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Posted by: David Hone

A Surprising Call From The Investment Community

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A recent Reuters article reported from a UN session on climate risk and energy solutions:

 UNITED NATIONS, Jan 12 (Reuters) – Institutional investors with a collective $26 trillion under management opened a new front on Thursday in the fight against climate change, urging the private sector to mobilize, follow the money and find new technologies to cut greenhouse gas emissions. Putting a price on climate-warming carbon emissions, which has been instituted in parts of Europe and elsewhere with limited success, would be “nice to have” but not essential, said Kevin Parker, global head of Deutsche Asset Management.       

“It’s not going to be long before an investor looking to roll out a new energy plant has to take solar and wind and other forms of renewables very seriously,” Parker said in an interview outside a session at U.N. headquarters on climate risk and energy solutions.  ”It’s coming down to following the bouncing ball of money, because it’s money that talks.”       

Inside the session, which drew more than 400 participants from banking, insurance, government, labor and institutional investing, the United Nations’ Roland Rich warned the group against “putting all our eggs in the government basket.”

“The carbon-burning economy is tomorrow’s Rust Belt,” Rich said. “Your job, it seems to me, is to invest in the Microsofts and Googles of the green economy.”           

The article continued with reports of other speakers making similar calls. It may be the case that this reflects a significant level of frustration in the investment community, driven by weak carbon prices, inaction in several major economies and uncertainty with policy implementation where action is underway. Nevertheless, to argue that an issue such as climate change can be addressed without government action is a worrying development.

It has taken a good 15+ years to build the case for a carbon price in the energy system and while there is concern as to the current state of carbon markets, particularly in the EU, it is not the time to now argue that we can do without them.  The most effective emerging technology for dealing with CO2 emissions is carbon capture and storage (CCS) and arguably (at least by me) we will not see a reduction in global emissions until it starts deploying on a large scale. We won’t even see a reduction in the rate of growth of emissions until coal use reaches a plateau and begins to decline. Recent statistics hardly give confidence that such a point in time is even remotely close.

 

Neither of these will happen without the presence of a carbon price, given the current demand for energy. Coal remains abundant, reliable and cheap for large scale power generation and while solar energy certainly falls on the planet in abundance, converting it to 24/7 electricity on a large scale (either directly or via wind) is neither reliable (from a 24/7 perspective) or cheap. Even as natural gas production increases globally, without a carbon price it will struggle to back out coal to the extent that it stays in the ground (rather it will tend to displace it to other markets). CCS of course is completely dependent on carbon pricing and early CCS demonstration in the EU is already suffering because of the low carbon price in the EU ETS.

There is no question that money talks and it is also true that a step change down in the cost of wind and solar has taken place in recent years, but the rate of investment in conventional energy infrastructure still far exceeds that of renewable energy and nuclear. In its recent World Energy Outlook, the International Energy Agency (IEA) warned that emissions lock-in at a level above that which is equivalent to a 2°C temperature rise this century is imminent.

Despite the repeated warnings, emissions continue to rise rapidly with no sign of a turndown. We really do need a carbon price in the energy system! It almost feels trite to have to say this is 2012, but apparently it is still necessary to do so.



Authored by:

David Hone

David Hone serves as the Senior Climate Change Advisor for Royal Dutch Shell. He combines his work with his responsibilities as a board member and Chairman of the International Emissions Trading Association (IETA). Additionally, he works closely with the World Business Council for Sustainable Development and has been a lead contributor to many of its recent energy and climate change ...

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January 22, 2012

David Lewis says:

Declaring that a price on carbon would be "nice to have but not essential" is a way of saying there is a tiny bit of hope left even though most who study the evidence and speak frankly would have to admit, even if only late at night to themselves, that it really looks like civilization is committing suicide.  

This is what happens when the entire world needs to see US leaderhip on this issue and the supposedly "conservative" forces in the US who have claimed for decades they have the security interests of the US at heart have declared that they could care less what the evidence is, the Republican party can not and does not believe there is a problem, period.  


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January 23, 2012

A guest says:

I would suggest that Asia has already exerted leadership on this issue. Asia's CO2 emissions are already more than 60% of global annual emissions; and, Asia's emissions are growing rapidly. Asia's emissions will likely be more than 75% of a larger total quantity of global annual emissions by the conclusion of COP21, which is supposed to mark the adoption of some emissions reduction agreement with some legally binding aspects, which is then to go into effect by the conclusion of COP 26. If the US led the developed nations in a crash program to reduce their annual carbon emissions, Asia's emissions could approach 90% of an even larger total quantity of global annual emissions by 2020. 

NOW THAT WOULD BE PROGRESS!

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January 22, 2012

Willem Post says:

Dave,

The Little Ice Age came about 1450 and went about 1850; 400 years and no change in CO2. The same happened during the Roman Warm Period; came and went and no change in CO2. There were 14 such swings during the past 10,000 years and no change in CO2. There must be other climate drivers. 

http://theenergycollective.com/willem-post/69710/will-germany-make-global-warming-difference

The warming during the Present Warm Period is due to several factors, nature and manmade.

The world's population was about 1 billion in 1900, 7 billion at present, 10 billion in 2050; extinct? Despite burning all this coal, many more people are living longer and healtier.

Practice energy efficiency. It costs a lot less/kWh than ALL renewable and conventional energy sources.

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