and gas refinery in Hungary, October 2013
Laszlo Balogh / Reuters
CCS is somewhat of a wildcard, too. Some industrial processes produce prodigious and highly
concentrated streams of carbon dioxide emissions that should be relatively easy to isolate
and capture. The production of cement, which accounts for a whopping four percent of global
carbon dioxide emissions, is a good example. But firms operating in global commodity
markets, where missteps can be economically disastrous, are hesitant to invest in fledgling
systems such as CCS. To change that, state-supported real-world testing is overdue. A
nascent Norwegian project to collect carbon dioxide from various industrial sources in
several northern European countries and inject it underground may provide some answers.
Another promising area for reducing emissions is agriculture, a field in which advances on
the horizon could yield large cuts. More precise control over the diets of animals raised for
food—which will probably require more industrial farming and less free grazing—could
lead cows, sheep, and other livestock to emit less methane, a warming gas that, pound for
pound, is 34 to 86 times as bad as carbon dioxide. (It would also help if people ate less
meat.) Meanwhile, a host of changes in crop cultivation—such as altering when rice fields are
flooded to strategically determining which engineered crops should be used—could
also lower emissions.
https://thehill.com/opinion/energy-environment/476783-us-leads-new-wave-of-carbon-capture-and-storage-deployment
http://www.climatechange2013.org/images/report/WG1AR5_Chapter08_FINAL
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Agriculture’s biggest potential contribution, however, lies belowground. Plants that engage in
photosynthesis use carbon dioxide from the air to grow. The mass cultivation of crops that
are specially bred to grow larger roots—a concept being tested on a small scale right now—
along with farming methods that avoid tilling the soil, could store huge amounts of carbon
dioxide as underground biomass for several decades or longer.
As the hard reality of climate change has set in, some have begun to dream of technologies
that could reverse past emissions, such as “direct air capture” machines, which would pull
carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and store it underground. Pilot projects suggest that
these options are very costly—in part because it is thermodynamically difficult to take a dilute
gas from the atmosphere and compress it into the high concentrations needed for
underground storage. But cost reductions are likely, and the more dire the climate crisis
becomes, the more such emergency options must be taken seriously.
GETTING TO ZERO
The ramifications of climate change are proving more disastrous than originally thought, just
as politicians are realizing that cutting emissions is harder than anticipated. That leaves a
large and growing gap between climate goals, such as the Paris agreement’s target of
limiting warming to 1.5–2.0 degrees Celsius above preindustrial levels, and the facts on the
ground. The world has already warmed by about 1.1 degrees, and at least another half a
degree is probably inevitable, given the downstream effects of today’s emissions, the inertia
of the climate system, and the inherent difficulty of reshaping industrial infrastructure.
The defining industrial project of this century will be to leave carbon behind.
To close the gap between aspirations and reality, governments need to grasp that they cannot
rely solely on hard-to-enforce international agreements and seductive market-based
approaches, such as carbon pricing, that will work only at the margins. The world needs new
technology, and that means more R & D—much more—and a lot of practical experience in
testing and deploying new technologies and business strategies at scale. To stimulate that
progress, governments need to embrace what is often called “industrial policy.” In each
major emitting sector, authorities should create public-private partnerships to invest in, test,
and deploy possible solutions.
The details will vary by sector, but the common thread is that governments must directly
support fledgling technologies. That means tax credits, direct grants, and promises to
procure pioneering green products even if they are more expensive than their conventional
alternatives. These steps will ensure that new low-emission products in sectors such as
cement, steel, electricity, plastics, and zero-carbon liquid fuels can find lucrative markets.
The need for such government intervention is hard to overstate. Producing steel without
emissions, for example, could initially be twice as expensive as producing it in the traditional
https://www.nationalacademies.org/our-work/developing-a-research-agenda-for-carbon-dioxide-removal-and-reliable-sequestration
https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-018-07586-5
http://www.energy-transitions.org/content/accelerating-low-carbon-transition
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way—a penalty that no company operating in a global, competitive commodity market will
accept unless it has direct support in developing the necessary technology, reliable markets
through government procurement, and trade protections against dirtier competitors.
For now, no major government is taking these steps at a reasonable scale. The much-touted
Green New Deal in the United States is still weak on specifics, and the more concrete it
becomes, the harder it may be to form a supportive political coalition around it. Its
counterpart, the European Green Deal, is further along yet also faces political challenges and
administrative hurdles. If these schemes focus on making critical industries carbon free and
provide lots of room for experimentation and learning, they could prove effectual. If they
become “Christmas-tree proposals,” with ornaments for every industrial and social cause
imaginable, then they may collapse under the weight of their cost and poor focus.
U.S. Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY) and Senator Ed Markey (D-MA) at a news
conference for their proposed Green New Deal in Washington, February 2019
Jonathan Ernst / Reuters
A bigger supply of new fundamental ideas for decarbonization is essential. On the first day of
the 2015 Paris climate conference, a group of 24 governments, along with the eu and the
billionaire philanthropist Bill Gates, pledged to double their spending on clean energy R &
D. So far, the group’s self-reported data show that it is at 55 percent of its goal; independent
and more credible assessments suggest that the actual increase is only half of that.
Mission Innovation, as the collective is known, has also set up working groups on solutions
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such as CCS and hydrogen, but those groups have little capacity to develop and implement a
collective research agenda. What is needed instead are smaller, more focused groups of high-
powered backers. Powerful governments have a part to play, but not an exclusive one,
considering that some (such as the United States today) are unreliable and therefore less
important than subnational actors, such as California, or even wealthy philanthropists.
Initiatives such as Mission Innovation are essential because markets for clean technology are
global. Three decades ago, when diplomatic efforts to combat climate change began,
most innovation in heavy industry, including in the energy sector, came from a small number
of Western countries. No longer. When it comes to electric buses and scooters, China is king,
with India taking some baby steps. For electric cars, U.S., Japanese, and European
manufacturers are in the lead technologically, but Chinese firms have larger volumes of sales.
Innovation in ultrahigh-voltage power lines is coming particularly from engineering firms
based in Europe and Asia. The explosion in China of low-cost production of solar
photovoltaics was initially geared to supply the highly subsidized German market.
Given this geographic breadth, nationalist trade policies that limit cross-border exchange and
investment could easily gum up the works. In particular, the United States should reform its
approach to foreign investment in sensitive technologies. Instead of the current review policy
—an opaque process managed by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States
—regulators should follow the “small yard, high fence” rule proposed by former U.S. Defense
Secretary Robert Gates: identify a short list of technologies that are truly sensitive and
protect the United States’ advantage in those areas while opening the doors to the power of
globalization for all others.
THE LONG HAUL
The great technological transformation of the nineteenth century was to harness the power of
fossil fuels for industrial growth. The twentieth century rode the wave of innovation that
followed and, inadvertently, put the planet on track for massive warming. The defining
industrial project of this century will be to leave carbon behind. As governments and firms
embark on this enterprise, they should prepare for the long haul. It took cars some 30 years,
starting in 1900, to completely replace horses on American roadways—and horses and cars
could use the same roads. History has shown that transformations affecting entire
infrastructures, as are needed today, take even longer.
Even immediate investment by a cluster of motivated countries, organizations, and
billionaires, in other words, cannot transform the industrial system overnight. Yelling louder
will not change that. Setting bold goals can help, but new technological facts on the ground—
sped along by active industrial policy and international cooperation—are what will transform
the politics and make deep decarbonization a reality. Change will be slower than advocates
and scientists would like. But it will accelerate if the leaders most willing to act on climate
change stop moralizing and start seeing deep decarbonization as a matter of industrial
engineering.
https://www.ipcc.ch/site/assets/uploads/2018/02/SYR_AR5_FINAL_full
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0301421598000676
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May18, 2020
How the Private Sector Can Combat Climate Change
foreignaffairs.com/articles/world/2020-04-13/unlikely-environmentalists
There’s a reason climate change is often described as a “wicked problem.” Fully
decarbonizing the economy will require not only completely transforming the global energy
infrastructure, at a cost of many trillions of dollars, but also retrofitting all of the world’s
buildings, remaking the planet’s agricultural practices, and revolutionizing transportation
systems. It is difficult to see how this can be accomplished without some kind of global
carbon tax or regulatory regime. But putting such a system in place is proving to be
enormously difficult. The 2015 Paris agreement on climate change was a good first step, but
many countries show little sign of meeting the commitments they made as part of that
agreement, and the United States’ withdrawal from the process has presented a significant
barrier to further progress. Given the slowing global economy and the slide toward populism
and nationalism in much of the world, the prospects for any kind of comprehensive global
accord seem increasingly remote. So far, at least, the public sector is failing to confront the
problem.
BlackRock CEO Larry Fink, center, with French President Emmanuel Macron, right, in Paris, July 2019
Michel Euler / AP
https://www.foreignaffairs.com/articles/world/2020-04-13/unlikely-environmentalists
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But the private sector has begun to step in to fill the vacuum. In January, Larry Fink, the
CEO of BlackRock, the largest asset manager in the world, declared that “climate risk is
investment risk” and announced that going forward BlackRock would ask every firm in its
portfolio to disclose its carbon emissions. BlackRock has roughly $7 trillion under
management and is one of the largest shareholders in nearly every publicly traded firm in the
world. So companies around the world paid attention when Fink went on to say that
BlackRock would consider voting against boards whose firms “do not make sufficient
progress” in addressing climate-related risks and would cease to invest altogether in some
fossil fuel projects.
Fink is not alone. Many of the world’s largest asset owners are coming to the conclusion that
climate change is the most important risk to the long-term health of their portfolios. More
than a third of global invested capital—about $19 trillion—is controlled by the world’s 100
largest asset owners. Nearly two-thirds of this money is in pension funds; the remaining
third is in sovereign wealth funds. These funds are now so large that they are sometimes
referred to as “universal owners” or “universal investors” since, in effect, they hold the entire
market. For that reason, they cannot diversify away from the risk of climate change—a risk
that Mark Carney, who until earlier this year was the governor of the Bank of England,
suggested could result in an abrupt financial collapse, potentially wiping out as much as $20
trillion of assets. To avert that kind of calamity, major asset owners are starting to push the
companies in their portfolios to address climate change.
For the world’s largest asset owners, climate change is not an externality—it is a profound
threat.
This trend is not driven by altruism or a deep commitment to the environment: it’s a function
of economic interests. For the world’s largest asset owners, climate change is not an
externality—it is a profound threat to their long-term returns. It will, after all, be significantly
harder to make money in a world where most of the major ports are underwater, harvests are
failing on a routine basis, and hundreds of millions of people are on the move.
As more and more major asset owners come to this realization, it is creating increasingly
strong incentives for them to cooperate with one another in support of large-scale
decarbonization. Together, they are pressing the firms in their portfolios to set concrete
targets for emission reductions and to make progress toward meeting those targets,
potentially solving the problem posed by firms’ unwillingness to cut their emissions unless
they can be assured that their competitors will follow suit. Someone, however, will need to
monitor that progress and sanction firms that lag behind—a role that would be best filled by
government regulators. The need for such public-sector involvement will likely increase
private-sector support for the policy changes required to drastically reduce carbon emissions.
In this way, private-sector pressure may serve as the force that finally breaks the political
logjam that has long blocked the public action needed to solve the climate crisis.
MONEY TALKS
https://www.blackrock.com/corporate/investor-relations/larry-fink-ceo-letter
https://www.newyorker.com/news/daily-comment/citing-climate-change-blackrock-will-start-moving-away-from-fossil-fuels
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One of the most promising examples of what this might look like in practice is Climate Action
100+, a nonprofit affiliation of more than 300 investors who collectively control nearly half
of the world’s invested capital. The group was founded in 2017 with the goal of persuading
the world’s 100 largest private-sector carbon emitters to “cut the financial risk associated
with catastrophe” by putting in place board-level processes to assess their climate-related
risks and oversee plans for dealing with them, pledging to clearly disclose those risks, and
taking action to reduce greenhouse gas emissions across their value chains rapidly enough to
help meet the Paris agreement’s goal of limiting the increase in the global average
temperature to well below two degrees Celsius.
In December 2018, a group of investors belonging to Climate Action 100+ published a letter
in the Financial Times listing some specific steps they were demanding of companies in
which they invest, including “the rapid elimination of coal use by utilities in EU and OECD
[Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development] countries by no later than
2030.” Six months later, investors from the consortium pushed the oil giant Shell to
announce short-term targets for limiting its greenhouse gas emissions and persuaded BP to
support a shareholder resolution that binds the oil company to disclose the carbon intensity
of its products, the methodology it uses to consider the climate impact of new investments,
and its plans for setting and measuring emission targets. More than half of the 40 oil and gas
companies with which the group has engaged have set long-term quantitative targets for
reducing their emissions. And the group has helped persuade the shipping giant Maersk and
two of the world’s largest mining companies, ArcelorMittal and Thyssenkrupp, to commit to
becoming carbon neutral by 2050.
These kinds of commitments are sometimes dismissed as mere greenwashing: public
relations stunts designed to buy time. And sometimes they are. But they might also help
catalyze an economic transformation that could play a major role in arresting climate
change.
Of course, large asset holders are not the only players who shape a company’s incentives:
employees and consumers do, as well, and they are increasingly insisting that firms go green
—and rewarding them when they do. For example, after the consumer goods giant Unilever
announced that it planned to cut its carbon footprint in half and double its revenue at the
same time—and then followed through by transforming its operations, brand by brand—the
firm joined Facebook, Google, and Microsoft on LinkedIn’s list of the ten most desirable
employers in the world. Sales of Unilever’s “sustainable living” brands—which include Ben &
Jerry’s, Dove, and Vaseline and which Unilever claims “contribute to achieving the
company’s ambition of halving its environmental footprint”—are growing 69 percent faster
than the rest of the business and providing 75 percent of the company’s growth.
Shifting public attitudes about climate change and public policies intended to combat it have
also created clear business opportunities. Solar and wind energy are both multibillion-dollar
businesses. The market for plant-based alternatives to meat is exploding. And global
http://www.climateaction100.org/
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recycling could generate close to $400 billion in the next five years.
RISKY BUSINESS
But embracing the innovation that is required to exploit new opportunities is often risky and
expensive. The venture capital industry lost at least $10 billion between 2005 and 2011
investing in clean energy technology. An electric utility that commits to phasing out coal
plants might reap the benefits of declining solar and wind energy costs, but it could also
misjudge the market and significantly increase its costs. An automobile company that invests
in developing electric vehicles might leap ahead of its competitors, but it could also risk
losing out to more cautious rivals.
Universal investors can help mitigate those risks by funneling capital to firms that are willing
to make the first move. This can be transformational in itself, since companies that decide to
embrace new opportunities can often persuade an entire industry to follow them. Walmart’s
massive investments in energy saving and waste reduction, for example, have helped
persuade many other companies to take similar steps. Since 2010, the price of battery storage
has fallen by at least 73 percent, a change driven largely by the electric vehicle company
Tesla’s significant investments in the technology, which spurred the company’s competitors
to invest more than $90 billion in the development of electric vehicles.
Major asset holders can also push companies to commit to aggressive targets for
decarbonizing their business models and insist that they report on their progress. In this way,
universal investors may be able to force every firm in an industry to act, solving the collective
action problem inherent in tackling climate change. Firms don’t naturally act collectively—for
all kinds of reasons, including antitrust law. But when there exists a clear business case for
doing so and cooperation can be credibly enforced, voluntary cooperation can be an effective
means of creating or preserving public goods. Nearly half of the world’s inshore fisheries are
managed through some form of cooperative agreement. Most of the rules governing
international trade are designed and enforced by the International Chamber of Commerce, a
voluntary association founded in 1919.
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Tesla Model X electric cars recharge their batteries in Berlin, Germany, November 2019
Fabrizio Bensch / Reuters
Some of the world’s largest firms are increasingly exploring whether these kinds of voluntary
agreements might be an effective way to reduce emissions. For example, after Unilever came
under pressure from activists to stop using palm oil, the cultivation of which contributes to
deforestation, Paul Polman, who was then the company’s CEO, was able to persuade many of
his fellow consumer goods CEOs that continuing to purchase conventionally produced palm
oil presented a significant threat to their own brands. Partly as a result, more than 60 percent
of the world’s traded palm oil is now covered by sustainability commitments. Similar
agreements with respect to soy and beef have greatly slowed rates of deforestation in the
Amazon River basin. And companies in industries as diverse as airlines, food, retail, apparel,
travel, hospitality, construction, health care, and high technology have begun to coordinate to
reduce carbon emissions across supply chains, so that no single firm is placed at a
disadvantage by going green.
Such arrangements produce a wealth of knowledge about what effective decarbonization
might look like on the ground. As one might expect, however, they are often unstable and
difficult to enforce, since no mechanism exists through which to punish firms that drag their
feet or refuse to conform. Here, universal investors might be able to make a significant
difference by acting as enforcers. If BlackRock, for example, follows through on its threat to
vote against the boards of companies that do not adequately disclose their climate emissions,
every major firm in every industry will be forced to report—in an auditable, replicable way—
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the degree to which it is meeting its commitments. And if the world’s major investors then
vote against the boards of those companies that are falling behind, investors could catalyze
the transformation of entire industries.
THE EARTH LOBBY
Arresting climate change will still require government action, of course, and the changes
afoot in finance and the corporate world could ease the path. As firms commit to reducing
their carbon emissions, they are increasingly recognizing that the most effective way to
ensure that they are not undercut by lagging companies is to press for regulation. Together,
they are creating a constituency for effective climate policy.
In 2017, for example, when U.S. President Donald Trump declared that he was going to
withdraw the United States from the Paris agreement, the CEOs of more than 50 U.S.
companies, including Apple, Gap, Google, HP, and Levi Strauss, published an open letter
urging him to rethink the decision. When Trump stuck to his plan, Elon Musk, the CEO of
Tesla, and Bob Iger, then the CEO of Disney, resigned from some of the president’s advisory
councils in protest. More than 2,000 companies have joined a collaborative effort called “We
Are Still In,” a group working to ensure that the United States meets its commitments under
the agreement despite the administration’s withdrawal. The group includes not only
businesses but also states, cities, religious organizations, and universities. Together, they
represent 68 percent of U.S. GDP, 65 percent of the U.S. population, and the source of more
than half of all U.S. carbon emissions. Such action independent of the federal government
could make a big difference. According to America’s Pledge, a nongovernmental organization
that tracks local progress toward emission reductions, the “full achievement of already on-
the-books policies from state and local actors—paired with rapidly shifting economics in the
power sector—would reduce emissions 19 percent below 2005 levels by 2025 and 25 percent
below 2005 levels by 2030.” This would be a significant step toward the approximately 50
percent reduction in emissions that the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
estimates is necessary to avoid the most dangerous potential outcomes of climate change.
These efforts and others like them also have the potential to change the nature of the political
conversation around climate change. In an increasingly partisan world, firms occupy a
unique position. According to the 2019 Edelman Trust Barometer, an annual survey
measuring credibility and trust, business is now the world’s most trusted institution, and 71
percent of employees around the world agree that “it is critically important” for the CEOs of
their companies “to respond to challenging times.” A broad-based movement among the
world’s biggest companies to tackle climate change could help legitimate the idea that climate
change is a real danger, that acting to avert it could be a major driver of innovation and
economic growth, and that appropriate public policy could be enormously helpful.
Such a movement could also put increasing pressure on companies that resist decarbonizing.
One of the reasons that climate regulation has stalled in the United States is that a small
minority of firms have invested billions of dollars in actively lobbying against it. If their peers
https://www.vice.com/en_us/article/wj3bdy/american-coalition-we-are-still-in-is-resisting-trump-at-cop-24
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start to push for regulation and highlight the dangers inherent in continuing with business as
usual, those laggards will be compelled to change their behavior. One day soon, flooding the
political process with money to defend the burning of fossil fuels could be seen as an
unacceptable reputational risk—or even as morally indefensible.
For many years, experts have assumed that the fastest and most efficient route to global
decarbonization is coordinated state action. But as the world’s political institutions have
come under pressure, such action has become increasingly elusive. Against this background,
the growing understanding that climate change presents a profound threat to the long-term
returns of the world’s largest asset owners provides some reason for hope. As investors push
for change and the realization dawns in more and more boardrooms that the benefits of
climate action will outweigh the costs, it is possible that leading-edge firms could trigger a
cascade of reinforcing reforms, transforming the economics of individual industries and
creating a significant constituency for political action. For decades, when it came to
addressing climate change, large asset holders and big companies acted more as obstacles
than as catalysts. Those days may soon be over.
REBECCA HENDERSON is John and Natty McArthur University Professor at Harvard
University and the author of Reimagining Capitalism in a World on Fire.
MORE BY REBECCA HENDERSON
https://www.foreignaffairs.com/authors/rebecca-henderson
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