The Pak Banker

Bank of England chief Mark Carney issues climate change warning

-

The world will face irreversib­le heating unless firms shift their priorities soon, the outgoing head of the Bank of England has told the BBC. Mark Carney said the financial sector had begun to curb investment in fossil fuels - but far too slowly. He said leading pension fund analysis "is that if you add up the policies of all of companies out there, they are consistent with warming of 3.7-3.8C".

Mr Carney made the comments in a prerecorde­d BBC Radio 4 Today interview.

The interview, by presenter Mishal Husain, is one of several items on the programme which are focusing on climate change, on the day the show is guest edited by environmen­tal campaigner Greta Thunberg.

Mr Carney added that the rise of almost 4C was "far above the 1.5 degrees that the people say they want and government­s are demanding". Scientists say the risks associated with an increase of 4C include a nine metre rise in sea levels - affecting up to 760 million people - searing heatwaves and droughts, and serious food supply problems.

Mr Carney, who will next year start his new role as United Nations special envoy for climate action and finance, continued: "The concern is whether we will spend another decade doing worthy things but not enough... and we will blow through the 1.5C mark very quickly. As a consequenc­e, the climate will stabilise at the much higher level."

Speaking to the Today programme, he reiterated his warning that unless firms woke up to what he called the climate crisis, many of their assets would become worthless.

"If we were to burn all those oil and gas [reserves], there's no way we would meet carbon budget," he said. "Up to 80% of coal assets will be stranded, [and] up to half of developed oil reserves. "A question for every company, every financial institutio­n, every asset manager, pension fund or insurer: what's your plan? "Four to five years ago, only leading institutio­ns had begun to think about these issues and could report on them.

"Now $120tn worth of balance sheets of banks and asset managers are wanting this disclosure [of investment­s in fossil fuels]. But it's not moving fast enough." Climate campaigner­s Extinction Rebellion question whether the capitalist system can halt climate change.

Mr Carney said capitalism had a vital role in raising funding for clean technologi­es. But he added that it had to be tempered by government-imposed incentives, rules and prohibitio­ns of the most damaging activities.

Climate change was what he called a "tragedy of the horizon", because the decisionma­king time horizon of investment managers is between two and 10 years. "In those horizons there will be more extreme weather events, but by the time that the extreme events become so prevalent and so obvious it's too late to do anything about it," he said.

"We look to political leaders to start addressing future problems today." He told those questionin­g the consensus on climate change: "We can't afford on this one to have selective informatio­n, spin, misdirecti­on… It needs to be absolutely clear because we are all in on it.

"To deliver, there needs to be shared understand­ing about what's necessary. [But] it is reasonable for there to be debates at the margin about where does the role of the state stop - and what's the role of markets."

Mr Carney applauded the UK government for hosting next year's vital global climate conference in Glasgow. He said success was "vital". Under Mr Carney's leadership the Bank of England recently launched a "stress test" to determine which firms and sectors would be worst-hit by climate change.

The question is how fast financial institutio­ns can change course. Recently, investment bank Goldman Sachs ruled out future finance for oil drilling or exploratio­n in the Arctic.

The bank said it would not invest in new thermal coal mines (for power stations) anywhere in the world.

It also announced plans to help its clients manage climate impacts by selling weatherrel­ated catastroph­e bonds.

Insurance giant AXA said it would stop insuring any new coal constructi­on projects, and totally phase out existing insurance and investment­s in coal in the EU, by 2030.

Nest, the workplace pension scheme set up by the government, is testing whether it can invest its Climate Aware Fund in firms compatible with a 1.5C warming.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Pakistan