Business a.m.

Tackling the Climate Crisis: Can Business Lead the Way?

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THE WORLD IS RUNNING out of time to solve the climate crisis, and businesses are under increasing pressure to lead the charge.

A recent United Nations panel report blamed human activity for rapidly warming the planet in the last millennium, with transporta­tion and electricit­y generation as the two largest sources of carbon emissions. U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, who described the report as a “code red” for humanity,” called on private and public stakeholde­rs to work toward greener economies.

But like smoggy skies, the path forward isn’t always clear.

“Whether we develop new government policies, work together to create QHZ HQHUJ\ HIåFLHQW WHFKnology, or commit to reducing emissions through nature-based solutions, more and more people believe something needs to be done. But what is the role business should play in this endeavor?” asked Wharton Dean Erika James as she introduced a panel of experts to discuss the topic.

The Oct. 20 virtual panel, titled “Tackling the Climate Crisis,” was part of the ongoing Beyond Business series to explore the most complex and pressing issues affecting organizati­ons and individual­s around the world. Part of the Wharton School’s Tarnopol Dean’s Lecture Series, Beyond Business is streamed live on Wharton’s LinkedIn page. (See video below.)

The panelists were Benjamin Keys, a Wharton real estate and finance professor, who spoke about how climate change is reshaping the mortgage and housing industries; Sarah E. Light, a Wharton legal studies and business ethics professor, who laid out an action plan for businesses to follow; and David Swift, chief operating officer of impact investment group Engine No. 1, who talked about how the investment community can green the economy.

Take Action, Be Transparen­t

Light, whose research focuses on environmen­tal law, corporate sustainabi­lity, and innovation, said businesses are responding to the call for change, even as the call grows louder and more insistent. For those that haven’t joined in the chorus, she said, there are three things they can do right now to start making a difference:

Measure and manage emissions from their own on-site operations, and work to power their operations with renewable energy.

Look beyond their operations to the environmen­tal footprints created by their partners up and down the supply chain.

Speak up for climate policy.

Ø1RW DOO åUPV KDYH JRWten there, and I would want to encourage them to do this, and that is to put their money where their mouth is in terms of advocating for public policies that will support a transition to a net-zero economy by 2050,” Light said.

6KH DOVR H[KRUWHG åUPV to be more transparen­t to the public and government regulators about what they are doing to mitigate emissions. This is especially important because there is so much uncertaint­y around the metrics and terminolog­y of going green. A lot of companies are using third-party platforms to disclose their environmen­tal activity in the absence of substantia­l government­al guidance. But the Securities and Exchange Commission has taken note of these voluntary disclosure­s and is catching up, she said. The agency is weighing whether to mandate its own disclosure­s regarding ESG (environmen­tal, social, and governance) compliance.

“The more we see private actors taking up the mantle of working to reduce greenhouse gas emissions not only from their operations but also from their value chains, I think that’s a real step forward,” Light said.

Innovate and Collaborat­e

Keys said the commercial real estate industry is very interested in the SEC’s decisions because coming up with the right metrics for energy efficiency has long been a challenge. For example, he said, New York City has laws targeting the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions from buildings, but that law doesn’t distinguis­h between a massive structure such as the Empire State Building or an apartment building. Keys said policymake­rs have to strike a balance between energy intensity and energy density.

“How do we avoid punishing density?” he said. “We know that city living LV IDU PRUH HQHUJ\ HIåFLHQW than driving out to the faraeXQJ VXEXUEV :H ZDQW WR encourage dense living, but we want to make sure it’s done in a way that’s more HQHUJ\ HIåFLHQW Ù

Climate change has increased the frequency, severity, and costs of weather-related disasters such as hurricanes, droughts, and aeRRGV ,Q WKHUH ZHUH 22 billion-dollar disasters in the U.S., Keys said. As a result, both private and public players are scrambling to innovate solutions.

“There’s a recognitio­n in the housing and mortgage space that these growing risks are going to need to be addressed, and that the federal government is not going to simply pick up the tab in the ways that they have in the past,” he said.

There are a number of entities contributi­ng toward solutions, including the National Associatio­n of Realtors, real estate broker 5HGåQ WKH QRQSURåW )LUVW Street Foundation, and the government’s Property Assessed Clean Energy Program. A large number of home loans go through Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, which is why they should also help guide change. But Keys emphasized that innovation must be affordable.

“I think we’re seeing policymake­rs putting these programs at least on a path towards getting the pricing right, and I think that’s going to send a strong signal to the market,” he said, adding that the decisions being made now will reverberat­e for decades.

Mitigating the risks from climate change is too costly for homeowners to bear alone. It’s going to take collaborat­ion and support from the government and the private sector to make it work, and Keys expects to see progress.

“I think we’re just scratching the surface in the housing and mortgage markets in this space,” Keys said.

Invest in Green Companies

Swift agrees with BlackRock CEO Larry Fink, who wrote in 2020 that “climate risk is investment risk.” An investment industry veteran, Swift said companies have a fiduciary responsibi­lity to shareholde­rs to analyze the risks related to climate change, like whether companies are adopting greener manufactur­ing practices or continuing to rely on fossil fuels.

“It is absolutely possible to address the needs of shareholde­rs while thinking about climate change,” Swift said. “If you think about it as an economic issue, it poses material risk to your business if you’re on the wrong side of this transforma­tion,” he said.

Technology, regulation, industry disruption, and other factors will exert force on companies that refuse to change. And the resulting pressure will squeeze everything from operations to recruitmen­t and retention of both employees and customers.

“Conversely, if you’re on the right side of this transforma­tion, if you’re taking the right steps, the market’s going to reward you,” Swift said, noting that now is the time for companies to “create value by changing their behavior and their business.”

The most common response he’s seen to climate change is the launch of ESG strategies. But companies lacking in such a plan are often “negatively screened” out of investment portfolios. His company, Engine No. 1, takes a very different approach: it invests and engages with them.

“When you screen out a bad company, it doesn’t really inspire that company to change their behavior,” Swift said. “We want them to understand the issue as a shareholde­r issue.”

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