By Ross Kerber and Simon Jessop
BOSTON/LONDON (Reuters) – Big business more than ever is under pressure to channel money into curbing climate change – and yet the chances of U.N. talks providing the necessary spur have slimmed as the Ukraine war, high energy prices and geopolitical tensions take precedence.
In interviews, more than a dozen U.S. and European finance leaders were pessimistic the climate conference in Sharm el-Sheikh in Egypt starting Nov. 6 can make clear progress.
What they want are signals on the pace of regulation that would allow company boards to plan their climate policy. But as governments have rarely been more distracted by world events, they fear countries will fail to provide any major new commitments.
“Geopolitical relations going into COP27 are at one of the worst levels in recent history,” said Luke Sussams, Head of ESG and Sustainable Finance, EMEA at Jefferies.
“The age-old dilemma of climate finance, facilitated between the developed and the developing world, will of course be critical. We, I don’t think, are too optimistic that many resolutions will be met in that regard.”
A U.N. report published in October underlined the urgency of the climate problem and that emissions must drop 43% by the end of the decade to prevent the worst impacts of a hotter planet.
The countries most exposed to the effects of temperatures that hit records this year are often the poorest and they are likely at next week’s talks to demand that any new promises they make to reduce their emissions are conditional on financial help from the rich world.
While they are looking to governments to provide more cash, the private sector will also be needed to fund the bulk of the renewable energy and other projects to cut emissions and offset the impact of climate change.
‘AVOIDING A ROLLBACK’ COULD BE CONSIDERED SUCCESS
The best hope could be to prevent the progress so far being undone.
“Avoiding a rollback of existing pledges and commitments… could probably be considered a success,” Benedict Buckley, research analyst at ClearBridge Investments, said.
Many companies made pledges to cut emissions last year, but like many governments, they have yet to work out how those will be implemented.
More than 550 financial firms are members of the Glasgow Financial Alliance for Net Zero, aiming to cut their emissions and push companies in the real economy that rely on their financing to do the same, but the pace of action has been slow.
“The hardest work is still to come. The reality is that not enough has been done in the last 12 months – some would argue we have moved backwards,” said Hortense Bioy, Global Director of Sustainability Research at Morningstar.
Thomas Hohne-Sparborth, Head of Sustainability Research at asset manager Lombard Odier, said only a small portion of potential investments were credibly aligned towards net-zero.
“For the transition to succeed, that portion must drastically increase,” he said.
ENERGY DEBATE RESET
Marty Durbin, a senior vice president for the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the largest U.S. business trade group, said current economic conditions had “reset the debate” over clean energy.
The biggest disruption since last year’s Glasgow climate talks has been the invasion of Ukraine by Russia, a major oil and gas exporter.
Europe in particular has been forced to rethink its previous reliance on Russian gas and to seek alternatives. In the short term that includes coal, undermining a deal the U.N. summit in Glasgow to phase out its use.
Longer term, it may mean reliance on emissions-free nuclear power, which Durbin said was increasingly discussed as a climate solution as technology improves.
High fossil fuel prices logically should spur renewable investment.
“It’s basic economics. The higher it goes, the more investment will go into that area,” said Hubi Meinecke, climate and sustainability leader for Boston Consulting Group, which is helping run the U.N. conference.
It can be less obvious for some shareholders, however, as this year’s high oil and gas prices have rewarded those producing fossil fuels.
A resultant surge in inflation and daily living costs also risked creating a hurdle in the form of “a voter backlash to climate commitments” said Nazmeera Moola, Chief Sustainability Officer for Anglo-South African investment manager Ninety One.
(Reporting by Ross Kerber in Boston and by Simon Jessop in London; editing by Barbara Lewis)