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Can Big Money Rescue the Climate?

Flooding surrounds several homes in a neighborhood after Hurricane Harvey. Can Big Money help fight these effects of climate change?

By SC National Guard / Wikimedia Commons

In the early days of this year, we’ve been heartened by the changing behavior of institutional investors toward climate: divesting from the bad and investing in the good.

Earlier this month, for example, New York City Mayor Bill DeBlasio and London Mayor Sadiq Kahn launched the latest version of their Divest/Invest campaign to persuade cities to move pension fund investments out of fossil fuel industries.

A growing number of cities around the world—New York City, London, Auckland, Berlin, Copenhagen, Melbourne, Oslo and Stockholm—have signed on and C40 Cities, the international group now led by Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti, has released a high quality toolkit to guide city actions.

Barely a week later, BlackRock CEO Larry Fink announced in letters to clients and CEOs that sustainability will be their new standard for investing the $6.95 trillion in assets they manage.

BlackRock is taking some key steps to actualize this goal, including using environmental, social and governance (ESG)-optimized index exposures in place of traditional market cap-weighted indexes; creating sustainable versions of their iShares index funds (the traditional version of which has $23 billion in assets); and crucially removing both debt and equity investments in companies that generate 25 percent or more from thermal coal (and scrutinize businesses that are heavily reliant on this coal as an input) from their discretionary portfolios by mid 2020.

At the very least, this amounts to them selling $500 million in coal investments.

Taking significant action on climate change is no longer just a moral imperative. Increasingly, it is a financial one as well.

Discussions like these that are focused on the climate crisis are happening very publicly at Davos at the moment. And for good reason. Taking significant action on climate change is no longer just a moral imperative. Increasingly, it is a financial one as well.

In his letter Fink writes that “The investment risks presented by climate change are set to accelerate a significant reallocation of capital, which will in turn have a profound impact on the pricing of risk and assets around the world.”

Fink raises some of these impacts, writing:

Will cities, for example, be able to afford their infrastructure needs as climate risk reshapes the market for municipal bonds? What will happen to the 30-year mortgage—a key building block of finance—if lenders can’t estimate the impact of climate risk over such a long timeline, and if there is no viable market for flood or fire insurance in impacted areas?

In other words, as finance increasingly recognizes and divests from environmentally unsustainable products and practices—out of anticipation or necessity—there will be dramatic implications for what capital goes into (and crucially what it does not go into).

Responding to this change in financial markets will take creativity. It will require, for example, new institutions and processes for funding local infrastructure and new ways of building middle-class wealth (since selling a house in a floodplain will no longer be a viable source of building home equity).

This is a crucial point—and one familiar to readers of this column and the work of partners like Accelerator for America. The changing nature of how capital moves will require new models of local governance and new norms to guide local solutions.

More immediately, though, it follows that an emerging divestment from dirty and polluting assets will lead to increasing investment in new models of the economy: cleaner and more long-term, sustainable assets.

The changing nature of how capital moves will require new models of local governance and new norms to guide local solutions.

For us, this raises questions about how far this logic extends.

Some asset classes that involve transitioning to cleaner energy sources for power generation, energy efficient building and low-carbon transportation (including electric vehicles) fit neatly into the narrative of “dirty to clean.”

The same goes for efforts to address the global challenge of mismanaged waste and the conversion of discarded plastic into sustainable uses.

But the logic of moving to a low-carbon/no-carbon economy implicates much more and raises a series of questions we’ve been thinking about lately:

As we’ve written before, there are a few key steps that local leaders can take, individually and collectively, in order to make the most of this trend and be at the forefront of ensuring that stopping investments over here will enable investments over there that meet community goals.

These include:

Time and effort will tell if this “significant reallocation of capital” (to use Fink’s phrase) is beneficial to the people and places most chronically excluded from the current allocation.

However, to us it’s promising that not yet a full month into 2020 financial transformation is afoot.

Bruce Katz is the director of the new Nowak Metro Finance Lab at Drexel University, created to help cities design new institutions and mechanisms that harness public, private and civic capital for transformative investment. Colin Higgins is a Program Director at The Governance Project.

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