The Borneo Post

Clean up climate change? It makes good business sense

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IF THE world’s largest companies live up to the promises they’ve made to slow climate change, together they could reduce emissions by an amount equal to those of Germany.

The corporate pledges gained renewed attention this week after an ominous report by the Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change, which said that government policies alone won’t ensure the “unpreceden­ted” societal changes needed over the next decade to stem climate change.

That puts the onus on the business sector to clean up a mess it helped create.

To a greater extent than ever before, the best interests of many businesses and those of the planet are aligned.

“We’ve gone from saying ‘it would be nice to do, but it would cost us,’ to saying ‘if we don’t do it, we won’t be able to grow, we won’t be able to have tomorrow’s economy,’ “said Andrew Steer, president of the World Resources Institute. “Business leaders, they realise that.”

As Feike Sijbesma, chief executive of Royal DSM, put it: “We need to future proof ourselves.”

The report said that holding the rise in global temperatur­es to 1.5 degrees Celsius above preindustr­ial levels - set forth by the Paris climate agreement - will require creating entire new industries to remove carbon from the air as well as the overhaul of the vast energy infrastruc­ture that has been built over more than a century.

Historical­ly, corporatio­ns have been complicit in the world’s climate problem. One analysis shows that half of the globe’s emissions since 1988 are traceable to just 25 private and state- owned fossil fuel corporatio­ns. And many have lobbied against policies that would limit greenhouse­gas emissions. They have done so both directly and through support of groups that have cast doubt about climate change.

Recently, however, there’s a palpable change in the way business leaders talk about climate change.

Sijbesma said, “some of my investors and banks asked me what do you want to do: Improve the world or make money? I said, ‘Well, both.’ “

With trillions of dollars at stake, corporatio­ns have forged ahead to create sustainabl­e businesses. They are taking steps to lower their carbon footprints and overhaul their supply chains in a race against rising seas and temperatur­es. Others are trying to come up with the ultimate goal: how to pull carbon dioxide out of the air and use or store it.

From Apple to Walmart, from IKEA to Google, dozens of firms have embraced renewable energy. UPS is shifting toward electric vehicles. Costco has installed solar systems on top of at least 100 of its warehouses, and some locations use solar power in parking lots. Google in 2017 offset all of its office and data centre electricit­y use by adding renewable energy to the grid.

Some of the biggest changes are coming from what companies don’t do. Europe’s largest bank, HSBC, this year stopped funding new coal power plants, oil sands developmen­t and Arctic drilling, joining a growing number of investors and lenders to shun ambitious fossil fuel projects.

Making real strides will be expensive. The UNreport said that hitting the 1.5 degree Celsius target would cost an average of US$ 3.5 trillion a year through 2050 - almost US$ 1 trillion a year more than the current pledges made by government­s in Paris in 2015.

The bulk of the money will have to come from the private sector. Analysts at Bloomberg New Energy Finance estimate that global investment in what’s called “clean energy” came to US$ 138.2 billion in the first six months of 2018, down one per cent from the same period in 2017. The slippage reflected lower capital costs for photovolta­ic projects, with fewer dollars spent per megawatt installed; and a cooling- off in China’s solar boom, the firm said.

Consumer demand and employee expectatio­ns are driving some of the investment­s. In many cases, companies are finding that their own customers and employees prefer to buy and work at firms that are responsive to climate issues. And thanks to the falling prices of renewable energy, it can be cheaper to be climate-friendly than not.

Walmart, for example, has installed more than 1.5 million energy- efficient LED light fixtures across more than 6,000 stores, parking lots, distributi­on centres and corporate offices in 10 countries, driving down lighting costs by hundreds of millions of dollars over the past decade, the company said.

Walmart also exceeded its goal to double the efficiency of its trucking fleet by 2015. Working with equipment manufactur­ers and others, the retailing giant saved nearly US$ 1 billion and avoided emissions of almost 650,000 metric tons of carbon dioxide in 2015 compared to 2005.

Many of the nation’s biggest utilities have figured out that they can make more by selling less, especially when public service commission­s can guarantee them healthy rates of return.

New Jersey-based PSEG, one of the nation’s largest utilities, last month unveiled a six-year US$ 4.1 billion climate plan, with two-thirds of the money aimed at boosting energy efficiency. An additional US$ 300 million will go toward 40,000 new charging stations for electric vehicles. At the end of 2017, New Jersey had just 517 public charging stations.

“I really do believe that while we pay an appropriat­e amount of attention to solar and wind, where we should be focusing far more of our attention is energy efficiency,” said Ralph Izzo, chief executive of PSEG.

A physicist by training, Izzo said the time for action is now, since the carbon dioxide already in the atmosphere won’t dissipate for centuries.

“We need to step up our game,” he said, “and that’s what we’re intending to do.”

The world’s major oil

We’ve gone from saying ‘it would be nice to do, but it would cost us,’ to saying ‘if we don’t do it, we won’t be able to grow, we won’t be able to have tomorrow’s economy. Business leaders, they realise that. Andrew Steer, president of the World Resources Institute.

companies - including BP, Shell and Total - have ponied up US$ 100 million each to establish a fund called the Oil and Gas Climate Initiative, which invests in small companies working on technologi­es that could sharply cut emissions. ExxonMobil and Chevron recently joined the group.

That amount pales next to the big oil companies’ commitment to oil and gas: US$ 100 million is less than two days’ capital spending for Royal Dutch Shell, for example.

“We cannot continue on this capitalist- driven carbon binge and hope voluntary actions will solve the climate crisis,” said Erich Pica, head of Friends of the Earth.

“The fossil fuel industry can’t buy their way out of this self- created problem by tossing pennies toward small projects to save their public image.” — Bloomberg

 ??  ?? Protesters in Paris march to urge politician­s to act against climate change on Oct 13. — Reuters photo
Protesters in Paris march to urge politician­s to act against climate change on Oct 13. — Reuters photo
 ??  ?? A protester in Paris holds her baby with a board reading “Endangered species” as she marches in a demonstrat­ion to urge politician­s to act against climate change. — Reuters photo
A protester in Paris holds her baby with a board reading “Endangered species” as she marches in a demonstrat­ion to urge politician­s to act against climate change. — Reuters photo
 ??  ?? Feike Sijbesma, chief executive officer of Royal DSM, pauses during a Bloomberg Television interview in London. — Bloomberg photo
Feike Sijbesma, chief executive officer of Royal DSM, pauses during a Bloomberg Television interview in London. — Bloomberg photo

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