September 9, 2020

Finance Experts Are Ringing the Alarm About Climate Change

Mindy Lubber, CEO and president of Ceres, perhaps the leading corporate sustainability non-profit focused on building business support for acting on climate, announced the issuance of a major report on climate risk by a U.S. financial regulatory agency, recommending that financial regulators act swiftly to address climate change as a systematic financial risk.

The report, "Managing Climate Risk in the U.S. Financial System," was produced by the Climate-Related Market Risk Subcommittee of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. It issues specific recommendations for action, including putting a price on carbon, strengthening climate risk disclosure and conducting stress tests to see how financial institutions like banks might fare in a carbon constrained, rapidly warming world.

This report doesn't stand alone but joins those issued by Lubber's Ceres Accelerator for Sustainable Capital Markets, outlining the systemic threat climate change poses to capital markets, along with more than 50 recommendations financial regulators should take to combat this threat.

In August, Sen. Elizabeth Warren and colleagues in the Senate issued a major climate report, with significant emphasis on the role financial regulators must play in avoiding severe climate risks to the U.S. economy. They, too, called for mandatory climate risk disclosure, stress tests for banks and cooperation from U.S. financial regulators with their global counterparts who are already engaging on climate change.

Read more at Barron's: "Finance Experts Are Ringing the Alarm About Climate Change. Will Regulators Listen?"

August 8, 2020

Climate Action 100+ deploys asset managers of $40 trillion to pressure corporate action on climate

Climate Action 100+ (CA100+), the largest asset manager activist alliance, with more than 450 investor members which collectively manage $40 trillion in assets, has secured climate action commitments from 70% of the 161 targeted companies, which account for the vast majority of CO2e emissions, since the group was organized 2.5 years ago.

BlackRock, which joined CA100+ earlier this year and manages $7 trillion in assets, is now among hundreds of large investors which have committed to work to get the targeted corporations (the ‘systemically important emitters’ accounting for two-thirds of annual global industrial emissions) aligned with the goals of the Paris Agreement. These asset managers are now actively driving change at the worst emitter companies from PetroChina to BP, forcing them to make public commitments to reduce emissions from their lines of business.

As the largest investor-to-company climate initiative in history, CA100+ has become the flagship investment industry group demanding that global corporations act on climate change.

Read more by Attracta Mooney at the Financial Times: "Corporate eco-warriors driving change from Shell to Qantas."

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