Investment giant's move toward sustainability offers hope for climate activism: Don Pittis - Action News
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Investment giant's move toward sustainability offers hope for climate activism: Don Pittis

Climate concessions by BlackRock, the world's largest investment management firm, proves that big business can be swayed by public outrage.

BlackRock's climate concessions prove public pressure works on big business too

A climate protester labelled BlackRock pretends to eat money at an Extinction Rebellion demonstration in London last fall. Could business finally be listening to activists' calls? (Henry Nicholls/Reuters)

One of the reasons people are worried climate change will be almost impossible to stop is that pumping carbon into the atmosphere is simply way too profitable.

Even as new reports yesterday from NASA and the British weather service showedclimate change had created the hottest decade in history, according to the traditional rules of capitalism, if companies make fortunesfrom digging coal and building pipelines, then nothing is going to stop them.

With so much money at stake, not only doshareholders and employees get onside, but governments may often bepersuaded to actively back increasedcarbon output, even when they have evidence it will ultimately damage the local and global economy.

That's why this week's announcement by BlackRock often described as the world's richest money manager, with about $10 trillion to invest (no, the T is not a mistake)is both surprising and encouraging.

All just talk

Although it is easy for climate activists to insist BlackRock has not gone far enough, the moves it has madeseen partly asa response to outrage that the company'sprevious green talk was just that, talk appear to offerevidence that business can be swayed by public pressure.

The news is especially interesting because, while global in scope, BlackRock is a U.S. companya country where theTrump administration seems to be doing everything it can to stand in the way of climate action, from defanging the Environmental Protection Agency to withdrawing from theParis Agreement.

Australia's government supports increased coal production from places like the western coalfields in New South Wales, though recent bushfires in the state have caused widespread devastation, with many pointing the blame at a changing climate. (David Gray/Reuters)

That is not the way things are supposed to work, andaccording to people like energy economist Mark Jaccard, it is governments that must be forced by public pressure totake the lead on climate change.

"You need to get climate-sincere politicians in there; you have to be able to identify them and you have to keep them there," Jaccard said in a recent interview. "And it turns out with something like climate change, that's really difficult."

Jaccard is the kind of guy who supports anything that works to solve the climate problem, but, as he contends in his book The Citizen's Guide to Climate Success,we must notdepend on the motive of profit.

Because of the low cost and high commercial efficiency of continuing to usefossil fuels, the only effective climate action entailsvoters forcinggovernments to change the rules.

BlackRock and coal

While most climate advocates say that remains true, BlackRock's moves to cut investments incompanies that earn morethan 25 per cent of their revenue from fossil fuels, get out ofcoal, and require companies in which it invests to reveal their level of climate risk (sometimes called climate transparency)seemto belie the idea that corporations have no morals.

Many commentators scoff at that idea, including Ian McGugan, who writes in The Globe and Mail that "BlackRock's Green Investing Strategy is Not a Moral Awakening." Like many others, however, he concedes that huge protests specifically naming the companyhave likely influenced its change infocus.

It may be that coal is simply a bad investment today.But the fact that "the world's most powerful investor" says so too makes it harder to ignore.

And while it is easy to say that green credentials are just an exercise in public relations, expressionsof public morality, such as the campaign againstblood diamonds, have had a real business impact.

As with all moral questions, the argument over whether business leaders are merelyparroting a growing public anxiety to earn greater respectapplies just as well to the rest of us. On the other hand, companies are not just machines. They are organizations made up of people, some of whomworry about the world their children and grandchildrenwill inherit.

And even in giant corporations, opinions on climate change matter.

Also this week, James Murdoch, son of global media mogul Rupert Murdoch (and a company board member),made global headlineswhen he criticized News Corporation's influential media outletsfor promoting climate denial during Australia's recent fires.

A BlackRock executive rings the opening bell above the floor of the New York Stock Exchange last summer. The company wields enormous clout in the U.S. financial community. (Lucas Jackson/Reuters)

BlackRock's new position on climate is no reason for activists to stop worrying;as Jaccard insists, government rules and public pressure remain crucial.

And asthe company has outlined, one of the reasons to begin adjusting its portfolio now is that a groundswell of public and (some) government support for climate action means climate-unfriendly businesses will no longer be good investments.

For a company investing for the future, that matters.

"Awareness is rapidly changing, and I believe we are on the edge of a fundamental reshaping of finance," said BlackRockCEO Larry Fink in a letter to company executives.

Yesterday, the World Economic Forum, whoseannual Davos gathering of the very rich and powerful which begins next week,released its latest annual risk report, titled 15 Years of Risk: From Economic Collapse to Planetary Devastation. Four of the Top 5 worries delineated bythe world's business and political elite had to do with climate.

In the past, the activist group BlackRock's Big Problem have accused the investment giant of being "the biggest driver of climate chaos you've never heard of."

And while it remains to be seen whether the company's efforts will truly make a difference, at the very least, its latest move means a lot more people now have heard of them.


Follow Don on Twitter @don_pittis