Climate change is the envelope within which all human
commerce and civilization take place; human-induced warming will change both
profoundly. Already, storms have become more severe; insurers are forecasting a
doubling-to-tripling in losses from floods as a consequence. In 2006, we saw
record heat in the South, a spate of early-season tornado activity, devastating
fires in the West, flooding in New England—dramatic weather that is exactly
what we would expect as a consequence of climate change.
For investors, climate change poses risks and presents opportunities whose
incidence and magnitude varies greatly by sector and industry, and over time.
Most of the attention in the scientific, advocacy, and investment worlds has
focused on the downside of climate change. But the drivers of risk often are
also the incubators of opportunity, and investors need to be aware of both.
Climate risk can enter portfolios through several doors. The most prominent,
for the past several years, has been the risk of litigation or regulation,
which primarily affects companies that emit greenhouse gases (GHG) in
significant quantities. Since the Kyoto Protocol’s entry into force, markets to
trade emission permits—so-called carbon markets—have developed quickly,
primarily in Europe, establishing a price for emissions reduction that helps
businesses in all Kyoto
ratifying nations to quantify the monetary impact of regulation, and begin to
manage the risks of noncompliance. It has also helped financial analysts to
understand the investment implications: now that emissions have a price and
reduction has value in most of the world’s developed markets, financial
analysis can make determinations on which companies are best and least
well-positioned to compete in the new, carbon-constrained world.
Julie Fox Gorte is vice president and chief social
investment strategist for Calvert.
Organization:
Boardroom Briefing: A publication of Directors and Boards magazine