How climate change will change business Emma Duncan Poland May 2008.

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Transcript of How climate change will change business Emma Duncan Poland May 2008.

How climate change will change business

Emma Duncan

PolandMay 2008

Positive proof of global warming

Is climate change happening?

• Yes, but very slowly• Global temperatures up by 0.6°C in a century• Arctic temperatures up by 3°C over 20 years• Summer sea ice cover shrinking by 10% a

decade• Increase in serious hurricanes over the North

Atlantic• Thousands of species are moving northwards

—problem for polar bears

Are we sure it’s serious?

• No, we’re sure of very little• Climate is an infinitely complex mechanism

• Some feedback loops (eg, CO2 emissions from warming earth) are understood

• Some (eg, clouds) are not• IPCC estimates of temperature increase by

2100 range from 1.2°C to 5.4°C

Why are we worried?

• Possibly catastrophic outcomes• The modern age is a remarkably mild

period: historically, the climate has been more extreme

• Sea levels have varied by 100m• Greenland and Antarctic ice caps have

frozen and reformed

Should we spend money on this?

• No—future generations will be richer than we are

• Yes—risk of a catastrophe is large enough that we should start trying to avert it now

The insurance principle

• As individuals, we insure our houses to protect our property

• As nations, we pay for armies to protect our countries

• As a world, we need to invest to protect our climate

Action is being taken

• In Europe, at national level and in Brussels

• In America at state level, and soon at federal level

• In emerging markets not at all, but the pressure is on

Will it stop climate change from happening?

Certainly not, unless more countries do a great deal more

Will it affect business?

Yes

Global warming will change business

• By changing the climate

• By changing the market

• By changing regulation

The changing climate

• Good for oil and gas in the Arctic (reckoned to be the source of 20% of the world’s undiscovered energy reserves)

• Bad for investments on the Florida coastline

The changing market

• Are consumer attitudes shifting?

• Are they shifting corporate attitudes?

Consumers

• Are they ethical?

• Or are they hypocritical?

Not many carbon offsets

• Expedia: 57,000 carbon offsets over 18 months

• British Airways: fewer than 1% of passengers buy carbon offsets

Even if customers can save money by buying green, they don’t always do so

Low-energy lightbulbs:

• Save around $50 in electricity bills over their lifetime

• Invented 25 years ago

• Only just getting off the ground

What’s going to happen to attitudes?

• Maybe carbon becomes morally and socially unacceptable

• Are you racist?

• Are you homophobic?

• Do you boil the planet by buying dirty?

Corporate customers

Big change over the past four years

• 2004: executives were prepared to doubt the value of trying to mitigate climate change

• 2008: uniformly, publicly convinced of the need to take action

Why?

• Genuine concern

• Hurricane Katrina

• Responsibility beyond shareholder returns

• Politics

American corporations

• Federal emission-control system better than a state-level patchwork

• Better to be at the table than on the menu

To be at the table you need to be seen to be green

• To be seen to be green you have to do something

• Hence the move to carbon neutrality

Carbon neutrality means you don’t add to the carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. So when you emit a tonne of carbon, you have to buy a tonne of carbon offsets

As a result:• Carbon has a price• Price gets fed into tenders• Greener suppliers favoured over carbon-

intensive ones

HSBC

• World’s biggest bank

• 312,000 employees

• Committed to carbon neutrality

• Uses shadow carbon price

Will corporations continue to move in this direction?

• High-profile commitments hard to reverse

• Recession could change that

• But politicians will force them to keep getting greener

Climate change is the most difficult policy problem politicians have ever had to deal with

• Uncertain

• Transgenerational

• Global

It’s happening

• All rich countries regulate to limit power and gasoline consumption

• Regulations are being tightened

• Even Bush has proposed to cap US greenhouse gas emissions by 2025

Europe’s tools for dealing with climate change

• Product standards

• Renewables targets

• Cap and trade

Commission has used standards to squeeze carmakers

• Voluntary ones ignored

• Mandatory ones introduced

• French and Italians shrug; Germans explode

Renewables targets

• 20% renewables by 2020

• 10% biofuels by 2020

Biofuels illustrate the consequences of mixing motivations

• Environment

• Energy security

• Pandering to the farm lobby

Biofuels illustrate the consequences of governments picking technologies

• Carbon price avoids that problem: the market does the picking

How a cap-and-trade system works

• To emit carbon you need a permit

• Price is determined by number of permits issued and demand for them

• Permit price is carbon price

Generating electricity with coal...

• is cheap

• is dirty

• requires lots of permits

How it works in Europe

• Covers 5 dirty industries (electricity, paper, metals, oil, building materials)

• Monitors GHG emissions from 11,000 plants

• Firms tell national governments how many permits they think they need

• National governments tell Brussels how many permits they think they need

• Brussels tells them they are greedy and rejects the bid

• National governments sue Brussels

To keep within their limits, firms can

• Cut power consumption

• Cut carbon emissions

• Buy new permits from each other or developing countries

Market has gone from zero to $64 billion in three years

• Of which $72m is Chicago Climate Exchange

• Almost all the rest is generated by ETS

• Bizarre trade fair in Cologne

How Europe messed up

• Gave out permits free

• Gave out too many permits

Costs?

• Power prices in Europe gone up by maybe 10-15% so far

• Current package, if agreed, will push them up another 10-15%

Opportunities, for investors and others

America is going this way

• Lieberman-Warner bill

• McCain and Obama both committed

How climate change will change business

Emma Duncan

PolandMay 2008