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MAHATMA GANDHI ~ Truth never damages a cause that is just.
Tuesday, 17 March 2015
The argument for divesting from fossil fuels is becoming overwhelming
As progressive institutions, the Gates Foundation and Wellcome Trust
should commit to taking their money out of the companies that are
driving global warming, says the Guardian’s editor-in-chief as he
launches our climate campaign
The world has much more coal, oil and gas in the ground than it can safely burn. That much is physics.
Anyone studying the question with an open mind will almost certainly
come to a similar conclusion: if we and our children are to have a
reasonable chance of living stable and secure lives 30 or so years from
now, according to one recent study 80% of the known coal reserves will have to stay underground, along with half the gas and a third of the oil reserves.
If only science were enough.
If not science, then politics? MPs, presidents, prime ministers and
members of congress are always telling us (often suggesting a surrender
of civil liberties in return) that their first duty is the protection of
the public.
But politics sometimes struggles with physics. Science is, at its
best, long term and gives the best possible projection of future risk.
Which is not always how politics works, even when it comes to our
security. Politicians prefer certainty and find it difficult to make
serious prudent planning on high probabilities.
On climate change, the public clamour is in inverse proportion to the
enormity of the long-term threat. If only it were the other way round.
And so, year after year, the people who represent us around the UN
negotiating tables have moved inches, not miles.
When, as Guardian colleagues, we first started discussing this climate change series,
there were advocates for focusing the main attention on governments.
States own much of the fossil fuels that can never be allowed to be dug
up. Only states, it was argued, can forge the treaties that count. In
the end the politicians will have to save us through regulation – either
by limiting the amount of stuff that is extracted, or else by taxing,
pricing and limiting the carbon that’s burned.
If journalism has so far failed to animate the public
to exert sufficient pressure on politics through reporting and
analysis, it seemed doubtful whether many people would be motivated by
the idea of campaigning for a paragraph to be inserted into the negotiating text
at the UN climate talks in Paris this December. So we turned to an area
where campaigners have recently begun to have marked successes: divestment.
There are two arguments in favour of moving money out of the biggest
and most aggressive fossil fuel companies – one moral, the other
financial.
The moral crusaders – among them Archbishop Desmond Tutu
– see divestment from fossil fuels in much the same light as earlier
campaigners saw the push to pull money out of tobacco, arms, apartheid
South Africa – or even slavery. Most fossil fuel companies, they argue,
have little concern for future generations. Of course, the companies are
run by sentient men and women with children and grandchildren of their
own. But the market pressures and fiduciary duties involved in running
public companies compel behaviour that is overwhelmingly driven by
short-term returns.
So – the argument goes – the directors will meanwhile carry on
business as usual, no matter how incredible it may seem that they will
be allowed to dig up all the climate-warming assets they own. And, by
and large – and discounting recent drops in the price of oil – they
continue to be reasonably good short-term businesses, benefiting from enormous subsidies as they search for even more reserves that can never be used.
The pragmatists argue the case on different grounds. It is simply
this: that finance will eventually have to surrender to physics.
If – eventually – the companies cannot, for the sake of the human
race, be allowed to extract a great many of the assets they own, then
many of those assets will in time become valueless. So people with other
kinds of fiduciary duty – people, say, managing endowments, pension
funds and investment portfolios – will want to get their money out of
these companies before the bubble bursts.
Of course, the financial risk comes not simply from the threat of
regulation, but could also be hastened by the march of alternative clean
energy. Global investment in clean energy jumped 16% in 2014 to £205bn, but because of the rapid drop in the price of that energy (the cost of solar has dropped by two-thirds in 6 years), the money invested last year bought almost double the amount of electricity capacity as in 2011.
So there’s a risk calculation to be done by anyone invested in fossil
fuels – which, one way or another, is probably most of us. Get out too
early and you might forgo the reasonable returns based on current
performance and the book value of the assets that are notionally
exploitable.
But what of the risk of being a late exiter? Do you wait and judge
when the politicians could finally summon the will to start making
regulatory and market interventions … and then get out? And at the same
time as everyone else is trying to do the same?
This is why the divestment movement
has changed from being a fringe campaign to something every responsible
fund manager can no longer ignore. How could they, when even the
governor of the Bank of England, Mark Carney, has warned that the “vast majority of reserves are unburnable” and the bank itself is conducting an inquiry into the risk that inflated fossil fuel assets pose to the stability of the financial system?
When the president of the World Bank, Jim Yong Kim, urges:
“Be the first mover. Use smart due diligence. Rethink what fiduciary
responsibility means in this changing world. It’s simple self-interest.
Every company, investor and bank that screens new and existing
investments for climate risk is simply being pragmatic”?
When the Bank of England’s deputy head of supervision for banks and insurance companies, Paul Fisher, warns, as he did this month:
“As the world increasingly limits carbon emissions, and moves to
alternative energy sources, investments in fossil fuels – a growing
financial market in recent decades – may take a huge hit”?
Or listen to Hank Paulson,
no bleeding liberal, but secretary of the Treasury under Bush and
former CEO of Goldman Sachs: “Each of us must recognise that the risks
are personal. We’ve seen and felt the costs of underestimating the
financial bubble. Let’s not ignore the climate bubble.” President Obama puts it most pithily: “We’re not going to be able to burn it all.”
So the argument for a campaign to divest from the world’s most
polluting companies is becoming an overwhelming one, on both moral and
pragmatic grounds. But the divestment movement is sometimes misunderstood.
The intention is not to bankrupt the companies, nor to promote
overnight withdrawal from fossil fuels – that would not be possible or
desirable.
Divestment serves to delegitimise the business models of companies
that are using investors’ money to search for yet more coal, oil and gas
that can’t safely be burned. It is a small but crucial step in the
economic transition away from a global economy run on fossil fuels.
The usual rule of newspaper campaigns is that you don’t start one
unless you know you’re going to win it. This one will almost certainly
be won in time: the physics is unarguable. But we are launching our
campaign today in the firm belief that it will force the issue now into
the boardrooms and inboxes of people who have billions of dollars at
their disposal.
It’s clear, from our researches over the past few weeks, that many
company directors and fund managers have had a nagging feeling that this
is something coming up the agenda that – one day – they will have to
think about. As the Guardian’s campaign mounts, we hope they will
appreciate that there is some urgency about the choices they make.
Who will take the lead? Some huge endowments and investment funds
have already announced that they will be decarbonising their portfolios,
exiting fossil fuels altogether and/or investing in cleaner
alternatives.
They include the Rockefeller Brothers Fund; Stanford, Glasgow and Australian National Universities; the British Medical Association; Norway’s Government Pension Fund Global, which has sold off 32 coal companies on climate and environmental grounds; AP4, the giant Swedish pension fund; and many other faith groups, local councils and asset managers. The World Council of Churches has committed not to invest.
Our own campaign will give readers the information they need to make
their own investment decisions and to apply pressure on the workplaces,
unions, schools, colleges, churches, NGOs, pension advisers and
charities in their lives. But we also want to try to change minds at one
or two institutions that have demonstrated inspiring thought leadership
in other spheres of life.
Professor Jeremy Farrar, director of the Wellcome Trust. Photograph: James Drew Turner/Guardian
The Wellcome Trust
handles a portfolio of more than £18bn and invests around £700m a year
in science, the humanities, social science education and medical
research. The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation has an endowment of $43.5bn. Last year it gave away $3.9bn in grants towards health and sustainable development.
In 2014 the Wellcome Trust had £564m invested in Shell, BP,
Schlumberger, Rio Tinto and BHP Billiton alone. The Gates Foundation has
a financial stake of over $1bn in fossil fuel companies.
By most standards, these are huge sums of money, helping to fund the
extraction of unusable oil gas and coal on a massive scale. But, as a
proportion of the foundations’ own endowments, they are relatively small
– just a few percent for the fossil fuel investments we know about. So
they could, we think, be divested without damaging overall returns.
Indeed, we think they could achieve higher and, over time, safer returns
by putting their money into other investments with real opportunities
for growth in a world tackling climate change
Because both foundations are a) so progressive in their aims and
actions and b) have human health and science at the heart of everything
they do, we hope they, of all institutions, will see the force of the
call for them to move their money out of a sector whose actions, if
unchecked, could cause the most devastating harm to the health of
billions. A landmark report by the Lancet and University College London concluded in 2009: “Climate change is the biggest global health threat of the 21st century.”
The ask of them is, we think, both modest and simple. We understand
that fund managers do not like to make sudden changes to their
portfolios. So we ask that the Gates Foundation and Wellcome Trust
commit now to divesting from the top 200 fossil fuel companies within five years. And that they immediately freeze any new investment in the same companies.
We will, of course, suggest that the Guardian Media Group does the
same, and keeps you informed about its own deliberations and decisions.
Please sign, retweet and generally spread news about the petition. In
everything we say to these foundations, we will emphasise that we come
in admiration for what they have done, and continue to do for human
health and wellbeing. They aren’t the “bad guys”. But they could
certainly show themselves to be the good guys in this matter of life and
death.
One final thing. This campaign is going to be backed up by much
reporting and analysis. We would be very pleased to hear from anyone
working in the fossil fuel industries at a senior level, either
currently or recently. We are interested, for instance, to learn about
internal discussions and papers about the state of knowledge and debate
about the environmental harm caused by the extractive industries. You
can email me confidentially at alan.rusbridger@theguardian.com; see my PGP key on @arusbridger
on Twitter; or use the Guardian’s encrypted securedrop platform, which
enables anyone to send us documents without being traced.
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