Fossil fuel lobby goes on the attack against divestment movement

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
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My my how the mighty have fallen..


Fossil fuel lobby goes on the attack against divestment movement


“First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you,” said Mahatma Gandhi. The climate change campaign to divest from fossil fuels seems to be moving through those stages at express speed, with a sudden barrage of attacks from the coal and oil lobbies ahead of its global divestment day on Valentine’s day.

The speed is appropriate given that the campaign, which argues the fossil fuel industry is a danger to both the climate and investors’ capital, is the fastest growing divestment campaign yet seen, moving quicker than those against tobacco and apartheid. It’s moving fast in the financial world too, with one finance executive calling it “one of the fastest-moving debates I think I’ve seen in my 30 years in markets”.

Let’s take the “laugh at you first”. This unintentionally hilarious cartoon, from a front group for a well-known anti-environmental PR firm, suggests that divestment will kill your “love affair” with fossil fuels, basically leaving you living in a dark cave.



The suggestion that divestment is about ending all fossil fuel use tomorrow is a complete fantasy. The actual demand is for investors to stop purchasing new stock and rebalance their portfolios out of fossil fuels over five years.

The justification is that there is already three times more fossil fuels ready to be extracted than can be burned, if the pledge by the world’s governments to keep global warming under 2C is to be kept. Yet the fossil fuel industry spent $670bn in 2013 exploring for more coal, oil and gas reserves that will be worthless if climate change is tackled.

In a similar vein, but closer to fighting than laughing, is the claim that coal is “the bedrock of modern life” from the American Energy Alliance, a group with links to the fossil fuel industry.

“We have a moral imperative to make sure that people can refrigerate their food and medicines, grow crops and plants with fertilizer, and keep their homes lit at night and warm during winter,” write the straight-faced AEA analysts. “All of this is what divestment activists are asking us to divest from — the bedrock of modern life.”

About 80% of all coal reserves are going to have to stay in the ground to tackle global warming, so it’s worth noting at this point that the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, backed by 194 governments, recently concluded that doing so was both affordable and essential to alleviating global poverty.

A further attack on the divestment campaign came directly from the oil industry on Wednesday. The new report commissioned by the Independent Petroleum Association of America (IPAA) - ignoring the key investment caveat that the past is an unreliable guide to the future - goes back half a century to conclude that if all US universities divested from fossil fuels, they could lose up to $3.2bn a year.

The work, conducted by retired Chicago Law School professor Daniel R Fischel, looked at the performance of portfolios with and without energy stocks over the last 50 years.“Every bit of economic evidence available to us today demonstrates that fossil-fuel divestment is a bad idea,” said Prof Fischel. “The costs of divestment are clearly substantial and stand to have real financial impacts on the returns generated by endowment funds.”

Barry Russell, president and CEO of IPAA, weighed in too: “This first-of-its-kind study confirms that the costs associated with divestment are real and enormous.”

It appears Fischel and Russell have their heads stuck firmly in the oil sands.

The overwhelming majority of the economic evidence I have seen shows the exact opposite. Here are some studies, not funded by the oil industry, which indicate recent divestment would, if anything, have had a positive impact on returns and can reduce investment risk: MSCI, Advisor Partners, Impax, Aperio, S&P Capital IQ and BNEF. I have seen one report, from Mercer, that said “divestment is likely to have up-front and recurring costs”.

But investors need to look forward. “It is completely wrong to assume the drivers of stock performance in the last 50 years will be same for the next 50 years,” says Ben Caldecott, at the University of Oxford’s Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment.

The AEA’s attack also ignores this by delving back into history not 50 years, but 500: “Coal solved the first energy crisis,” it crows. “In the late 1500s and early 1600s, the English faced what was possibly the world’s first energy crisis—they were running out of wood.”

Returning to the modern day, and reality, every nation on the planet has pledged to tackle climate change, meaning the long-term prospects for the fossil fuel industry look uncertain at the very least. But don’t take my word for it, the president of the World Bank and the governor of the Bank of England have among others warned of the risk posed to fossil fuel assets by climate change action.

The divestment movement does not seek to financially bankrupt the vastly wealthy fossil fuel industry. Instead, the campaign is aiming for moral bankruptcy and is supported by Archbishop Desmond Tutu, who testifies to the power of divestment in helping defeat apartheid in South Africa.

With their opponents now taking the threat of divestment seriously, the campaigners will be hoping to they are another step closer to the final stage of Ghandi’s analysis: “First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then you win.”

Fossil fuel lobby goes on the attack against divestment movement | Damian Carrington | Environment | The Guardian

Everyone keep quiet!
 

skookumchuck

Council Member
Jan 19, 2012
2,467
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36
Van Isle
"The divestment movement does not seek to financially bankrupt the vastly wealthy fossil fuel industry. Instead, the campaign is aiming for moral bankruptcy and is supported by Archbishop Desmond Tutu, who testifies to the power of divestment in helping defeat apartheid in South Africa."

Perhaps you could explain to us how far advanced South Africa is since "apartheid" was defeated. How many of the farms given to blacks have thrived? How many businesses? Go ahead, lie.
 

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
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Lie about what?

That plunge in oil profits along with your entire investment portfolio?


How sad.
 

taxslave

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 25, 2008
36,362
4,337
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Vancouver Island
I wouldn't take anything the guardian says too seriously. But it does show how far out of touch with reality the extreme left is.
 

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
39,778
454
83
I wouldn't take anything the guardian says too seriously. But it does show how far out of touch with reality the extreme left is.

Who knew that hoping for a successful free market economy was a leftists dream.

Times sure have changed.
 

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
39,778
454
83
I wonder why the fossil fuel industry is so angry all of a sudden.

Any ideas guys?
 

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
39,778
454
83
Palo Alto joins push toward divestment from fossil fuel

Uploaded: Wed, Feb 11, 2015, 11:01 am
by Gennady Sheyner / Palo Alto Weekly

Spurred by concerns about climate change and a grassroots push from Palo Alto's faith community, the City Council enthusiastically passed a resolution Monday urging the California Public Employees' Retirement System to divest from fossil-fuel companies.

The council voted 8-0, with Councilwoman Liz Kniss absent, to go along with the recommendations of a colleagues memo issued last week by four council members. The memo by Marc Berman, Patrick Burt, Mayor Karen Holman and Kniss recommends that the city officials request that CalPERS divest from fossil-fuel companies and frames the issue as one of both environmental and fiscal responsibility.

The city's resolution urges CalPERS, the state's pension fund for government employees, to "immediately instruct" its asset managers to stop any new investments in fossil-fuel companies; ensure that "none of its assets include holdings in fossil fuel include holdings in fossil-fuel public equities and corporate bonds" on or after Jan. 1, 2020; and publish quarterly updates starting in July 1, 2015, detailing progress made toward full divestment.

The quick council vote was greeted with applause by more than 20 people who attended the meeting to urge for the resolution. Several addressed the council before the vote to make their case for divestment.

"There is no longer any doubt that fossil-fuel emissions are causing sea-level rise, extreme weather events and drought-related crop losses," said local resident Debbie Mytels, co-convener of Peninsula Interfaith Climate Action. "So it's time for action. Pulling our investments out of this dirty industry is a very symbolic step in recognizing that we can no longer continue with a business-as-usual source of energy."

Local resident Susan Chamberlain also addressed the council and made an economic argument for divestment. As pressure to reduce the use of fossil fuels builds in America and in the international community, Chamberlain said, there will be an increase in regulations to limit carbon emissions and an increase in fuel-efficient technologies. The decrease in demand for fossil fuels would leave some of the existing technology as stranded assets.

"Not only is divestment from fossil fuels the right thing to do from a moral perspective, but it makes good sense from a financial perspective as well," Chamberlain said.

In their memo, the council members made similar arguments. Berman, the memo's lead author, said he was swayed by recent studies that suggest that divestment would not lead to a negative economic impact on the city and the pension fund. He also cited the more than 150 letters that the council had received before the meeting urging divestment.

"Our investments should reflect our values," Berman said. "That's what tonight's memo and resolution is about."

The city's action comes at a time when the movement for divestment is picking up steam at cities, colleges and legislative chambers. State Sen. Kevin de Leon has been leading the Sacramento push for a bill that would force CalPERS to divest from fossil fuels, and students and faculty at Stanford and Harvard University have been vocal in urging their respective schools to divest.

Councilman Cory Wolbach called the Monday resolution a "small but important step."

"Our voice joined with others may nudge CalPERS to divest," Wolbach said. "CalPERS' decision to divest may send a message to others."

Palo Alto joins push toward divestment from fossil fuel | News | Palo Alto Online |