7519 lines
274 KiB
Plaintext
Executable File
7519 lines
274 KiB
Plaintext
Executable File
# COP28
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Data: 11-01-2025 21:40:42
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## Lista de Vídeos
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1. [Hopes for COP28](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mJ9wSjcCoEM)
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2. [think ahead: COP28 Expectations and the Role of Business](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MU9Li2tUwTM)
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3. [think ahead: Challenging Contemporary Energy Systems](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hJOeONgMszA)
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4. [think ahead: Energy Transition, A View from the UAE](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ONsN6nxftZk)
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5. [think ahead: Complex Climate Trade-Offs](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XE9DPMV4ENM)
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6. [think ahead: Meeting the Climate Challenge](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_LE1nBUDaDQ)
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7. [think ahead: How Regulation is Supporting the Path to Net Zero](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HyC66Ybmhok)
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8. [think ahead: Climate Transition and Emerging Markets, led by the Wheeler Institute](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jKanGWK6WmA)
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9. [think ahead: Fireside Chat Hosted by Christopher Caldwell](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bc5pYw7tppQ)
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10. [Hopes for COP28](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DM6cHHwLwbY)
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## Transcrições
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### Hopes for COP28
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URL: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mJ9wSjcCoEM
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Idioma: en
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[Music]
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one of the key issues Business Leaders
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should focus on at cop 28 are public
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private Partnerships these are tools
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that can help enable new projects in
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developing economies and ensure that the
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transition is just and Equitable a key
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issue is the decide of effective
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regulation to mitigate climate change
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research shows that so far existing
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rules have not yet leveraged their full
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potential to motivate business
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businesses to address environmental
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sustainability there is a significant
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Gap that now needs to be identified and
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addressed at cop 28 these gaps relate to
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providing capital from some of these
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institutions to the underdeveloped
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institutions and see how we can actually
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make them more practical and more
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feasible what we need to prioritize is
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how to incentivize early action by
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businesses to tackle climate problems a
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key issue step business leader should
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focus in cop 28 will be on increasing
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resilience towards impact of climate
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change as more countries will inevitably
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experience the impact of climate change
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it's important for us to develop and
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Implement a workable solution for this
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issue I think one of the key issues is
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energy diversification uh energy
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diversification is important to prevent
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disruption of energy Supply I think a
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big issue is finding the capital and
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expertise to invest in companies that
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improve the green
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infrastructure basically generating
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energy from Green sources battery
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storage solutions and smart
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[Music]
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grids I think the cop 28 is a fantastic
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opportunity for Business Leaders to
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really get together and talk about
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shared issues and start excellent
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collaboration programs to really aim to
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solve the current climate crisis
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together my hope is for policy and
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Business Leaders to agree on an
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ambitious framework for tax policy that
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reduces carbon emissions and fosters
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investment in green technologies I hope
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that we can achieve more ambitious
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climate commitment from participating
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countries more collaboration between
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countries on climate actions and more
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concrete plan for funding for adaption
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one of the positive changes I want to
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see is greater introduction of
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Regulation particularly around
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sustainability reporting my biggest hope
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for cop 28 is for all the stakeholders
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to realize that we are all in this
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together and so we need to work together
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for something that addresses the
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iniquities and in injustices that affect
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people who are especially the most
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vulnerable out of cop 28 I hope that
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there's more dialogue and progression
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and actions from both governments and
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[Music]
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businesses
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[Music]
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---
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### think ahead: COP28 Expectations and the Role of Business
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URL: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MU9Li2tUwTM
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Idioma: en
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all right good morning everyone uh what
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a privilege to be here with you uh this
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morning thank you so much for joining us
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so when Katrina and Julian asked me to
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speak at this uh wonderful event they
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said you know we want you to speak about
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the role of business and the
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expectations about cop 28 I was like
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wonderful great topic do I have about an
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hour 90 minutes something like that and
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Katrina turns and says you have 20
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minutes I was like wonderful okay so I
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made two promises to myself for today
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one to keep it within the 20 minutes and
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therefore I scripted what I wanted to
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say to you but second and most
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importantly perhaps a promise that we
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should make ourselves for today is to
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avoid the easy path of Doom and Gloom
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when we look at the scientific facts
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about cop 28 let's be optimistic let's
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be proactive let's be more impactful
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today so here it goes so as I'm sure all
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of you know cob 28 presents a
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significant ific milestone in our
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Collective Journey towards climate
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action as I'm sure you already know the
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the conference of the parties start at
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convening in 1995 that's three decades
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that we've been discussing uh climate
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change and the pro the challenge here is
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to forge those global agreements and
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reduce greenhouse gas emissions um and
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do our best to mitigate climate change
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impacts these conferences have been in
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in fact instrumental in in fostering
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this International cooperation and and
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to some extent at least propelling
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climate action hence for example the the
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Paris agreement now there's no question
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that the urgency to address climate
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change is both clear and immediate right
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some recent assessments that we know
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they conclude that we have only a 50%
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chance of staying within the 1.5 degre
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Celsius and to do that we have a
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remaining carbon budget of about 250
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gatons of old CO2 how long is that how
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long is that going to take us at cuted
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emissions
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six years six short years before we hit
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the uh the boundary of only 50% chance
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of of heating 1.5 now two months ago
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September 2023 the global temperature
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anomaly sounded alarms across the
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scientific Community not only did we
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witness the hottest September on record
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but also 2023 is now on track to be the
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warmest year ever with surface
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temperatures being around
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1.75 de warmer than pre-industrial times
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and pushing this year's average to 1.4
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de cels above pre-industrial levels
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right the implications of this
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trajectory couldn't be more profound and
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of course the stakes could not be higher
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the science confirms an existential
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urgency to take decisive action so as we
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head to cop 20 uh cop 28 unfortunately
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the whole atmosphere is a little bit of
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a cautious optimism at best um which of
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course reflects the complex and
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inherently political nature of global
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climate neg negotiations and climate uh
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diplomacy right the I I would argue that
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the global communities expectations
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remain at best cautiously optimistic so
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of course the road to cop 28 is not
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about policy alone it's a more holistic
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effort it calls on us the business
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Community to introspect to engage and to
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mobilize in alignment with our
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sustainability goals so looking at the
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agenda for today's event and we do have
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an exciting day ahead of us I'm
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confident that our discussions are just
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are not going to be just academic there
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will have to be a call to action and
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urging all of us from our respective
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roles to realign our business strategies
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our business mindset mindsets even with
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a global sustainability agenda so
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hopefully in sodim we also cultivate a a
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more collaboration to tackle this quite
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unprecedented challenges so as we go
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through today's reach agenda I invite
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each one of you to engage with an open
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mind to embrace the spirit of
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constructive but also Fierce debate um
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and to cont contribute actively to our
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discussions across the day and across
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the various panels what I would like to
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do next is share with you some of my
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views about the expectations for cop 28
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and in fact um the interplay between cop
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28 and business strategy now first let
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me start by saying it's important to
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understand that cop 28 is not just
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another annual Gathering but I do
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honestly think it's a crucial turning
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point this year we start at the
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threshold of the first Global stock take
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under the Paris agreement which is a
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comprehensive process that evaluates the
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process of this the progress of nearly
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200 Nations toward the ambitious climate
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targets that we collectively set in 2015
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15 this stock take which started last
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year is set to culminate at cop 28 and
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it will reflect it will reflect how far
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we've come or rather perhaps how far we
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have not come uh in our path to uh uh to
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confine global warming uh within the
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thresholds of 1.5 to 2 degrees this
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technical assessment um concluded as I'm
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sure many of you may have read it with
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the synthesis report in September
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2023 and sadly painted a very dire
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picture despite an increase in the
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number of countries that adopting CO2
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reduction targets the existing pledges
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are not on track to keep temperature
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rise under 1.5 degrees in fact global
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temperatures are optimistically are
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projected in the 2.4 to
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2.7 degrees range by the end of the
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century this is far beyond the parties
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agreement targets so against this
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backdrop cop 28 um will host and uh and
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and and will'll discuss some key policy
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discussions on some critical issues
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including the establishment of the loss
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and damage fund and the global momentum
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towards phasing out as opposed to
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phasing down um fossil fuels and CO2 um
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fossil fuels now I do think that the
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loss and damage fund it is a historic
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development this fund is the first
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United Nations mechanism to help
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countries that have already suffered
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irreversible
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um climate driven damage however the
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successful oper operationalization
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beginning with the World Bank hosting
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this fund um it does inevitably face
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geopolitical tensions and reflects
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broadly the challenges that will all
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that will have to be addressed at cop 28
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now developing and developed countries
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have made significant concessions to
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facilitate an agreement but big
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questions still remain an answer about
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who will contribute to this fund and
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when now importantly though uh cop 28
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has also is often described as the
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implementation cop that's because the
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conclusion of this stock take exercise
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that I talked about earlier is supposed
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to set a road map of uh how exactly
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we're going to accelerate climate action
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as I mentioned just now it's also the
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stage where we hope to operationalize
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this loss and damage fund and for the
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parties to agree on the Frameworks that
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uh that will enhance overall climate
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resilience and
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adaptation at the same time the
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negotiations will focus heavily of
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course on climate Finance with a
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standing committee on finance preparing
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a report on the developed countries
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pledge to double adaptation Finance by
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2025 so the emphasis there is not only
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going to be on meeting the hundred
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billion pledge that countries have done
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in the past but also to start thinking
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about post 2025 CL climate finance and
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in fact update that that pledge and and
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set a new Target for Global fin for
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climate Finance now all of these
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ambitious challenging and often
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contested agenda items of course
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reinforce the idea that cop 28 is about
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turning previous commitments into action
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and deciding uh concrete steps for
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forward now these issues all of the the
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ones I just mentioned of course
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underscore the critical link between
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these Global Climate policies and the
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business landscape in fact the business
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Community finds itself at the crossroads
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um of these discussions with the
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decisions that we will hopefully take at
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cop 28 very likely to inuence to
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influence a whole host of factors
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including regulatory Frameworks policy
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commitments investor expectations even
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potentially consumer preferences so what
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does that mean for us it means that um
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there's a need to for a robust road map
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uh in terms of how we're going to
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realign our strategies with climate
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Target and in so doing to set a
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pragmatic um but hopefully optimistic
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and ambitious path forward for business
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in fact and this is a lot of the work
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that I I do is in in terms of the
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integration of environmental and social
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issues into strategy more broad more
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broadly we know that the business world
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is already undergoing a profound
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transformation A disruption as I often
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uh call it it's um a slow but steady
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shift from rhetoric to T tangible action
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so this change is evident in businesses
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not only in terms of innovating uh their
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products to be more socially and
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environmentally responsible but also in
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terms of how they entirely restructure
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their operating and business models
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doing their best to align line with the
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planet's uh limits so this fundamental
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shift is motivated by several factors of
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course to create value to manage risks
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to comply uh with emerging laws and
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regulations to better manage the
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stakeholder ecosystem that actually
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places these demands on business and of
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course as part of the broader effort to
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really redesign and reconstruct um the
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entire infrastructure within which our
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Industries operate now there's no
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question my mind that the engagement of
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the business sector um especially when
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it comes to climate but also broadly
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with sustainability issues has moved
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from considered an optional extra
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something wonderful to do on Friday
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afternoon activity to a core and
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fundamental element of strategic
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management in fact you'll even see that
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some some companies already think about
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Beyond Net Zero and they talk about so
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companies like Microsoft for instance
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say not only will be Net Zero but we're
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going to be net negative hoping to take
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out of the atmosphere all the CO2 that
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we have put in since the founding of the
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company now just an example of several
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commitments uh that reflect a growing
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recognition uh that the urg of the
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urgency of climate action and the role
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that Us in other words corporate leaders
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can play in D in really driving
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sustainability forward now uh reflecting
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at least some of the themes that we're
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going to see at cop 28 and uh in the
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various panels that we're going to see
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today um is of course the the commitment
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to renewable energy which has seen a
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significant surch in recent year so give
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you some numbers in 2022 the global
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investment in energy transition
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Technologies including Renewables re
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reached a record high of $1.3 trillion
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do um but even with those amounts the
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investment Stills fall short of the
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average annual investment that is needed
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to remain on track for 1.5 deg the IIA
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the International Energy agency
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estimates that around 2.8 trillion will
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be invested in energy in
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2023 with over $1.7 trillion doar
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directed towards clean energy which
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includes Renewables nuclear gr storage
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and low emission fuels now it's
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important to understand kind of these
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numbers Visa V fossil fuels because this
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is a significant these are significant
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increases in clean energy investment um
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to give you a sense is 24% for
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Renewables versus only 15% for fossil
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fuels and again demonstrates this um
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hopefully decisive shift towards um in
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our investment priorities now even more
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recently and ahead of cop 28 um over 100
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CEOs from the alliance of Co climate
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leaders have issued an open letter
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urging both the public and private
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sectors to adopt transformative policies
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to accelerate decarbonization efforts
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their message is clear without bold
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action and enhanced collaboration the
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goal of a 50% reduction in emissions by
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2030 with remain Elusive and some of you
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may have already seen the UN report that
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came out yesterday um according to the
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estimates we need a 45 to 50% reduction
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by 2030 what are we on track on nobody
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knows an increase of 9% so we're moving
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at speed but in the wrong direction um
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I'm I'm I'm going back on my second
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promise of avoiding the Gloom so let me
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return to my script um so um I believe
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that this interplay between government
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policy and political will to the extent
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that it exists and we'll talk about that
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in a bit and pro proactive steps by
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businesses in fact underline what I
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mentioned earlier as the essence of cop
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28 which is to have an implementation
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cop in fact I do think that the private
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sector and the business sector's
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commitment and importantly and this
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reflects back to what Julian was saying
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about business as problem solvers right
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and therefore the Innovation
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capabilities that we bring to the table
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combined always with supportive
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regulatory policies and Frameworks and
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the necessary infrastructure are
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absolutely pivotal for this
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transformation or this transition to Net
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Zero so let's be a bit more specific
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let's go from the general to the more
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specific and think about how potentially
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these cop 28 discussions and potential
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outcomes may affect or could shape or at
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least impact business business
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strategies I mean we all we're only
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going to know once we see the outcomes
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but let's let's play this thought
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experiment so first there's no question
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that at cop 28 we're going to see a huge
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push to accelerate the transition to
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clean energy um and this will require in
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many cases a significant acceleration
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perhaps for some companies it's going to
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be a strategic shift towards embedding
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sustainability more deeply within
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operations and business models companies
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will have to adapt by investing more in
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renewable energies rethinking energy
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procurement strategies and funding
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Innovation aimed at reducing emissions
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these alignment will have to move Beyond
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environmental responsibility is it will
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it is and will become even more so a
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business imperative and is will be
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motivated by of course the need to
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create value regulatory pressures market
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dynamics and in some Industries changing
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consumer expectations I think that um
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companies across across Industries are
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likely to also emphasize the crucial
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role of collaboration especially in
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those Industries where the transition is
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more difficult and is and and sticking
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your head out first as a business can be
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risky um but also collaboration between
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businesses and government in order to
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fundamentally transform the global
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Energy System system and move away from
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our unhealthy Reliance on fossil fuels
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also this shift in towards sustainable
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energy sources could open doors of
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course to economic growth new markets
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and and growth opportunities for
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companies and I do think that those the
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companies that do make those Investments
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today or already started making these
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Investments on more sustainable energy
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solutions would benefit from potentially
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government incentives top into these new
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markets first and of course bu their
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brands and reputations now to
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effectively manage this transition
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though it's also crucial for companies
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to optimize their energy usage expand
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their Reliance on G green en clean
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energy sources and prepare for for
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upcoming policy shifts that favor
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environmentally friendly Alternatives
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now navigating these uh challenges these
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changes successfully is becoming
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increasingly vital for businesses
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especially those that do want to
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maintain or enhance their Competitive
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Edge in a very Dynamic landscape as I
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mentioned earlier and and we discussed
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this a lot in our classes here at lbs
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looking at sustainability and the energy
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transition As A disruption as opposed to
|
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a path with a Rosy path ahead second
|
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issue at cop 28 there's a growing
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expectations that businesses will place
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a greater emphasis on integrating nature
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people lives and livelihoods Into
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Climate strategies this approach isn't
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just about reducing the negative impacts
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right but hopefully going to move Beyond
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and build an understanding about
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improving the relationship between um
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what companies do and the broader
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ecological and social environment so I
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both anticipate and hope that an agreed
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upon policy framework will incentivize
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companies to take more proactive
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measures to ensure that their activities
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positively contribute to environmental
|
|
sustainability and social well-being
|
|
this includes for example making Supply
|
|
chains more resilient to climate impacts
|
|
and actively supporting biodiversity for
|
|
example now this focus on on people
|
|
nature lives and livelihoods also
|
|
highlights the need for a more holistic
|
|
approach to climate action it calls for
|
|
companies to actively contribute to the
|
|
restoration and preservation of natural
|
|
ecosystems and it's broadly about
|
|
evolving from this idea of simple
|
|
compliance to laws and regulations to
|
|
actually focus on a regeneration which
|
|
of course will will benefit the planet
|
|
but will also benefit Society local
|
|
communities and so on um they um I also
|
|
think that um companies will ultimately
|
|
have to consider more carefully and
|
|
diligently the social implications of
|
|
their environmental strategies and
|
|
especially their transition plans to net
|
|
uh zero emissions this relates back
|
|
again to what Julian mentioned as
|
|
potential tradeoffs right because we
|
|
need to have plans that reflect a
|
|
transition that is both just and
|
|
Equitable and this could involve for
|
|
example creating jobs in GRE in green
|
|
Industries ensure ensuring Fair label
|
|
labor practices and supporting
|
|
community-led initiatives that enhance
|
|
resilience to climate change I think
|
|
that these type of strategies will play
|
|
an increasingly Central role in
|
|
corporate decision making as companies
|
|
uh seek to align their growth objectives
|
|
with the broader goals of sustainable
|
|
development and social Equity third the
|
|
focus on climate Finance at cop 28
|
|
highlights an important shift in
|
|
perception and handling of climate
|
|
related funding for businesses this
|
|
means um reevaluation of investment
|
|
strategies and financial moders models
|
|
to better align with the broader goal of
|
|
sustainable development especially in
|
|
developing countries indeed a key aspect
|
|
of the cop agenda is making climate fin
|
|
Finance more affordable available and
|
|
accessible and this may result in
|
|
increasing funding for green projects
|
|
enhance support for climate adaptation
|
|
Technologies in vulnerable regions and
|
|
greater incorporation of sustainability
|
|
criteria into investment decision making
|
|
I also think that within that context
|
|
companies are going to face huge
|
|
pressures for more transparency and
|
|
accountability about their climate
|
|
Finance contributions requiring them to
|
|
report not only on the amount but also
|
|
the effectiveness of their investments
|
|
in reducing emissions and improving um
|
|
resilience now third inclusivity in
|
|
climate action it's another central
|
|
theme of cop 28 and marks a shift
|
|
towards integrating a wide range of
|
|
perspectiv and experiences in addressing
|
|
climate challenges I think that for
|
|
businesses this means that future
|
|
strategies will likely need to Encompass
|
|
a broader spectrum of stakeholders their
|
|
interests particularly those of
|
|
marginalized communities and future
|
|
Generations this could result in
|
|
businesses adopting more Community
|
|
centered approaches ensuring their
|
|
practices not only comply with
|
|
environmental standards but actually
|
|
positively contribute to local economies
|
|
and their social fabric um finally I
|
|
think there's going to be a development
|
|
potentially on the legal front we know
|
|
that uh in recent years there's an
|
|
increase in terms of climate litigation
|
|
risk so depending on what decisions and
|
|
what commitments we collectively make at
|
|
cob 28 for for instance if we do set new
|
|
benchmarks and expectations it may well
|
|
be the case that businesses might find
|
|
themselves under closer legal scrutiny
|
|
to ensure compliance with these enhanced
|
|
standards so to summarize cop 28 will
|
|
likely influence significant shifts in
|
|
business strategies emphasizing the
|
|
urgent need for a transition to clean
|
|
energy integrating holistic climate
|
|
strategies that consider people and
|
|
nature and re-evaluating climate Finance
|
|
models the focus on inclusivity in
|
|
climate action will require companies to
|
|
adopt more Community focused and
|
|
socially responsible practices while the
|
|
rising Trend in climate litigation
|
|
underscores the need for robust legal
|
|
preparedness um I think that as we look
|
|
forward these tees will be crucial for
|
|
shaping the corporate approach to uh not
|
|
only climate policies but sustainability
|
|
more broadly now before I close my talk
|
|
it's important to address directly a
|
|
critical issue the not so green elephant
|
|
in the room so the yawning gap between
|
|
our Global Climate Ambitions and the
|
|
tangible actions that we take despite
|
|
this widespread consensus on the urgency
|
|
of climate crisis there's a trampling
|
|
disconnect between intentions and real
|
|
world actions and outcome within the
|
|
business Community our community there
|
|
huge gap between aspirations and actions
|
|
is equally apparent while many companies
|
|
have indeed pledged to reduce carbon
|
|
emissions and Achieve Net Zero targets
|
|
there's a prevailing trend of
|
|
overstatement and greenwashing this is
|
|
partly due of course to the still EV
|
|
evolving regulatory Frameworks which
|
|
don't give us clear understanding well
|
|
what does Net Zero actually mean but
|
|
might also be the fact that these are
|
|
very very long-term targets that often
|
|
constrain or avoid immediate action but
|
|
I even with these challenges I think
|
|
that the majority of companies genuinely
|
|
do strive and actually experiment
|
|
profoundly for ways to reduce their
|
|
carboned um footprint we I've also seen
|
|
a new phenomenon too by the way it's is
|
|
not just green washing uh more recently
|
|
we we' also seen green hushing right
|
|
where companies actually shy away from
|
|
disclosing the environmental effort
|
|
which again highlight a very complex and
|
|
evolving in this case political
|
|
landscape with respect to
|
|
sustainability um so as we approach cop
|
|
28 and and even Beyond cop 28 there's a
|
|
very pressing need to align these lofty
|
|
climate climate goals with concrete
|
|
actionable steps so ladies and gents
|
|
it's crucial to acknowledge the
|
|
challenges and inconsistency and the
|
|
path ahead a recent Stark and sad
|
|
illustration of this is the UK
|
|
government's uturn on their Net Zero
|
|
policies prime minister Rishi sunak
|
|
decision to delay the ban on new petrol
|
|
and diesel cars from 2030 to 2035 along
|
|
with easing Energy Efficiency targ
|
|
efficiency targets for rental properties
|
|
and backtracking on plans to replace gas
|
|
boilers with hit pumps exemplifies a
|
|
concerning Trend this comes of course
|
|
after president Trump with drew the us
|
|
from the climate agreement these steps
|
|
taken under the guise of a socalled
|
|
pragmatic approach do raise serious
|
|
questions about the commitment to
|
|
long-term climate goals in the face of
|
|
immediate economic and political
|
|
pressures or indeed populist or extreme
|
|
right-wing pressures this us U-turn is
|
|
not just a local misstep it sends a
|
|
disconcerting signal to the global
|
|
Community suggesting that climate
|
|
commitments can be relegated when faced
|
|
with daunting challenges or political
|
|
expediency this is a narrative we cannot
|
|
afford to entertain and as active
|
|
citizens should not tolerate especially
|
|
at a time when the urgency to act
|
|
against climate change is
|
|
Paramount nevertheless and despite these
|
|
challenges there remains a margin for
|
|
cautious optimism and a call to action
|
|
the road ahead in climate action is
|
|
indeed fraud with complexities but it
|
|
also presents opportunities for
|
|
transformative change the discussions at
|
|
cop 28 and the evolving business
|
|
strategies in response to these
|
|
conversations are not just formalities
|
|
let's grasp let's grasp this for a
|
|
second they are in essence survival
|
|
strategies for our economies our
|
|
communities and our planet so as we move
|
|
forward let us remember the words of the
|
|
former un Secretary General of the un
|
|
bimon who said there is no plan B well
|
|
because there is no Planet B This is Our
|
|
Moment to shift from incremental steps
|
|
to significant string climate action so
|
|
as we engage in today's discussions and
|
|
look towards cope 28 let's carry this
|
|
thought with us let's not only Envision
|
|
a sustainable world but let's actively
|
|
construct one our decisions our actions
|
|
will shape our Legacy one that we hope
|
|
will be marked by stewardship and
|
|
foresight as the book says let's be good
|
|
ancestors for the generations to come
|
|
let us challenge the status qu and
|
|
transform our Ambitions into tangible
|
|
actions for for our the future of our
|
|
planet hinges on the choices that we
|
|
make today so thank you so much for your
|
|
attention I wish you an enjoyable fierce
|
|
but productive day ahead thank
|
|
you
|
|
you just stay
|
|
there okay so thank you Janis thank you
|
|
terrific stuff we've got a bunch of
|
|
questions uh so keep them coming but I'm
|
|
going to pick up on a few of the ones
|
|
that have come through already um just a
|
|
little bit on the Regulatory and
|
|
governmental en environment and then
|
|
I'll move to kind of business business
|
|
issues um so question about private
|
|
initiatives
|
|
um and development of codes of conduct
|
|
actually let me ask you this specific
|
|
one I see mainly protectionist measures
|
|
such as the Border carbon adjustment
|
|
mechanism that taxes carbon and there's
|
|
also a question around uh carbon trading
|
|
markets what is your view of the
|
|
efficacy if you like of these types of
|
|
politically motivated attempts to to
|
|
manage these things sometimes for
|
|
climate benefit sometimes arguably for
|
|
yeah protectionist regions yeah so those
|
|
are two separate issues carbon markets
|
|
and the carbon border adjustment border
|
|
tax but I do think that um both
|
|
highlight the idea that even within the
|
|
system there might be market-based
|
|
solutions that we can take advantage of
|
|
so the devil is always in the details in
|
|
terms of how well do we design and
|
|
implement this market so in my view for
|
|
instance the fact that you might have a
|
|
carbon uh trading Market whereby you
|
|
reduce the carbon allowances for
|
|
instance in line with what science would
|
|
require us to do and therefore
|
|
constraining the market and in the
|
|
process um essentially pushing companies
|
|
to adjust their carbon emissions through
|
|
through an increasing price of this
|
|
offsets makes makes sense but the
|
|
question is how is it implemented is it
|
|
Global how does the European versus the
|
|
Chinese versus an American or the
|
|
Californian system change can we
|
|
exchange those globally because these in
|
|
a sense cannot be local markets because
|
|
we're addressing a global issue right so
|
|
again in those kinds of of of issues I
|
|
would I would go with with um um sort of
|
|
the devil is is in the design details
|
|
when it comes to the Border adjustment
|
|
tax I do understand the arguments that
|
|
it might be more protectionist but look
|
|
even the inflation reduction act in the
|
|
US um got criticism by the EU that is a
|
|
protectionist act now we haven't done
|
|
this before we need to navigate this and
|
|
these are all going back to the issue
|
|
that climate change and what we do is a
|
|
global problem it's the problem of you
|
|
know know of the commons if if you like
|
|
and we'll just have to work hard and
|
|
with political will to resolve them I I
|
|
frankly don't think there's anything
|
|
depending on you know how the the who's
|
|
going to pay for this tax I don't think
|
|
there's anything wrong in terms of
|
|
leveling the playing field and say you
|
|
know if you're producing in Europe with
|
|
low carbon and someone is trying to
|
|
undermine You by importing from
|
|
elsewhere with products that have been
|
|
produced with high intensity of of
|
|
carbon yeah of course you should be
|
|
taxed maybe that may create a race to
|
|
the top by other other comp countries
|
|
but again is going to be a design
|
|
feature what are you going to do with
|
|
those processs how are you going are you
|
|
going to increase the size of the
|
|
government are you going to redistribute
|
|
those tax proceeds back to the people in
|
|
a progressive or regressive way so there
|
|
again it's all about those design
|
|
choices that we make that will determine
|
|
the outcome and we will be coming back
|
|
to some of these issues around
|
|
government policy over the course of
|
|
today we'll also talk about measurement
|
|
and that was another question but I'm
|
|
not going to touch on it now let's go to
|
|
corporate strategy because you like like
|
|
myself I mean we're professors of
|
|
strategy we try to help companies to
|
|
make good choices somebody says I love
|
|
Colin mayor's definition of purpose the
|
|
one that I I used half an hour ago but
|
|
are there any good examples of big
|
|
companies who don't put growth and
|
|
profitability
|
|
first yeah frankly Julian I think that
|
|
this conversation of you know uh profits
|
|
first Milton Freedman said this Milton I
|
|
mean Milton Freedman is dead it's been a
|
|
long while so
|
|
in every sense right exactly so let's
|
|
let's actually have a more comp more
|
|
nuanced argument of what what's going on
|
|
here right so if if you look at the
|
|
business world there's no question that
|
|
if you see their stakeholder ecosystem
|
|
everybody is demanding that they do
|
|
things differently whether it's
|
|
customers investors governments
|
|
accountability in the supply chain and
|
|
so on and so forth so it's part of a
|
|
corporate objective right of course
|
|
you're a business you have to remain
|
|
profitable but the question is how are
|
|
you going to do this how are you going
|
|
to do this in a world where the
|
|
competitive lands is Shifting so
|
|
fundamentally because every single
|
|
demand that you're facing and these are
|
|
fundamental demands right we're talking
|
|
about your investors your customers and
|
|
so on you will need to adapt so this is
|
|
an adaptation Challenge and that's what
|
|
we so that's why I mentioned before it's
|
|
not a Rosy picture right I I don't agree
|
|
with this views that say oh you know
|
|
it's all about finding a stakeholder
|
|
finding win-win dance kumaya and the
|
|
world is going to be a better place it's
|
|
not it's a disruption and disruptions
|
|
are deadly think about you know Sears
|
|
Kodak Polaroid Blockbuster that was an
|
|
easy disruption compared to
|
|
sustainability so that's why I said that
|
|
sustainability has these two components
|
|
you have to start investing in a world
|
|
where these negative externalities are
|
|
going to be priced in so that's a higher
|
|
cost world and on top of that if you
|
|
have the foresight you also need to see
|
|
where will the opportunities arise right
|
|
but you have to do both and I think a
|
|
lot of the companies you know May in in
|
|
rhetoric for the focus on the
|
|
opportunity while misunderstanding the
|
|
elevated costs and while at the same
|
|
time not really building the capability
|
|
in order to build differentiated
|
|
position yeah so we need to wrap up I've
|
|
got one one final question for you I
|
|
mean you you absolutely as you lay out
|
|
the facts there's a risk of Doom and
|
|
Gloom as it were I avoided it though I
|
|
did try to avoid you did your best to
|
|
avoid but you know there are some un
|
|
escapable facts which are really uh
|
|
rather
|
|
uncomfortable um I'm wondering what what
|
|
makes you OB optimistic I mean there
|
|
must be some things that you see out
|
|
there you know in your conversations
|
|
with Business Leaders that that at least
|
|
give you some grounds for optimism I
|
|
mean and I guess I mean particularly
|
|
around businesses because those are our
|
|
our primary audiences a business school
|
|
what what do you see them doing do you
|
|
see any any role models that you can
|
|
really look to and say this is what
|
|
others should be yeah following I think
|
|
what the I mean in addition to being in
|
|
and I'm not saying this in a Cheesy way
|
|
but in addition to being in the lbs
|
|
classroom and seeing our current mbas
|
|
our embas across exeed even the the the
|
|
early careers seeing you know it used to
|
|
be the case that 15 years ago you have
|
|
to convince people about the why they
|
|
should care about these issues right
|
|
today they come in knowing all of these
|
|
facts and ready to and demanding of us
|
|
to tell them how on Earth do I do this
|
|
help me do this help me bring about that
|
|
change so that's one key component of
|
|
optimism the second one at the corporate
|
|
level is the fact that we are witnessing
|
|
and I think across the board and in most
|
|
indust is a profound level of
|
|
experimentation companies are truly
|
|
putting money into and and we are going
|
|
to see failures because these are
|
|
fundamentally difficult issues these
|
|
were issues that were always somebody
|
|
else's problem these were issues that
|
|
often they were under the rug like you
|
|
know meeting um all the greenhouse gas
|
|
emission gases for instance so there is
|
|
a um um a wave of profound
|
|
experimentation which we have already
|
|
seen paying off at least in some
|
|
Industries like electric vehicles
|
|
renewable energy and I think the task
|
|
the first task which was let's try to
|
|
instigate let's try to start the process
|
|
of change to a large degree has been uh
|
|
achieved and now so that's a point of
|
|
optimism and now the the the our key
|
|
challenge perhaps even bigger challenge
|
|
is how do we accelerate it right and I
|
|
think that even the fact that we got the
|
|
conversation to that point is a point of
|
|
optimism for me as well good a point of
|
|
optimism is where we will end thank you
|
|
thank you very much your thoughtful
|
|
ideas thank you everyone thank
|
|
you
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
### think ahead: Challenging Contemporary Energy Systems
|
|
URL: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hJOeONgMszA
|
|
|
|
Idioma: en
|
|
|
|
so we move directly on to our next
|
|
session and I am going to welcome up
|
|
onto the stage Professor Derek bun a
|
|
colleague at London Business School uh
|
|
who's going to be leading a panel to
|
|
talk about challenging contemporary
|
|
Energy Systems Paving the way for
|
|
transformation Derek thank you thanks
|
|
here we go go yeah please
|
|
yeah so if you you
|
|
sit thank you Julian so um we have uh um
|
|
I a challenging set of issues to go
|
|
through at the moment I think the energy
|
|
transition and it's been with us for
|
|
about 20 years since the Kyoto Protocol
|
|
and uh it's had its ups and downs
|
|
various progresses have been made and
|
|
you know in some respects I mean I feel
|
|
that the uh the easy things might have
|
|
been done already and the big challenges
|
|
are are kind of facing us at the moment
|
|
and so to kind of put some of those
|
|
things in perspective we have we have
|
|
three guests who are both prominent in
|
|
their fields and can bring a lot of
|
|
expertise uh into this area I'm very
|
|
pleased to to welcome Daniel Hannah from
|
|
from barles uh Albert from um uh
|
|
Bloomberg new energy finance and Marta
|
|
basz from BCG I'm going to ask them each
|
|
to kind of just say about a minute uh
|
|
for about a minute about themselves um
|
|
and what they do and what their
|
|
expertise is and then we're going to go
|
|
into some of the big questions and I
|
|
will post post some some topics there
|
|
that I think um are kind of crucial uh
|
|
over the next uh 20 years really in in
|
|
kind of building on the energy
|
|
transition and making a kind of a a
|
|
substantial impact on decarbonization
|
|
and there will be an opportunity for for
|
|
questions uh both online and and from
|
|
the audience um in the in the way that I
|
|
think has been explained to you already
|
|
um if you just scan the the the QR code
|
|
and they will appear on my um my um iPad
|
|
here and uh I I have the the uh the
|
|
privilege of deciding which ones I might
|
|
I might kind of ask the group so if we
|
|
if you could just spend um maybe 30
|
|
seconds introducing yourself what you do
|
|
uh and your expertise so so um Daniel
|
|
please yeah uh Daniel Hannah the global
|
|
head of sustainable Finance at Barley's
|
|
Bank um we've got a commitment to
|
|
mobilize a trillion dollars of
|
|
sustainable and transition Finance by
|
|
2030 and to align our financing towards
|
|
the NetZero pathway and we are um also
|
|
investing 500 million in early stage
|
|
climate
|
|
Technologies perfect thank you Albert
|
|
you um first of all yeah thank you very
|
|
much for having me um I so I noted
|
|
earlier that I'm the only person here on
|
|
stage who's not an alumni of lbs so
|
|
thank you in particular for for
|
|
welcoming me here to speak today um so
|
|
my name is Albert Chung I'm Deputy CEO
|
|
of Bloomberg NF we call ourselves bef
|
|
for short um and we are the research
|
|
business within Bloomberg that focuses
|
|
on low carbon transition um so all we do
|
|
every day is think about um the past
|
|
present and future of of global low
|
|
carbon transition across energy
|
|
transport industry um agriculture uh
|
|
increasingly financed as well um and uh
|
|
I've been there about 15 years at this
|
|
point so yeah looking forward to the
|
|
conversation yeah and and I promised
|
|
that you would be an honor Alum us after
|
|
this thank you very much it is a
|
|
pleasure to be here I'm Martha Vasquez
|
|
I've been in Upstream oil and gas
|
|
exclusively for more than 20 years the
|
|
first 10 at the slom so have field
|
|
operations practical uh experience
|
|
experience and I have the privilege to
|
|
be leading at BCG the topic of the
|
|
decarbonization of the Upstream asset
|
|
and I would like to also make the
|
|
disclaimer that uh we firmly believe I
|
|
firmly believe that oil and gas demand
|
|
will decline in most scenarios and there
|
|
is a big challenge to make sure that the
|
|
pathway is clear on how we do this in
|
|
the most responsible and low GSG
|
|
emissions way and that is my Miss
|
|
thank you very much thank you we we'll
|
|
come back to some of those points I'm
|
|
sure in the next half hour so I I think
|
|
I'd like to start by by taking a kind of
|
|
a perspective view um looking at at the
|
|
current trends looking at in particular
|
|
the challenges in the trends and that
|
|
and I think Albert you'll be best place
|
|
to kind of start that off with your your
|
|
work at
|
|
Bloomberg um so I'll try and kind of
|
|
talk a bit about where where we see
|
|
things at the moment I think to work in
|
|
energy transition is is to kind of live
|
|
with contradiction and to have cognitive
|
|
dissonance every day because you're
|
|
always seeing record growth things are
|
|
always moving faster than ever and the
|
|
progress is incredible but at the same
|
|
time it's it's never enough and you're
|
|
never like the transition is never
|
|
moving fast enough so maybe just to back
|
|
that up with a few kind of facts and
|
|
data points that we see from BF um last
|
|
year for the first time we saw more than
|
|
a trillion dollars invested into low
|
|
carbon Technologies so think of
|
|
renewable energy plants um electric
|
|
vehicles battery storage hydrogen um
|
|
carbon capture stage all these
|
|
Technologies we know and needed to to
|
|
achieve Net Zero and a trillion dollars
|
|
is not a small number it's uh it was a
|
|
fantastic um and it grew 30% year on
|
|
year so I don't think there's that many
|
|
Industries growing 30% year on year so
|
|
that's really great um renewable energy
|
|
installations this year will be um
|
|
almost 500 gaw again up 30% from the
|
|
year before um 90% of new power plant
|
|
capacity that's being installed is clean
|
|
so almost all if you're building a coal
|
|
or a gas plant today you're an absolute
|
|
minority um and and shrinking um
|
|
electric vehicles we think um today
|
|
they're probably 14 or 15% of the market
|
|
globally which is an incredible
|
|
achievement we used to count the number
|
|
of countries that had 1% EV sales and we
|
|
the first country the second wow we now
|
|
have three countries that have 1% today
|
|
it's 14% globally and we think it's 30%
|
|
in the next 3 years so just in
|
|
incredible progress um however lots of
|
|
challenges um you will have seen um
|
|
we're starting to see offshore wind
|
|
projects being cancelled um or auctions
|
|
for offshore wind failing and that's
|
|
probably the biggest kind of red flag
|
|
that we've seen recently um and that's
|
|
because of supply chain disruption cost
|
|
inflation and there's this window right
|
|
now where the costs of key Renewable
|
|
Energy Technologies have risen and so
|
|
the project developers who signed
|
|
contracts in the last year or two to
|
|
deliver projects at a certain power
|
|
price now suddenly find themselves
|
|
unable to achieve those those power
|
|
prices that they they said they would do
|
|
so they're having to cancel their
|
|
projects and that's causing a lot of
|
|
pain and it's putting at risk some of
|
|
the the energy and climate targets of
|
|
certain countries and we're also seeing
|
|
Rising competition between countries um
|
|
we all know that these Technologies are
|
|
largely produced in Asia many of them
|
|
produced in China anywhere between 50 to
|
|
80% of the supply chain of these
|
|
Technologies is in China and so you have
|
|
the US Europe India other countries
|
|
stepping in and saying well we want a
|
|
piece of that pie so we're going to
|
|
start um putting in TR barriers and
|
|
subsidizing local production which is is
|
|
creating some tension as well and then I
|
|
think the going back to the cognitive
|
|
dissonance just with all that growth um
|
|
if you take that trillion dollars you
|
|
add in another 300 billion that's going
|
|
into Power grids investment which is
|
|
also critical for the transition you get
|
|
to about $1.4 trillion going into kind
|
|
of Net Zero compatible kit that's that's
|
|
being deployed at the moment um we think
|
|
we need to be doing three times that
|
|
much about $ four and a half trillion
|
|
dollar per year for the rest of this
|
|
decade in order to get on track for Net
|
|
Zero by 2050 so that's the scale of the
|
|
challenge um and we I know we want to
|
|
talk about hard toate sectors and so on
|
|
but maybe I'll leave it there for now
|
|
and we can come back to other challenges
|
|
as well yeah thank you very much that's
|
|
good and I think just where that that
|
|
those trillions are going to come from I
|
|
think um we we've got the third speaker
|
|
that can perhaps say a few things about
|
|
that um I'd like to ask you a little bit
|
|
about the the supply chain issues that
|
|
you brought up I mean to what do you
|
|
think those are temporary or do do you
|
|
think there really has been a structural
|
|
shift and that and that this this idea
|
|
that the costs are going to continue to
|
|
come down is now historic and that that
|
|
going forward the you know the supply
|
|
chain issues are crucial and possibly
|
|
becoming more crucial um there's good
|
|
news on that front um so um as I said
|
|
during the energy crisis because of
|
|
these disruptions um solar became more
|
|
expensive for the first time in 15 years
|
|
batteries became more expensive for the
|
|
first time in 15 years and and wind as
|
|
well all those things have been coming
|
|
down for a long time so solar is now
|
|
backed down and back down in in fact to
|
|
record lows and because the supply chain
|
|
responded very quickly that's been an
|
|
incredible turnaround just in the last
|
|
year so on solo we're we're in a great
|
|
place actually it's hurting the
|
|
manufacturers because they've they've
|
|
now
|
|
overinvestment year um in about a week
|
|
and a half um and I can't tell you the
|
|
result of that but I can tell you it's
|
|
yeah things are looking better and then
|
|
um wind is really the one that's still
|
|
having pain and I I do think it will
|
|
return to a downward cost Trend it's
|
|
just taking little bit longer because it
|
|
it's easier for the other Supply chains
|
|
to respond for a variety of different
|
|
reasons um the raw materials are um uh
|
|
smaller markets that can respond more
|
|
quickly the supply chains frankly a lot
|
|
of them are in China and Those comp
|
|
companies can respond more quickly so I
|
|
think wind is just going to be a little
|
|
bit slower to respond and that's why
|
|
you've just got this window where
|
|
projects are really challenged but
|
|
ultimately we we think it does turn
|
|
around yeah that's good to hear your
|
|
optimism we we may come back to some of
|
|
the those issues shortly I mean I'd like
|
|
to pass over to you now Mar and
|
|
particularly uh from the the oil and gas
|
|
perspective um in in some respects there
|
|
hasn't been quite so much progress there
|
|
as there has been in power generation
|
|
and you know I'd like to to kind of hear
|
|
your thoughts on on kind of what are the
|
|
possible easy wins that we might have in
|
|
the near term and what may need to
|
|
happen in in the medium and longer term
|
|
thank you thank you Derek just to ground
|
|
us on some of the facts the oil and gas
|
|
industry contributes to 5.1 gigaton of
|
|
emissions scope one and two this is
|
|
about 15% of the emissions in energy and
|
|
uh but when you put together the scope 3
|
|
emissions that is about
|
|
24 um gigaton which is more than 50% of
|
|
the emissions in energy and you are
|
|
noing so I think you some of you are are
|
|
familiar with this statistic it it is
|
|
material okay it it matters just
|
|
intrinsically from the footprint now I
|
|
started my introduction just saying that
|
|
um there is only one way going forward
|
|
which is a decline for the demand and
|
|
the supply of oil and gas still there is
|
|
a big role to play for this asset class
|
|
however not all the barrels are equal
|
|
okay and we believe that whenever uh
|
|
whenever we put together all the barrels
|
|
in the world uh both what is existing
|
|
what is in development what is in
|
|
Exploration what hasn't been uh explored
|
|
yet uh some of those barrels will stay
|
|
on the ground and the winning barrels
|
|
will be the low low cost and the low
|
|
emissions barrels now you you say we
|
|
haven't made uh enough progress there
|
|
the pressure I I want to make a third
|
|
Point around the pressure that is in is
|
|
high it has been high and it is
|
|
increasing is extremely hard and we will
|
|
hear more from Daniel uh and I was just
|
|
in a conference in in London uh over the
|
|
last today increasingly hard to get
|
|
access to Capital it is not debt but
|
|
especially when there is a uh a
|
|
transition from the big owner to the
|
|
meat and a small cap company um they
|
|
need to demonstrate that they are doing
|
|
this in the most competitive way uh to
|
|
get access to Capital Talent extremely
|
|
difficult to access the talent pool that
|
|
we have in this room and to actually
|
|
retain the great people that we have who
|
|
we by the way we need in order to
|
|
decarbonize other Industries as well
|
|
right and uh finally there is a huge
|
|
pressure and um on the tax front on the
|
|
fiscal front I think most people here
|
|
will have heard of the IRA in the US
|
|
Australia has made progress in methan
|
|
the the carbon border mechanism in
|
|
Europe but also the methan uh the methan
|
|
emissions tax Outlook all of that is
|
|
putting pressure this is an important
|
|
point to remember
|
|
now why else we haven't done enough
|
|
progress um I think what what we notice
|
|
is extremely hard uh for uh for
|
|
companies to T called the energy
|
|
trilemma I think for the last three
|
|
years this is a topic that we have
|
|
spoken at length but we can leave it so
|
|
vividly in new ways even in the UK right
|
|
in the UK that we have the offshore
|
|
petroleum licensing bill you know uh
|
|
being proposed at the moment so that we
|
|
can have annual licensing rounds there
|
|
is a big element of energy security okay
|
|
energy security that if countries like
|
|
the UK have it in top of Mind imagine
|
|
other countries in the world who are
|
|
very early not only in their energy
|
|
security but the second point is the the
|
|
economic growth element and on top of
|
|
that having to decarbonize and do this
|
|
uh with a net zero mindset is extremely
|
|
hard sometimes to to reconcile these
|
|
tensions and possibly the fifth point
|
|
that we leave every day whenever we work
|
|
with some of these companies is that
|
|
it's extremely hard to change the
|
|
context in which people work it is not
|
|
only about the operational and Technical
|
|
challenge or the commercial and the
|
|
financial challenge it's about creating
|
|
the context for people to make different
|
|
choices every day right the people who
|
|
are doing offshore and onshore
|
|
operations have to have the right
|
|
performance framework and incentives to
|
|
say hey I'm going to take eight hours to
|
|
restart this well instead of two hours
|
|
okay to minimize flaring because this is
|
|
one of the most practical l so to
|
|
transform each of these companies it
|
|
takes time it is not going to happen in
|
|
weeks so I can expect uh the earlier we
|
|
engage um the better but it will still
|
|
take uh months um and possibly the last
|
|
the six point just in direct answer to
|
|
what can we do today versus what might
|
|
take
|
|
longer this is a positive news by the
|
|
way but uh 40% of the emissions uh um I
|
|
mean there is a dark side but a positive
|
|
news 40% of scope one into emissions in
|
|
in in my industry is from methan uh and
|
|
it is has it is woring from one side but
|
|
on the other side we have viable
|
|
technically operationally and economical
|
|
solutions to Abate this emissions today
|
|
it is not IR realistic when a company
|
|
says by 2030 I will be zero mean
|
|
operations okay so this is really
|
|
important together with Energy
|
|
Efficiency in flaring there goes 50% of
|
|
the footprint okay now longer term what
|
|
people are what we need to bet uh to bet
|
|
on in order to really have a net zero
|
|
pathway is two main things
|
|
electrification for which Renewables or
|
|
nuclear or anything that is uh lower uh
|
|
G emissions is is really critical
|
|
enabler and carbon capture so ccs and
|
|
fortunately just to end in a in a
|
|
positive note part of the actions that
|
|
we see
|
|
many oil and gas companies taking is
|
|
actually launching these new businesses
|
|
right and I think if some of the some of
|
|
the gains in this very profitable
|
|
industry go towards launching these
|
|
businesses as soon as possible I think
|
|
it is a huge contribution to the energy
|
|
transition yeah thank thank you very
|
|
much M there's a lot in in what you have
|
|
said there um I I want to pick up very
|
|
quickly on a couple of points and then
|
|
then then then bring in bring in Daniel
|
|
I mean methane is very topical at the
|
|
moment and you right to suggest that
|
|
that that is a possible um significant
|
|
win that that can happen I mean as
|
|
probably most people know or not
|
|
everyone I mean methane is about eight
|
|
times as detrimental as carbon dioxide
|
|
in terms of emissions uh and and a lot
|
|
of it can be solved by better
|
|
operational performance um what's what's
|
|
the quality of a kind of international
|
|
government governance and audit and
|
|
uh in some way
|
|
authenticating the the the supply chain
|
|
for for methane I mean given that a
|
|
number of countries are putting in uh
|
|
regulations uh that oil and gas you know
|
|
should should have methane limits below
|
|
certain levels EU has just done that and
|
|
so on um I mean I mean is is the quality
|
|
of monitoring sufficient to be able to
|
|
kind of uh authorize that process yeah
|
|
no thank you Derek and uh
|
|
no
|
|
uh and and I would like to say more uh
|
|
no uh however in some jurisdictions
|
|
we're moving really fast and I think it
|
|
is the
|
|
combination uh when it works best we
|
|
have a combination of Market you know
|
|
pushing for a shareholder and the the
|
|
commitments of the companies but also
|
|
the fiscal and Regulatory support when
|
|
you put them together it can I think it
|
|
can be quite powerful uh to create not
|
|
only the pressure to have to do it uh
|
|
but also a way to monetize the low G
|
|
emissions hydrocarbons and the two more
|
|
points the certification of this low G
|
|
emissions gas is an increasingly
|
|
important topic and miq is an example we
|
|
work closely with them is an example of
|
|
a third party organization who says I
|
|
think we were talking before um it is
|
|
not about monitoring mean emissions at a
|
|
country level level it's hard to take
|
|
action we need to go to the asset level
|
|
to the facility level to be able to
|
|
track down and be able to certify hey
|
|
yes you know along the value chain this
|
|
LG cargo is indeed you know L um mean
|
|
emissions so yeah that is the
|
|
certification and possibly the last part
|
|
I just would like to give the audience
|
|
and the panelists here confidence that
|
|
we do see and we are working with
|
|
companies who are taking action to
|
|
prepare you know for more market and uh
|
|
government support and incentives but
|
|
also to be able to monetize these low G
|
|
emissions G emissions gas thank you and
|
|
then there's just one other thing that
|
|
that you you mentioned um and that that
|
|
I think possibly could link back to an
|
|
aspect that Albert you could comment on
|
|
um you you talk about the the kind of
|
|
the inevitability of of demand
|
|
Destruction for for oil um uh I'm not so
|
|
sure about that I mean a lot of that
|
|
depends upon the transportation sector
|
|
and the transportation sector basically
|
|
um in that context is all about
|
|
electrification and I just wonder um
|
|
what the scope is for electric vehicles
|
|
uh in uh third world countries in you
|
|
know in in Africa in in South America do
|
|
we really expect
|
|
Transportation uh in developing
|
|
countries to move away from diesel uh
|
|
and
|
|
I don't know I don't know if you want to
|
|
comment or maybe Albert first of all in
|
|
terms of of Trends you're seeing on
|
|
electrification I mean globally not not
|
|
just in um sure maybe just very quickly
|
|
I think um if you take our sort of base
|
|
case view from our long-term electric
|
|
vehicle Outlook um ro road fuel demand
|
|
Peaks sometime later this decade um and
|
|
then starts to decline from there um but
|
|
we we need to go a lot faster if we're
|
|
going to reach Net Zero and I think
|
|
Emerging Market countries are one of the
|
|
big um you know call it challenges um
|
|
and adoption in those countries is
|
|
really really far behind so when I talk
|
|
about the 14 or 15% penetration of EV
|
|
sales globally today um that's because
|
|
the big markets are doing that heavy
|
|
lifting China Europe uh us is catching
|
|
up and those are responsible for you
|
|
know I don't know the very large portion
|
|
of auto sales but it overlooks many many
|
|
many small markets where penetrations
|
|
are not or
|
|
1% um I think this can change I think
|
|
it'll change first in the kind of two
|
|
and three wheelers Market think of you
|
|
know bikes and um Tuk TS and things like
|
|
that buses as well I think those will
|
|
change first but even with cars I think
|
|
there's there's room for optimism
|
|
because we see in the second half of
|
|
this decade between 2026 and 2030
|
|
depending where you are in the world um
|
|
it will become cheaper to buy an EV than
|
|
to buy an equivalent quality internal
|
|
combustion engine 2030 2031 in Emerging
|
|
Market countries for cheaper cars so
|
|
it's a a bit further away in those
|
|
markets but it is coming um and that's I
|
|
think that's when it starts to become
|
|
interesting can can I can I come in here
|
|
because I I think it's worth just
|
|
stepping back I mean five years ago 1 in
|
|
70 new cars were EVS now this year we'll
|
|
probably be at what one in four one in
|
|
five and so just in five years we have
|
|
seen an exponential growth in EVs and I
|
|
take your point very much on on Emerging
|
|
Markets but actually here the majority
|
|
of mileage done in Emerging Markets is
|
|
two wheelers not four uh and you're
|
|
seeing in places like India huge
|
|
Innovation already on in terms of EVS uh
|
|
in terms of the two-wheeler Market but
|
|
then also battery swapping and the sort
|
|
of infrastructure around that that can
|
|
really start thinking about how you
|
|
create an ecosystem so actually India
|
|
kind of gives me hope that again you
|
|
know what what we have seen is
|
|
technology has consistently outperformed
|
|
the expectations particularly in places
|
|
like on Sola and and EVS I think the big
|
|
question if I if I can keep going uh the
|
|
big question for all of us though which
|
|
I think and Mar and Albert did a
|
|
fantastic job scene setting the one
|
|
thing we haven't talked about was
|
|
interest rates were a rock bottom level
|
|
for the whole last decade and a bit in
|
|
which we've seen this tremendous growth
|
|
so I think actually one of the big
|
|
challenges speaking as a as a banker is
|
|
you know is the transition affordable at
|
|
5% interest rates I I think that is and
|
|
you've seen that impact in the markets
|
|
in terms of valuations of some of the
|
|
very big renewable companies coming down
|
|
70% since their Peak um and it is
|
|
definitely getting harder to raise
|
|
capital for even great companies I mean
|
|
we work with a lot of early companies
|
|
and you know that process is now
|
|
probably taking more like 12 to 18
|
|
months when you know just a year ago it
|
|
was probably taking about six so there's
|
|
definitely the the trend has shifted and
|
|
I think it's important to reflect that
|
|
but and I think it was right that I go
|
|
last because money in some ways I think
|
|
is is the last thing to worry about I
|
|
think as as Mar and Albert very well set
|
|
out if the context works if if the
|
|
project works the transaction Works
|
|
money will find a way and I think
|
|
there's really two big challenges in my
|
|
mind that we need to solve for one is we
|
|
need to scale Renewables I think Albert
|
|
absolutely correctly talked about it
|
|
three-fold increase in Renewables needed
|
|
we need to Electrify what we can and
|
|
then power that through Renewables and
|
|
the second is that we need to really
|
|
tackle these hard to evate sectors that
|
|
Martha kind of talked about 30% of the
|
|
emissions that we need to reduce in this
|
|
decade is going to come from new
|
|
technologies that need to get Scaled up
|
|
so you take those two things and I think
|
|
that then presents two challenges um at
|
|
Barkley's we've funded Moray West which
|
|
is going to power half of Scotland's
|
|
electricity through offshore wind um and
|
|
in my past life I've done a lot of
|
|
renewable financing including the
|
|
largest uh concentrated solar Park in in
|
|
the world but the Big Challenge and the
|
|
big stat that sort of was missed out is
|
|
if you strip out the big countries China
|
|
and India Renewables are basically flat
|
|
since Paris and I think that's that's a
|
|
disaster so how do we scale financing
|
|
into the emerging you know the the
|
|
lowest the countries that have most
|
|
exposed from climate change and actually
|
|
have the biggest opportunity Elite R I
|
|
think is one of the big challenges we're
|
|
going to see more around things like
|
|
using the World Bank and other catalytic
|
|
type Capital crowd in the private sector
|
|
but really we've got to collectively
|
|
think about how do we go after uh and
|
|
really Electrify at PACE um and then
|
|
power that through Renewables and
|
|
Emerging Markets the second one is about
|
|
the hard to evate sectors so how do we
|
|
tackle other sectors where you can't use
|
|
electricity uh and power those through
|
|
Renewables and so that's going to need
|
|
new technology um Mar talked a couple of
|
|
those carbon capture hydrogen the likes
|
|
at Barkley we think the hydrogen Market
|
|
is going to grow Eightfold over the next
|
|
sort of couple of decades and we're
|
|
already starting to see momentum coming
|
|
in there but we need to move faster to
|
|
tackle climate change we've got to take
|
|
great ideas from ideation to IPO and at
|
|
Barkley we're trying to create this kind
|
|
of escalator to speed that up that's why
|
|
we've got some very focused Partnerships
|
|
around the early stage there's something
|
|
that we do with unreasonable and
|
|
actually I was with them yesterday with
|
|
20 new companies that are thinking about
|
|
all these sort of challenges um we've
|
|
backed 300 of those companies over the
|
|
last since 2016 they've gone on to raise
|
|
over 10 billion of financing employed
|
|
more than 24,000 of people um and some
|
|
of them have then gone unlisted we're
|
|
also deploying 500 million to support
|
|
these technology companies directly
|
|
through Equity carbon capture some Great
|
|
British companies like Brill power and
|
|
the energy storage or proteum which is a
|
|
hydrogen Solutions company but we've got
|
|
this Gap at the moment this kind of
|
|
scale Gap and broadly I think that we've
|
|
got very good as an industry at scaling
|
|
software companies right Facebook social
|
|
media these type of companies but the
|
|
issue there is adding a million people
|
|
onto those platforms is a marginal
|
|
increase in capital in climate Tech you
|
|
basically have an exponential increase
|
|
in capital you have more and more
|
|
Capital that you kind of need to deploy
|
|
and I think that the finance industry as
|
|
a whole is not very well suited for for
|
|
tackling this missing middle of capital
|
|
and that's something that we're very
|
|
focused on I think a couple of things
|
|
that will help the inflation reduction
|
|
act in the US the EU new green deal the
|
|
sort of work that the UK is doing around
|
|
providing cfd back stops for some of
|
|
these new technologies but overall we
|
|
need to innovate there to really scale
|
|
up these technologies that can tackle
|
|
the heart to evate sectors I'll pause
|
|
that thank you and and I think that that
|
|
queued into a number of things that I
|
|
was going to ask you about um but I mean
|
|
you mentioned hydrogen um and I mean I
|
|
mean hydrogen's to to me seems to be a
|
|
kind of a major challenge because you're
|
|
trying to kind of create a new economy
|
|
almost um o overnight it's not just you
|
|
you're bringing in something like an
|
|
offshore wind and it's going to kind of
|
|
slot in where there was previously other
|
|
kind of generation you know you you
|
|
you're developing something which has
|
|
got production infrastructure and Market
|
|
um I mean h how does that new economy
|
|
come in because you you've got the
|
|
demand the infrastructure and the supply
|
|
all of which don't exist at the moment
|
|
um I mean do do you see that being done
|
|
through major policy commitments or do
|
|
you do you see it being done through if
|
|
you like organic growth where the the
|
|
industrial sector does it first because
|
|
they need to do and then and then from
|
|
the industrial clusters it it spreads
|
|
out um it's clear that we need long-term
|
|
storage and it's clear that hydrogen is
|
|
the best solution for that
|
|
but I mean I I think I think the
|
|
investment will is it makes a lot of
|
|
sense but but how does that kind of
|
|
translate in into the development of the
|
|
sector so I think it's a great set of
|
|
question we probably do a whole panel on
|
|
just hydrogen and I'm sure Albert and
|
|
Mar have got very strong views on this
|
|
as well um I I'm not sure I agree with
|
|
you that it is the solution for
|
|
long-term storage I mean I think there
|
|
batteries um and deploying other
|
|
Technologies we've backed a company
|
|
called Energy Dome that use compressed
|
|
CO2 that can provide more than 24 hours
|
|
storage at a very cost effective rate so
|
|
I think there's a lot of innovation in
|
|
the storage but I think the challenge
|
|
where I see hydrogen fitting in is the
|
|
things where you can't use Renewables
|
|
and storage in a simple way and where
|
|
you may have excess renewable capacity
|
|
then I think to your point you could
|
|
then transfer it but the economics
|
|
around hydrogen I think are you know
|
|
there's a lot that we could talk about
|
|
there but to come back to your framing
|
|
which I think was right I think one of
|
|
the big challenges is we got a
|
|
coordination problem so you're a
|
|
professor of decision sciences and I
|
|
think is exactly right so you need both
|
|
investment from the producers and the
|
|
consumers but both producers and
|
|
consumer looking at each other and
|
|
saying well you go first and that leads
|
|
to a sort of suboptimal equilibrium and
|
|
so that's why I think policy has to play
|
|
a really key role the inflation
|
|
reduction act which I think you know
|
|
estimates and again probably these are
|
|
Albert's numbers I'm sure I'm borrowing
|
|
you know could unlock over a trillion
|
|
dollars in carbon capture and hydrogen
|
|
both of which have been mentioned big
|
|
policy tool we're seeing the hydrogen
|
|
hubs here in the UK as well I think
|
|
that's really really important um but
|
|
the key thing that we need to deliver I
|
|
think is kind of
|
|
from a to make a project bankable is
|
|
offtake and so how you can have
|
|
long-term off-take of these things which
|
|
really comes to this this point around
|
|
if you like the inflation reduction Act
|
|
is trying to pump Prime the production
|
|
but we need to see the consuming sort of
|
|
businesses effectively commit to
|
|
long-term off-take so if you look at I
|
|
was involved in financing the world's
|
|
largest green hydrogen project in in in
|
|
Saudi Arabia and Y and effectively that
|
|
was the key piece there was a long-term
|
|
off take often these places there aren't
|
|
now there is some discussions going on
|
|
in us and UK policy tools effectively
|
|
how do you provide that sort of support
|
|
in the absence of it as a temporary
|
|
thing and then get the private sector to
|
|
come in so I think this this is a very
|
|
live issue I think you put your finger
|
|
absolutely on it um and there's a lot of
|
|
work going on across the finance
|
|
industry and policy to think about what
|
|
are the solutions to tackling that but I
|
|
think Albert I'm sure you no yeah Daniel
|
|
Mak some really important points and
|
|
I'll just maybe build a little bit and
|
|
add a couple other other other points to
|
|
that I think um one thing that's
|
|
important to know about hydrogen is I
|
|
think there is now a a consensus a
|
|
narrowing consensus around where
|
|
hydrogen should actually be used and it
|
|
used to be this idea hydrogen will be
|
|
used everywhere and we use it in our
|
|
homes and our cars and I think all a lot
|
|
of those things have gone away and it's
|
|
really understood now there's some
|
|
really key applications where hydrogen
|
|
is required to decarbonized like steel
|
|
production um ammonia production
|
|
chemicals you know some some parts of
|
|
refining now the issue is that those are
|
|
big industrial companies whose products
|
|
are Commodities and therefore if they
|
|
are not competitive if they decarbonize
|
|
first but but become uncompetitive
|
|
because they've taken on a load of cost
|
|
then they lose so they they've gone
|
|
green but they go out of business and if
|
|
you want to buy green hydrogen today
|
|
it's probably going to cost you5 or $6
|
|
doar per kilogram depending where you
|
|
are in the world most of these
|
|
industrial companies say we need it to
|
|
be one or $2 per kilogram if we're going
|
|
to be able to uh switch to hydrogen and
|
|
still be competitive so that premium for
|
|
them like somebody's got to help deal
|
|
with that so whether it's government
|
|
mandate subsidies um uh things like that
|
|
but but what's interesting is when once
|
|
you feed that through so if you're a
|
|
steel manufacturer and you switch to
|
|
hydrogen and it increases your costs by
|
|
10% it makes you uncompetitive but for
|
|
the car manufacturer who's buying that
|
|
steel to make a car the car that's sold
|
|
at the end is maybe only 1% more
|
|
expensive and to us as a car buyer you
|
|
you would find that negligible you would
|
|
say I didn't even notice that so I think
|
|
there's to your point about off-take I
|
|
think there's really um an important
|
|
focus on how do you get the whole chain
|
|
to recognize this value or somehow kind
|
|
of connect the user through to the the
|
|
kind of green hydrogen whether it s kind
|
|
of green certificates or other programs
|
|
that can really connect it through and I
|
|
think that's where well we it needs more
|
|
work and more thought to figure that out
|
|
yeah thank you and in terms of the chain
|
|
Upstream I mean are are they oil and gas
|
|
companies enthusiastic about developing
|
|
their capabilities in hydrogen or are
|
|
they dragging their feet I think um um
|
|
more
|
|
broadly many of them are enthusiastic
|
|
not only about hydrogen but about carbon
|
|
capture and Renewables I think there is
|
|
at least um two examples and I hope it's
|
|
okay to expand Beyond outside of
|
|
hydrogen but just I think in the last
|
|
two weeks we heard the total energies is
|
|
a partner partly owner of the largest
|
|
offshore wind farm in Scotland and it
|
|
has just started 114 turbines so I think
|
|
that is a very tangible example of
|
|
something that a traditional oil and gas
|
|
integrated company is doing right to uh
|
|
to expand uh there is also I think over
|
|
the last six months uh exom Mobile in
|
|
the U in the US acquired a 5 billion
|
|
pipeline operator to support the carbon
|
|
capture agenda so I think it is we need
|
|
them in this business we need them in
|
|
the future in the future businesses and
|
|
I'm I'm very glad to see that thank you
|
|
can I ask the panel kind of a pointed
|
|
question on this um you know we we
|
|
understand how to decarbonize the
|
|
electricity system in this country for
|
|
example what what do we do about the gas
|
|
Network um I mean do do we expect
|
|
hydrogen to be the the solution for
|
|
decarbonizing the gas Network do we
|
|
think the gas Network should become a
|
|
stranded asset and we shouldn't use it
|
|
anymore I wean
|
|
do I I yeah let me go first because we
|
|
we we are the carbonizing gas networks
|
|
at the moment and by the way um we need
|
|
the gas Network to be transporting gas
|
|
low carbon for the foreseeable future I
|
|
think first before we I I hand over to
|
|
you to speak about the hydrogen uh
|
|
Network and most I would say 90 or 95%
|
|
of the emissions are methan leaks so
|
|
which we can actually aate today so I
|
|
genuinely feel really positive you know
|
|
about the Outlook this almost low
|
|
hanging fruit um to decarbonize the the
|
|
gas Network
|
|
there so by decarbonizing you you mean
|
|
putting hydrogen through the existing
|
|
network no I mean I mean transporting
|
|
gas with low G emissions impact I'm
|
|
talking about the operation
|
|
Transportation the switch no the the
|
|
switch of fuel that is a that is that's
|
|
a different topic right but the point is
|
|
that we will need gas between now in
|
|
2050 right okay yeah yeah but do you
|
|
have any thought on decarbonizing gas
|
|
yeah just to say you know we have our
|
|
own Net Zero scenario that we've built
|
|
at BF that goes out to 2050 and kind of
|
|
tries to answer the question of what's
|
|
the technology mix that will decarbonize
|
|
the global energy economy in that
|
|
Outlook in the net zero scenario we
|
|
still have oil we still have gas we
|
|
still have coal in 2050 um alongside
|
|
some carbon capture and storage a little
|
|
tiny little bit of carbon removal for
|
|
for some of the really really difficult
|
|
things so I don't think we're saying
|
|
these fields go away and and you still
|
|
need to transport the hydrogen if you're
|
|
going to have hydrogen in some of these
|
|
um facilities you're going to need to
|
|
transport the hydrogen as well so there
|
|
will be a role for molecules that will
|
|
be retained in a net zero world but it
|
|
will be smaller it will be quite quite a
|
|
lot smaller in some cases so I think the
|
|
challenge and the question for gas
|
|
networks is what does that transition
|
|
really look like for them how do you
|
|
avoid kind of um investing in stranded
|
|
assets and that there you need to go
|
|
much more in depth into what's the role
|
|
of this particular asset is there a
|
|
carbon capture inore storage facility
|
|
nearby which makes it Net Zero
|
|
compatible and so on it I think it gets
|
|
quite specific at that point interesting
|
|
do you do have a view on this Danel I
|
|
mean so the only thing I would add is is
|
|
also this point around carbon capture
|
|
because I think we're going to have to
|
|
use pipes to effectively transport CO2
|
|
the other way to to storage so I think
|
|
and I think I'll pick up on Albert's
|
|
point which is maybe to tie it a little
|
|
bit back for things like hydrogen but I
|
|
think we're going to see the emergence
|
|
of very large projects like neon but
|
|
then also there are going to be some
|
|
very specific on on site situations
|
|
where you're trying to decarbonize
|
|
something that's just very hard to do so
|
|
and then there'll be the emergence of
|
|
these sort of smaller projects there
|
|
kind of a barbell Outlook and I think
|
|
that context then becomes really key
|
|
because I think we can all model things
|
|
um you know very well now and you know
|
|
they've got some great modeling that BNF
|
|
and others have done but actually there
|
|
is the Practical context of when you're
|
|
trying to decarbonize a situation and
|
|
that may mean that you're using
|
|
something that from a model perspective
|
|
looks suboptimal but needs to be
|
|
delivered so I think we're going to see
|
|
these bespoke small projects that's
|
|
something that I mentioned proteum
|
|
that's where they're very much focused
|
|
and these really large Mega projects
|
|
that are going to kind of think about
|
|
how do we get things like green ammonia
|
|
and others to the most cost- effective U
|
|
Place possible thank thank you um I
|
|
actually wanted to to ask you a question
|
|
Daniel about infrastructure in general
|
|
and infrastructure financing um I mean
|
|
we we've we've spoken a lot about about
|
|
the Technologies which are coming in but
|
|
when you're thinking about
|
|
electrification in general the the
|
|
degree of network expansion that has to
|
|
occur is enormous not not just the kind
|
|
of the high voltage but but local as
|
|
well I mean um what what's the kind of
|
|
the the solution there I mean is a scope
|
|
for a lot more third-party Finance in
|
|
infrastructure ownership we've already
|
|
seen in this country for example
|
|
separation of the system operator from
|
|
from the the transmission ownership
|
|
which should open up the potential for
|
|
for you know independent investment uh
|
|
in a regulated way on infrastructure
|
|
assets is that an asset class that would
|
|
be
|
|
attractive um regulated asset class
|
|
obviously and more of that or I mean it
|
|
has to happen no no I think it's a very
|
|
good question I think it definitely does
|
|
I think we have seen infrastructure
|
|
become a sort of recognized asset glass
|
|
and actually increasing amounts of
|
|
capital going into financing it I mean
|
|
you're absolutely right I think the
|
|
amount of capital I think Albert touched
|
|
on this as well that needs to go into
|
|
grid infrastructure is is is very
|
|
significant we're going to have to see
|
|
um companies that own and run grids you
|
|
know increase the amount of investment
|
|
you know manyfold over the next um few
|
|
years and that needs to be financed I
|
|
think it will be financed through Equity
|
|
I think it'll be financed through
|
|
infrastructure debt and and the like so
|
|
um and then that effectively has got to
|
|
be paid at some point as well so I I
|
|
think I I think the capital actually for
|
|
infrastructure is is actually an easier
|
|
discussion to have because in some ways
|
|
that's scaling what we've already got
|
|
and I think you've seen a number of very
|
|
large funds like Brookfield and other
|
|
raise large amounts of capital to deploy
|
|
into these sort of decarbonization
|
|
stories and other things for me the
|
|
bigger challenge actually is this
|
|
scaling of the next set of Technologies
|
|
these sort of Technologies full the hard
|
|
to evate sector and that sort of missing
|
|
middle I talked about rather than say
|
|
the infrastructure financing I think you
|
|
know for the right project the right
|
|
sort of scope money will find its way
|
|
for that but I actually think the the
|
|
sort of this mid middle of capital for
|
|
how the sort of new technology the next
|
|
wave of climate Tech that's going to
|
|
require a bit more Innovative
|
|
thinking and and there's a thinking
|
|
there because um that that technology is
|
|
unproven and it's very high risk because
|
|
of that or be because it's kind of
|
|
economic role is not understood or or
|
|
yeah that it it may not be the right
|
|
solution it it's all of the above I
|
|
think it's all those situations and and
|
|
I think we should you know think about
|
|
EVS I mean to to to use an example just
|
|
to make the point but I think the first
|
|
EV came over like more than a 100 years
|
|
ago um we are trying to scale some
|
|
technologies that um not all I mean
|
|
hydrogen and carbon capture have been
|
|
around in some components but some of
|
|
these other areas we are trying to scale
|
|
technologies that are very
|
|
nent um and you've got effectively risk
|
|
on risk you've got new technology risk
|
|
you you've got infrastructure risk
|
|
you've got Le sort of regulatory risk as
|
|
well so I think it's there is a number
|
|
of different um Dimensions there that
|
|
even with you know certainty as I have
|
|
that we are going to see this kind of uh
|
|
decarbonization wave continue it's just
|
|
a question of how fast um you know for
|
|
an investor that's a very hard set of
|
|
risks to break down and so that's where
|
|
you know public private kind of
|
|
coordination can really work and I also
|
|
think coordination across um both within
|
|
the industry you know Insurance private
|
|
Equity Banks but then I think Albert
|
|
made a fantastic point which I hly agree
|
|
on we're going to have to start thinking
|
|
about value chain financing and value
|
|
change Solutions and how do you
|
|
effectively look through the entire
|
|
ecosystem and work out how to
|
|
effectively uh effectively create the
|
|
lookth through that allows that
|
|
situation to be bankable um across the
|
|
ecosystem thank you thank you very much
|
|
that that leads into uh a question which
|
|
is not a surprise in this institution
|
|
it's coming from the audience and that
|
|
is you know the the scope for for new
|
|
businesses for startups for for uh
|
|
Innovation uh for the kind of things
|
|
that that graduates from Business
|
|
Schools like to do um I mean do you see
|
|
the the this the energy transition being
|
|
a kind of a big established company game
|
|
or do you think there is a kind of
|
|
fertile ground for for a lot of new new
|
|
new innovation to to come in
|
|
uh and grow
|
|
yeah I'll ask yeah yeah I mean I so I
|
|
think it's both um I feel I'm going to
|
|
maybe repeat a lot of what Daniel's
|
|
already said but um I I actually think
|
|
the sort of startup ecosystem in climate
|
|
energy Tech has been pretty healthy the
|
|
last couple of years slightly more
|
|
difficult at the moment than it has been
|
|
but um lots of Venture Capital Money
|
|
available for those companies developing
|
|
new technology um much more hard tech
|
|
than I'd seen in the previous round I
|
|
think when we were doing this a few
|
|
years ago was a lot of software
|
|
companies trying to optimize this this
|
|
or that bit of the chain which is
|
|
incredibly important but I think now
|
|
there's an understanding that okay
|
|
there's some really hard Hardware based
|
|
issues like can you apply
|
|
electrochemistry to mind tailings to get
|
|
clean copper out the back because we
|
|
have an issue with copper production you
|
|
know really difficult things um that are
|
|
now able to attract capital or until
|
|
this year I would say we're able to
|
|
attract Capital to to to do exciting new
|
|
Innovations
|
|
um and and then at the sort of later end
|
|
and again I'm just repeating what Daniel
|
|
has already said but um there's a lot of
|
|
money available for sort of proven
|
|
Technologies infrastructure um funds um
|
|
you know obviously Bank debt and and
|
|
large large corporates so I again
|
|
apologies for saying what you've already
|
|
said but there is just this missing
|
|
middle right now for kind of the first
|
|
of a Kind projects um and so I'll give
|
|
an example from hydrogen so our team our
|
|
hydrogen team has this um market share
|
|
pie chart they produce which is all of
|
|
the kind of hydrogen electrolizing
|
|
manufacturers around the world and how
|
|
much market share they have or how much
|
|
production capacity they have and it
|
|
looks like a um like a sea urchin or a
|
|
like a dandelion or something because
|
|
there's just hundreds of tiny slivers so
|
|
if you if you want to develop a hydren
|
|
project how do you choose a vendor that
|
|
you trust is going to produce a piece of
|
|
kit that you can rely on for 20 years
|
|
when it's an emerging industry there's
|
|
100 suppli all of whom have just built
|
|
their first factory so it's almost like
|
|
you it's starting the company now is
|
|
doable but it's sort of how do you get
|
|
to the point where you're the The
|
|
Trusted one how do you get the finance
|
|
for that first project to demonstrate
|
|
that your thing works that that's where
|
|
the the tricky part is so can I I mean
|
|
agree with everything Albert says I'm
|
|
trying not to repeat it but my journey
|
|
around sustainable Finance really
|
|
started here at London Business School
|
|
um and I I with a few others launched uh
|
|
the first green online search engine uh
|
|
we had a bit of success planted like
|
|
250,000 plus trees H and then it didn't
|
|
work out and so I had to become a banker
|
|
instead of a
|
|
successful um but so do I think to your
|
|
question Derek absolutely there is a
|
|
huge space of that and I and I think um
|
|
there's a lot of innovation going on in
|
|
this sector I you know you can get quite
|
|
um sad and depressed I think about where
|
|
the state of of climate can be and you
|
|
spend any time with people that are
|
|
innovating entrepreneurs it really does
|
|
give you faith and I think you know some
|
|
of the stats that we've talked about
|
|
today you can see the impact of
|
|
technology and I think that's what's
|
|
going to really ultimately win this for
|
|
us right is just scaling great new ideas
|
|
and there's a number of different ways
|
|
to do it I think so you know I've
|
|
mentioned one of the Partnerships that
|
|
we have at Barkley is unreasonable
|
|
there's a focus one called carbon 13
|
|
that we're working on so if you've got a
|
|
great idea you know have a look you know
|
|
you can see we run a number of corporate
|
|
challenges as well so we've kind of
|
|
worked with some of the very large
|
|
companies say okay well how can they
|
|
decarbonize say ports and Southampton
|
|
we've got a Challenge on at the moment
|
|
you got a great idea on that have a look
|
|
on my LinkedIn you'll see a link to it
|
|
you can kind of go to or just email me
|
|
so I think this kind of ecosystem and
|
|
actually we just we're just about to
|
|
publish a research piece and 99% of the
|
|
people that we uh spoke to companies and
|
|
entrepreneurs said the UK is a great
|
|
place for climate Tech um and you know I
|
|
think 70% of the companies that we talk
|
|
to see decarbonization as a Big Driver
|
|
of value for them going forward so I
|
|
think there you know all the challenges
|
|
that we talked about absolutely are
|
|
there but 100% you know there's
|
|
definitely capacity to do it and I'm
|
|
sure there are someone sitting you know
|
|
many people probably sitting in this
|
|
room who've got a fantastic idea that's
|
|
going to make a big difference to this
|
|
whole situation over the next few
|
|
years I think that's a very good point
|
|
on which to finish this panel I think um
|
|
I think we've covered a lot of
|
|
interesting issues I think we've covered
|
|
a number of kind of very big intractable
|
|
problems to a large extent um but but I
|
|
think there there's more optimism in
|
|
this panel than I I was kind of
|
|
expecting to start with and so so with
|
|
that in mind I want to thank you very
|
|
much for your contributions thank
|
|
[Applause]
|
|
you
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
### think ahead: Energy Transition, A View from the UAE
|
|
URL: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ONsN6nxftZk
|
|
|
|
Idioma: en
|
|
|
|
so just to get a started Alex I mean not
|
|
everybody will know Peta I I know it
|
|
pretty well as a company that weon and
|
|
business school have worked with a lot
|
|
over the years just tell us petac and
|
|
what you do at petac so petac has been
|
|
going for about 42 years now uh and we
|
|
started out as the clues in the name
|
|
right it started out as an oil and gas
|
|
Services Company um based birly in
|
|
abedine looking at the North Sea and as
|
|
well as in in sha in the UAE where a lot
|
|
of our business is based so we've been
|
|
delivering large scale onshore and
|
|
offshore energy assets mainly oil and
|
|
gas for the last 40 years so we design
|
|
it we build it and then we operate it
|
|
and more recently we started
|
|
decommissioning it as well uh my role is
|
|
we started an energy transition projects
|
|
group about three three years ago um
|
|
because the the essence of what we do in
|
|
in the oil and gas Services when
|
|
engineering construction and operation
|
|
is equally applicable in hydrogen or
|
|
carbon capture or offshore wind uh a lot
|
|
of the uh the the periphery of the the
|
|
job that you do a lot of the actual work
|
|
to make project successful revolves
|
|
around safety procurement Logistics
|
|
construction safety uh scheduling
|
|
invoicing all all that good stuff uh it
|
|
doesn't really matter whether it's a a
|
|
steel pipe with oil and gas in it or
|
|
whether it's a steel pipe with carbon
|
|
dioxide in it like going for a CCS
|
|
project so we are a a company that can
|
|
deliver um the energy assets for a low
|
|
carbon future thank you good so you've
|
|
lived in the UAE I think Abu Dhabi for
|
|
many years obviously you're doing
|
|
business there all the time so we're
|
|
going to just pick your brains a little
|
|
bit on the view in that region and I
|
|
guess there's a for some people there's
|
|
an in conr in congruity easy for you to
|
|
say thank you around um cop 28 happening
|
|
in the region because for a lot of
|
|
people who are perhaps not so involved
|
|
there they think of Saudi aramco
|
|
literally the biggest company in the
|
|
world they think of the state oil
|
|
companies in AB Abu Dhabi Oman Qatar
|
|
Kuwait and so forth and they think this
|
|
is a region which of course was built on
|
|
oil uh and continues to invest in oil
|
|
and gas so how how do you make sense of
|
|
what they're doing is this is this their
|
|
attempt to sort of show to the world
|
|
that that they are part of the solution
|
|
rather than being part of the problem so
|
|
I think it's an existential question for
|
|
the GCC countries if you look at their
|
|
history the last 7500 years they've
|
|
built their wealth they've built their
|
|
geopolitical presence and and influence
|
|
based upon delivering energy to the
|
|
world and I say energy rather than oil
|
|
because um it has been oil and gas for
|
|
the last 100 years or so but ultimately
|
|
they they deliver the energy that we all
|
|
need to turn the lights on uh to to
|
|
produce the pet chemicals that that we
|
|
all use day daily and it's quite it's
|
|
quite interesting sometimes when you I
|
|
always like to talk to just stop oil or
|
|
Extinction rebellion and I normally take
|
|
my Petra fat lanyard off but I'll ask
|
|
them you know well how did you get here
|
|
and what are your shoes made of and and
|
|
what did you eat today and because
|
|
actually the oil and gas it permeates
|
|
everything we do so so the Middle East
|
|
has been the swing producer a massive
|
|
producer of the energy for the globe um
|
|
for for for decades
|
|
if as customers the world starts turning
|
|
to a net zero future which is the plans
|
|
is in law and so their customers are now
|
|
going to say to aramco to adnoc we need
|
|
energy but I want it to be zeroc carbon
|
|
or low carbon um that's if if adnoc or
|
|
ramco can't Supply that they'll go out
|
|
of business um so for them to retain
|
|
that that social Packa with their CI CI
|
|
citizens to retain their their Global
|
|
footprint to retain their business model
|
|
they're going to have to change to and
|
|
they are changing to a lower carbon
|
|
Energy Future um and they're uniquely
|
|
well placed in order to do that in that
|
|
not only are they able and have done so
|
|
for 40 50 years deliver large scale
|
|
projects they've got the infrastructure
|
|
for export they've got the
|
|
infrastructure internally for large
|
|
companies to deliver projects um and and
|
|
they have that interaction with customer
|
|
and Supply chains the shipping the the
|
|
import terminals Etc so that they're
|
|
there they've also now fortunately for
|
|
them made a shedload of money with the
|
|
oil price that they've got the enough
|
|
funding if they choose to to then invest
|
|
in the capex needed in order to build
|
|
those assets so it's a strategic play
|
|
for them and you've seen aramco and
|
|
adnoc uh moving faster and further in
|
|
the energy transition uh and they
|
|
they're they're part of the cop 28 and
|
|
cop 27 discussion around phasing out or
|
|
phasing down the view from the the
|
|
Middle East is very much oil and gas
|
|
will still be needed um we're still
|
|
going to need fertilizers and pet cams
|
|
for for well well past 2050 and what
|
|
we're asking for is net zero so overall
|
|
it has to be Net Zero so that means
|
|
you've got some emissions you can't do
|
|
we're not saying we have to all stop
|
|
Flying or stop using Plastics um but
|
|
you've got to then counteract that with
|
|
either direct air capture carbon capure
|
|
project so we've got the uh uh we've got
|
|
that Net Zero piece so for them it's
|
|
existential it's required and they're
|
|
well placed to do it so so talk about
|
|
some of the specific types of uh
|
|
projects that you see in the middle e so
|
|
for for most of the general public
|
|
they've heard of neom and indeed um it
|
|
was just mentioned in the previous panel
|
|
by Daniel um many people have heard of
|
|
Mazda um I mean you don't have to focus
|
|
on those but it would be quite good to
|
|
get your just your explanation of what
|
|
some of these major projects are that
|
|
we're seeing being so there's there's
|
|
two main strands one is to produce oil
|
|
and gas more efficiently so reduce
|
|
emissions reduce methane leaks make sure
|
|
that they are the lowest carbon
|
|
production of of uh of oil and gas that
|
|
will continue to need into the future I
|
|
think um the UA calls itself the the has
|
|
the lowest carbon footprint for per
|
|
barrel of oil produced because it's
|
|
actually quite easy to get it's not deep
|
|
water offshore in Brazil where you've
|
|
got pre-salt deposits that takes a lot
|
|
of energy just to get the oil out for
|
|
them it's it's abundant it's fairly
|
|
allow they've got the infrastructure so
|
|
cleaning up their emissions and making
|
|
sure there's no leaks and producing the
|
|
lowest carbon barrel of oil we need uh
|
|
that we will continue to need for the
|
|
for the future secondly they're looking
|
|
at low carbon projects the um I think
|
|
the largest solar farm is now in the UAE
|
|
Mazda was set up in 2006 actually run by
|
|
uh Dr Sultan aljaba um who's now the
|
|
president of well the leader of CEO of
|
|
adlock and the president of of cop uh
|
|
cop 28 uh so his his background for
|
|
instance has been in that for a while uh
|
|
petat were fortunate enough to be
|
|
awarded a main CCS project in habshan uh
|
|
just back in November for adnoc so
|
|
there's a lot of carbon capture work
|
|
going on uh along with solar there we're
|
|
starting to see some potential wind
|
|
projects particularly in the GCC that
|
|
can produce if you've got abundant solar
|
|
and decent wind you can start to produce
|
|
green hydrogen uh we see a lot of
|
|
activity in Oman for instance where
|
|
they've got uh very good um export
|
|
routes from dukham down in the South
|
|
that can go to Africa up the Su canal
|
|
and also to Asia and they're looking at
|
|
you know billion dollar scale projects
|
|
with wind and and and solar to produce
|
|
green hydrogen from water and again
|
|
that's another energy Vector they can
|
|
see so that's where we're seeing the
|
|
activity and which Technologies do you
|
|
see the most potential I mean the
|
|
previous panel we talked a little bit
|
|
about some of this but green hydrogen
|
|
carbon capture uh I think blue ammonia i
|
|
l do not know what blue ammonia is
|
|
apologies but I mean are there some
|
|
technologies where you think I mean
|
|
particularly in Middle East but perhaps
|
|
more broadly where you see the biggest
|
|
potential for actually reducing
|
|
emissions given that we're going to be
|
|
using um oil and gas for the foreseeable
|
|
future so I think it's going to be a a
|
|
wide fragmented mix of energy sources
|
|
and and vectors for transporting the
|
|
energy we've been really lucky the last
|
|
100 years our wealth industrial sort of
|
|
growth has all been in the globe um
|
|
being lifted up out poverty by
|
|
hydrocarbons as a bit of a monoc crop or
|
|
monoculture coal gas or oil highly
|
|
energy dense easy to transport uh and
|
|
can be used in a a multiple different
|
|
different ways from Aviation through to
|
|
you know Coal Fire Stations um as we go
|
|
forward in the low carbon world you're
|
|
going to find a really fragmented mix of
|
|
Technologies so in some places it might
|
|
be wind if you've got abundant wind some
|
|
places it might be geothermal uh it
|
|
might be Hydro right if you've got
|
|
somewhere like Norway with with Lo loads
|
|
of hydro facilities um you might find
|
|
that it's hydrogen again where where
|
|
that makes sense uh and you might find
|
|
that it's it's sustainable aviation fuel
|
|
so where we're seeing activity and where
|
|
we're focused on is in four main areas
|
|
one is carbon capture and we are uh tech
|
|
technology neutral as a company that
|
|
allows us to sit with a number of
|
|
different solutions whether it's a well
|
|
established aiming solution or hot
|
|
potassium carb we've been looking at uh
|
|
and even just yesterday quite a novel uh
|
|
a novel Solution that's that's basically
|
|
an organic solution um so carbon capture
|
|
we think is is where we're seeing
|
|
activity in the UK for instance you've
|
|
got these clusters coming up in tside
|
|
and uh humberside the Scottish cluster
|
|
Etc in the UAE clearly in order to get
|
|
low carbon um fuel out they're going to
|
|
have to start capturing some emissions
|
|
or direct air capture so carbon capture
|
|
is definitely one way of doing it and
|
|
that speaks to Net Zero because we're
|
|
going to have emissions so therefore you
|
|
need you need to capture some of the
|
|
remaining heart toate sectors hydrogen
|
|
is another uh key directive and we're
|
|
seeing a huge amount of that in in the
|
|
in the GCC I mentioned Oman hydrogen is
|
|
a really tricky molecule as my colleague
|
|
would call it it likes to escape it's
|
|
very small goes through valves Etc it's
|
|
also not particularly efficient because
|
|
you have to take electricity and water
|
|
by electrolysis uh to produce hydrogen
|
|
which is best then used locally if
|
|
possible because it's quite hard to to
|
|
transport um and if you want to
|
|
transport it long distances we're
|
|
starting to see it being used as either
|
|
ammonia so turning it from hydrogen into
|
|
ammonia so it can be shipped or used as
|
|
shipping fuel MK is looking at that and
|
|
others or we're seeing it as a ethanol
|
|
as well being used so there's a I think
|
|
is it Michael Li talks about the
|
|
hydrogen ladder which is is ruffle some
|
|
feathers but in my view if you've got
|
|
Electrify everything so if you've got
|
|
electrons and it's completely zero let's
|
|
use let's use electricity that's fine
|
|
but if you've got a stranded electron
|
|
sitting off the North Coast of Scotland
|
|
and the grid can't take it you have to
|
|
do something with it so you could use a
|
|
battery to then store it part-time uh
|
|
that's quite expensive in short term if
|
|
you can't use a battery and you can't
|
|
put it into the grid then you might as
|
|
well turn it into some kind of liquid or
|
|
gaseous fuel so hydrogen is the the The
|
|
Logical The Logical route use that
|
|
hydrogen locally um either blend it to
|
|
to make uh sustainable aviation fuel or
|
|
a methanol or ammonia for transportation
|
|
um is the it's the best way of using it
|
|
because that otherwise if you transport
|
|
hydrogen on its own even as a a liquid
|
|
organic or as a compressed that's
|
|
actually quite expensive in terms of the
|
|
energy penalty so those are the reasons
|
|
thank you um final question um bringing
|
|
it back to kind of the corporate level
|
|
and I was just looking online so adnoc
|
|
the Abu Dhabi National oil company they
|
|
plan to to spend 15 billion on clean
|
|
energy projects by 2030 they've got a
|
|
pledge to get to Net Zero by I think
|
|
2045 I looks on Saudi aramco's website
|
|
they've got a pledge to get to Net Zero
|
|
by 2060 that's an awful long time away
|
|
um they have a 1.5 billion
|
|
sustainability Fund in aramco but you
|
|
know they spend $38 billion a year on
|
|
capex so I guess my my question is you
|
|
know not withstanding all of this good
|
|
stuff you know is it is it enough right
|
|
I mean this is this is a good a good
|
|
effort it's progress but it does feel
|
|
like we're still you know going back to
|
|
what Yan says right at the beginning
|
|
we're still you know not getting
|
|
anywhere near where we we need to and I
|
|
guess it's a question to to you in terms
|
|
of how do both the companies think about
|
|
it but but also of course how do the
|
|
governments because in all cases these
|
|
are basically government controlled
|
|
companies so we can't completely
|
|
separate out the state oil companies and
|
|
the national governments how how are
|
|
they thinking about it how are they
|
|
talking about actually managing to get
|
|
to the uh to the ultimate Net Zero
|
|
Target so it is interesting because they
|
|
are setting they got targets 20160
|
|
2050 um and and they're getting pressure
|
|
to bring that further down they have
|
|
interim targets I think uh um KSA have
|
|
got a a 2030 Target to reduce by 280 odd
|
|
million tons per year uh uae's got a
|
|
2030 Target as well so they are they are
|
|
moving that direction however their
|
|
business model is also predicated on
|
|
selling hydrocarbons and energy to the
|
|
world so there's definitely a ying and
|
|
yang there in terms of how they do that
|
|
I think as a as a globe everyone is
|
|
agreed we've got to get to an N zero the
|
|
end point is set and we we're kind of
|
|
saying mid mid century is what we need
|
|
to do I think you we're horribly off
|
|
track right we we need to accelerate
|
|
absolutely clear um but it's us as
|
|
consumers right so there's a business
|
|
model there right how how do we change
|
|
our demand as well and it can feel
|
|
overwhelming as a consumer what
|
|
difference can I make as an individual
|
|
but I would strongly encourage everyone
|
|
to look at their what they're doing what
|
|
they're buying you vote three times a
|
|
day or more depending how hungry you are
|
|
on when when you eat right where's your
|
|
food coming from is it you know is it is
|
|
it is it carbon intensive meat is it
|
|
plant-based is it highly processed is it
|
|
packaged has it had how how many food
|
|
miles does it have we as consumers can
|
|
make that choice every day three times a
|
|
day on what you eat likewise how you
|
|
travel what you wear um
|
|
can you cycle can you take public
|
|
transport I think I've seen the climate
|
|
Action Report came out with we need to
|
|
build every um every year a public
|
|
transport system the size of New York
|
|
cities every year for the next 10 years
|
|
in order to you know again get people
|
|
because car mileage is still going up
|
|
and and while the battery electric
|
|
vehicle uptake is is is is on track that
|
|
still takes carbon intensity to to run
|
|
those vehicles and you've got to charge
|
|
them where's that electricity coming
|
|
from so I would really encourage you I
|
|
think we can all individually make a
|
|
difference and that's ultimately it's
|
|
those buying signals that will affect
|
|
the business models of what the of what
|
|
has produced and and we we have the
|
|
power indeed thank you good we are going
|
|
to take a break in one second um so
|
|
first of all thank you so much Alex for
|
|
a terrific
|
|
[Applause]
|
|
session
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
### think ahead: Complex Climate Trade-Offs
|
|
URL: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XE9DPMV4ENM
|
|
|
|
Idioma: en
|
|
|
|
thank you very much Julian it's it's
|
|
really great to be here so what I'm
|
|
going to speak about is complex climate
|
|
tradeoffs so when we think about the
|
|
climate crisis we think it is so urgent
|
|
that we should stop talking and start
|
|
acting we might think about the Nike
|
|
logo just do it we don't need to talk
|
|
about issues such as this but the
|
|
reality is much more complex there are a
|
|
variety of tradeoffs where if we pursue
|
|
the climate agenda there might be some
|
|
other types of cost to society and we
|
|
need to be mindful of them and this is
|
|
absolutely not to downplay the scale the
|
|
magnitude the urgency of the climate
|
|
crisis but to number one recognize there
|
|
are other considerations and number two
|
|
if we don't recognize those
|
|
considerations then any strategy that we
|
|
have to address the climate issue might
|
|
run into problems and resistance
|
|
so there's three types of tradeoffs that
|
|
I will focus on in my talk
|
|
today so the first is the tradeoff
|
|
between climate and financial returns
|
|
now you might think well is it is that
|
|
even a trade-off to begin with if you
|
|
look at the letters from Larry thinkink
|
|
the CEO of Black Rock he claims that
|
|
climate risk is investment risk so if
|
|
you want to maximize your risk adjusted
|
|
Financial returns minimize climate risk
|
|
he also says investment conviction is
|
|
that sustainability and climate
|
|
integrated portfolios can provide better
|
|
risk adjusted returns to investors again
|
|
this suggests that there is a win-win
|
|
and no trade-off finally we believe that
|
|
sustainable investing is the strongest
|
|
foundation for client portfolios going
|
|
forward and you might think well this is
|
|
what Larry think says but maybe he's
|
|
talking his own book so let's go to a
|
|
more objective source so the financial
|
|
times so so they produced some really
|
|
impactful paper articles entitled The
|
|
ethical investment boom claiming the
|
|
outperformance of ESG strategies is
|
|
beyond doubt and many other
|
|
authoritative newspapers and media
|
|
Outlets have articles with similar
|
|
claims but the big concern with all of
|
|
this is the issue of confirmation bias
|
|
so what is confirmation bias this is the
|
|
idea that we accept a claim
|
|
uncritically if it can confirms what
|
|
we'd like to be true and this
|
|
particularly applies to ESG investing we
|
|
would love to believe that ethical
|
|
companies perform better and
|
|
particularly in the area of climate we
|
|
like to think that companies that
|
|
pollute the planet will meet their come
|
|
ups and later on suffer from high lower
|
|
Financial returns but the problem of
|
|
confirmation bias is that we will
|
|
believe things even if it's not backed
|
|
up by rigorous evidence and this was the
|
|
topic a TED Talk I gave at lbs a few
|
|
years ago called what to trust in a
|
|
posttruth world about how critical and
|
|
how Discerning we need to be on issues
|
|
that we feel very strongly about like
|
|
climate and indeed there's a book I've
|
|
written which is coming out next year
|
|
with penguin called may contain lies
|
|
about how careful we need to be with
|
|
simple statements which seem quite
|
|
appealing so how do we apply the idea of
|
|
confirmation bias to the examples that
|
|
I've already given if you go back to the
|
|
Financial Times article then a reader
|
|
wrote in and said well actually the case
|
|
on ESG investing is far from closed and
|
|
he highlighted a number of pieces of
|
|
evidence suggesting there sometimes is a
|
|
tradeoff maybe ethical companies don't
|
|
perform better and then if I go to the
|
|
Larry fin statements let me start from
|
|
the bottom and work up we believe that
|
|
sustainable investing is the strongest
|
|
Foundation but if we are to take some
|
|
action it has to be more than just
|
|
belief our investment conviction is that
|
|
sustainability can provide better
|
|
returns but again we want more than
|
|
conviction is their evidence and this is
|
|
why the heartbeat of what we do at
|
|
London Business School is not just to
|
|
tell nice stories but make sure that
|
|
this is backed up by rigorous academic
|
|
research and that's what I'm going to
|
|
apply to the first statement of Larry
|
|
thinkink climate risk is investment risk
|
|
so is climate risk investment risk now
|
|
the prevailing consensus is the answer
|
|
is yes and this is backed up by some
|
|
research published in a top Finance
|
|
Journal so the paper finds and I'm
|
|
quoting stocks are firms with higher
|
|
total carbon dioxide emissions earn
|
|
higher returns so more polluting
|
|
companies earn higher shareholder
|
|
returns and their interpretation is our
|
|
results are consistent with an
|
|
interpretation
|
|
that investors are already demanding
|
|
compensation for their exposure to
|
|
carbon emission risk so the idea is that
|
|
companies that emit a lot of carbon they
|
|
are risky why because there might be a
|
|
global carbon tax in the future and so
|
|
investors are only willing to invest in
|
|
these risky companies if they are
|
|
compensated for by a higher
|
|
return but let's think about this and
|
|
let's think about it critically because
|
|
what happened
|
|
if we replace carbon dioxide emissions
|
|
with another ESG Factor so let's replace
|
|
this with employee satisfaction so there
|
|
is evidence shown that stocks of firms
|
|
with higher employee satisfaction earn
|
|
higher returns now would the
|
|
interpretation be the reason for these
|
|
higher returns is that companies with
|
|
lots of employees satisfaction are risky
|
|
it's just too risky to have happy
|
|
employees and therefore we will demand
|
|
higher returns because we don't want to
|
|
hold stocks with happy employees
|
|
absolutely not we would not interpret
|
|
this as risk we would interpret this as
|
|
outperformance right so why is it that
|
|
companies with happy employees they do
|
|
better it's just these are better
|
|
companies they are generating higher
|
|
Financial returns because they are more
|
|
profitable and so that might be the
|
|
interpretation for the carbon emissions
|
|
result companies that emit more carbon
|
|
have higher profits why because they can
|
|
get away with polluting we don't have
|
|
sufficient government action on climate
|
|
change so there are polluting companies
|
|
which are able to generate higher
|
|
profits and those higher profits lead to
|
|
higher shareholder returns so there
|
|
seems to be a bit of ESG double thing
|
|
here where if we see a bad thing leads
|
|
to higher returns we say well that's
|
|
proof that it's risk and if it's a good
|
|
thing we which leads to higher returns
|
|
we say well that's proof that it is
|
|
actually good so the question is well
|
|
how do we disentangle if we have higher
|
|
returns is this a good thing it's
|
|
outperformance or is this bad thing is
|
|
it compensation for risk and the
|
|
standard way to do this is to do what's
|
|
known as an earnings surprise test and
|
|
so this is what I did in one of my
|
|
earlier papers where I looked at the
|
|
link between employee satisfaction and
|
|
long-term share shareholder returns so
|
|
how do you show that it is out
|
|
performance well what I did is I took
|
|
earning surprises so this is every 3
|
|
months in the US a company releases
|
|
their earnings and before they do so
|
|
companies like Goldman Sachs or my
|
|
former employer Morgan Stanley they
|
|
predict what the earnings are going to
|
|
be and I compare how these companies do
|
|
compare to what analysts were predicting
|
|
and I found that companies that treat
|
|
their employees well deliver higher
|
|
profits than what the analysts were
|
|
predicting and therefore the higher
|
|
shareholder returns was due to
|
|
outperformance not risk but we'd
|
|
accepted the early result on carbon
|
|
emissions without doing that
|
|
disentanglement we just accepted the
|
|
interpretation that we want to be true
|
|
so in a more recent paper with other
|
|
co-authors what we did is basically the
|
|
same methodology to try to disentangle
|
|
the for of the carbon premium why is it
|
|
that these emitting companies are
|
|
earning higher shell returns and to our
|
|
dismay we wish this was not the case we
|
|
found it was because they were
|
|
performing better they are delivering
|
|
higher profits why the absence of
|
|
government action means that they are
|
|
doing higher better returns than what
|
|
analysts were expecting and just four
|
|
earnings announcements per year can
|
|
already explain 30 to 50% of the carbon
|
|
premium so what are the implications
|
|
from all of this well number one it
|
|
suggests that sadly climate risk is not
|
|
investment risk so the message that we
|
|
can just leave everything to the market
|
|
because the market is pricing everything
|
|
in the market is already punishing
|
|
companies that admit we don't need
|
|
government action that is not correct
|
|
the market is not getting everything
|
|
right number two is that a low carbon
|
|
portfolio sacrifices is risk adjusted
|
|
returns why because emitting companies
|
|
are performing better now one could say
|
|
I don't care I believe the climate
|
|
crisis is so severe I willing to
|
|
sacrifice Financial returns to
|
|
decarbonize my portfolio and that's
|
|
absolutely fine but the goal of evidence
|
|
is just to highlight that there is a
|
|
tradeoff there is a sacrifice many
|
|
people will still be willing to pay that
|
|
sacrifice just like people pay more for
|
|
organic food but the goal of evidence is
|
|
to show that a sacrifice is needed and
|
|
finally there might be potential
|
|
tradeoffs for investors wanting to take
|
|
climate action between net zero and
|
|
fiduciary duty so if fiduciary duty
|
|
highlights that you need to generate
|
|
long-term returns to your investors
|
|
maybe pension fund beneficiaries then
|
|
these are complexities that we need to
|
|
address and my colleague Tom goling an
|
|
executive fellow has written an article
|
|
about this in a
|
|
lger okay so that's one tradeoff that
|
|
I've highlighted tradeoff between
|
|
Financial returns and climate carbon
|
|
emissions now the second trade-off is
|
|
between climate and other environmental
|
|
and social goals let's say we don't care
|
|
about financial returns or at least we
|
|
deprioritize them but we are concerned
|
|
about Society more generally not just
|
|
climate but other things there might be
|
|
tradeoffs with those other things
|
|
600
|
|
million what is that you might think
|
|
well that's the amount of investment per
|
|
month needed to achieve Net Zero no you
|
|
might think well this is the amount of
|
|
donations every year to exension
|
|
Rebellion or or just a oil
|
|
no 600 million is the number of people
|
|
in Africa who don't have access to
|
|
electricity so last month I was at the
|
|
world economic Forum in a for in a
|
|
session on a just transition and we were
|
|
talking about in a developed country how
|
|
we make sure that if we transition
|
|
towards renewable energy we don't lose
|
|
jobs for those employed in fossil fuels
|
|
and then a lady from Africa got up and
|
|
she said you all talk about a just
|
|
transition we don't have anything to
|
|
transition from right we don't have
|
|
electricity to begin with so you
|
|
responsible investors you can talk about
|
|
decarbonizing your portfolio but if
|
|
you're pursuing this too aggressively
|
|
then you're going to stifle economic
|
|
development for many many millions of
|
|
people so you might think okay just stop
|
|
oil that is a powerful statement but for
|
|
her it's just stop Economic Development
|
|
so this is one of the things which might
|
|
be an issue here do we need to recognize
|
|
that there are some countries which
|
|
don't even have access to electricity
|
|
this is again not to downplay the
|
|
severity of the climate crisis but to
|
|
recognize there other issues that may be
|
|
asked in the west we might not be aware
|
|
of and then if we go back to the West
|
|
what's go back to the jobs issue because
|
|
many of us I have to admit that despite
|
|
me working in this field I don't know
|
|
anybody who works in the coal industry
|
|
and the average age of somebody in the
|
|
coal sector is 55 years old so if he or
|
|
she lose their job then this could be
|
|
the human equivalent of stranded assets
|
|
how are they going to retrain and this
|
|
is something with long-term impacts on
|
|
their family if their children then are
|
|
less affluent and then cannot get the
|
|
same education that's something with
|
|
long-term implications which again us
|
|
perhaps we don't know these people as
|
|
much we might not emphasize or recognize
|
|
when we focus on the very important
|
|
issue of climate and let's say we don't
|
|
care about the social the social issues
|
|
with somebody whose goal is only to
|
|
maximize the environmental performance
|
|
there are also trade-offs with other
|
|
environmental factors so we talk about
|
|
carbon capture technology and then I've
|
|
heard statements like why do we need
|
|
carbon capture technology we have a
|
|
great carbon capture technology that is
|
|
trees why don't we just grow loads of
|
|
trees which sounds simple but sometimes
|
|
growing trees will consume substantial
|
|
water often in places where people are
|
|
already thirsty it will drive people off
|
|
land that is not a problem that many of
|
|
us in the west need to think about but
|
|
this is a serious issue we could say
|
|
well to Country X why don't you grow
|
|
more trees well there is an impact there
|
|
on humans what about emissions reduction
|
|
we can also try to have different types
|
|
of fuels say biofuels but sugar cane for
|
|
bioethanol and palm oil for biodiesel
|
|
those are great biofuels but they can
|
|
lead to monocultures and that reduces
|
|
biodiversity which is another emerging
|
|
environmental
|
|
issue and the final set of tradeoffs is
|
|
the tradeoffs between the portfolio of
|
|
an investor and wider Society so there
|
|
are many investors who are very well
|
|
intentioned are taking very seriously
|
|
the climate crisis and their goal is to
|
|
aim for portfolio
|
|
decarbonization or Net Zero portfolios
|
|
or climate aligned
|
|
portfolios but decarbonizing your
|
|
portfolio does not necessarily mean de
|
|
carbonizing Society so if I own some
|
|
fossil fuel stocks if I'm to sell my
|
|
shares I can only sell if somebody else
|
|
Buys so I'm not depriving it of capital
|
|
and notice this is quite different from
|
|
boycotts as a customer if I choose to
|
|
boycott a company then maybe the
|
|
products stay on the stores I am
|
|
depriving it of Revenue but the analogy
|
|
to investors divesting is not perfect
|
|
because I can only sell
|
|
if somebody else buys I am not starving
|
|
it of capital
|
|
immediately now others will say yeah we
|
|
get that but when you sell and somebody
|
|
else Buys in order to encourage somebody
|
|
to buy you have to sell for a lower
|
|
price if you drive down the stock price
|
|
then you make it harder for the company
|
|
to raise capital in the future and again
|
|
that seems a logical argument but again
|
|
if we think about this if you're an
|
|
investor
|
|
and you choose to sell every fossil fuel
|
|
company in order to reduce their stock
|
|
price and then make future Capital
|
|
raising harder well then what are the
|
|
incentives of a fossil fuel company to
|
|
reform they know that even if they are
|
|
best in class and putting in a credible
|
|
transition plan which is being
|
|
implemented they will still be divested
|
|
so this black and white view that we're
|
|
going to divest from everybody irrespec
|
|
of whether you are reforming just
|
|
because you're a fossil fuel company
|
|
that doesn't provide any incentives it's
|
|
just like if a company was to say my
|
|
policy is never to hire any ex offenders
|
|
well then this means if you're somebody
|
|
who's been in prison what are your
|
|
incentives to reform if you're not going
|
|
to be able to get a job afterwards so
|
|
this is why one of my more recent papers
|
|
with a couple of other co-authors what
|
|
that suggests that actually a tilting
|
|
strategy or the best-in class strategy
|
|
when I'm willing to hold maybe a fossil
|
|
fuel company if it's Best in Class if
|
|
it's taking action to reduce its climate
|
|
impact that might be better than blanket
|
|
exclusion and notice it doesn't apply
|
|
just to energy companies maybe I could
|
|
hold something in a hard to Abate sector
|
|
such as cement or concrete if I'm in
|
|
holding a company which is reducing its
|
|
usage of clinkers and that's something
|
|
which has a huge effect on the
|
|
environment maybe this is something
|
|
needed we still need concrete we still
|
|
need to build schools and hospitals yes
|
|
there are emissions associated with this
|
|
but can I hold something which is best
|
|
in
|
|
class and the final reason why that's
|
|
important is that sometimes you might
|
|
hold a quote Brown company a polluting
|
|
company but that allows you to engage
|
|
right so if you have a seat at the table
|
|
then you might be able to ensure that
|
|
the company has a plan and is putting
|
|
this into practice like as a professor
|
|
do I want to say look I have all the
|
|
very best students all my students do
|
|
very well or is your job to work with
|
|
students who might be finding the topic
|
|
more difficult and then you work with
|
|
them in order to improve their knowledge
|
|
and then end up doing much better than
|
|
they would have done otherwise and so if
|
|
You' like to learn more on this there's
|
|
a great Ted Talk by a lady called nilly
|
|
Gilbert who is the vice chair of a the
|
|
um the carbon trust which is working on
|
|
these issues and it's about how we need
|
|
to take a very nuanced view on these
|
|
issues which are often seen as black and
|
|
white and so let me then sum up before
|
|
we get to um the Q&A so all the three
|
|
tradeoffs that I've highlighted
|
|
emphasize that there's danger in binary
|
|
thinking so binary thinking is saying
|
|
that divestment is good holding it is
|
|
bad pursuing climate is good let's a
|
|
ignore all of the other objectives of of
|
|
society and also it's better to always
|
|
reduce our portfolio carbon footprint
|
|
not recognizing that this may mean that
|
|
somebody else holds the emitting company
|
|
and so this is exacerbated by some
|
|
recent developments so often people
|
|
think well we need climate action as a
|
|
regulator let's try to come up with some
|
|
rules and some numbers and some metrics
|
|
but with all of these things we think of
|
|
the toris and the hair more haste less
|
|
speed we need to take action but we need
|
|
to make sure that the action is
|
|
effective it doesn't backfire it doesn't
|
|
have unintended consequences so the
|
|
urgency of the issue does mean we need
|
|
to act fast but also we need to act
|
|
wisely so we currently have these
|
|
taxonomies in the EU saying well what is
|
|
good and what is bad but hopefully I
|
|
highlighted that there is no clear
|
|
distinction between good and bad some
|
|
something that generates electricity
|
|
could well be good particularly if it's
|
|
for people who otherwise would not have
|
|
access to it something like producing
|
|
cement or concrete we still need for
|
|
construction but if you're doing this in
|
|
a way which minimizes your impact on the
|
|
environment that could still be a good
|
|
thing what are ESG ratings they're
|
|
trying to measure the ESG performance of
|
|
a company and so this leads to some
|
|
investors trying to hold highly rated
|
|
stocks and divest from lowly rated
|
|
stocks
|
|
in order to show how committed they are
|
|
to uh ESG but again if I'm selling the
|
|
poor performers number one I'm not
|
|
providing them with incentives to reform
|
|
and number two I don't have a seat at
|
|
the table I'm not holding these
|
|
companies I'm not able to engage with
|
|
them to improve their ESG
|
|
performance and finally and more
|
|
specifically to carbon there are many
|
|
investors which will report their
|
|
portfolio carbon footprint there are
|
|
even some CEOs of asset managers whose
|
|
pay is linked to the portfolio carbon
|
|
footprint of what they're holding and
|
|
one of the big trends now in ESG is to
|
|
pay for ESG the idea is that if you care
|
|
about something deeply let's link pay to
|
|
it to show that there is bite to show
|
|
that you don't just have statements but
|
|
those statements have implications for
|
|
reward but again this is problematic
|
|
because you can simply reduce your
|
|
portfolio carbon footprint by selling
|
|
emitting companies and somebody else
|
|
buys it it's just like I'm going to
|
|
clean up the trash in my garden by
|
|
throwing it over the fence to the
|
|
neighbor right so I've reduced my trash
|
|
but I've have not done anything for
|
|
society and this is something which may
|
|
well be a consequence and also this only
|
|
looks at carbon footprint but not the
|
|
positive aspects of some activity that
|
|
generates emissions as a byproduct such
|
|
as the production of electricity or the
|
|
production of cement or conrete so what
|
|
might be the solution to all of this and
|
|
I might be biased being somebody who
|
|
works for an educational institution but
|
|
it is literacy and education but what do
|
|
I mean by literacy we hear often
|
|
financial literacy we now hear AI
|
|
literacy but maybe an important issue is
|
|
climate literacy so there was a lot of
|
|
action and a lot of excitement among
|
|
young people and groups like Extinction
|
|
rebellion and just top oil have
|
|
highlighted the criticality
|
|
of taking action but if the message is a
|
|
one-sided message we're only
|
|
highlighting the um problems of things
|
|
like fossil fuels and not the fact that
|
|
it might be providing electricity not
|
|
the fact that it might be currently
|
|
providing jobs that in the long term we
|
|
do want to phase this out but in the
|
|
short term there might be some real
|
|
consequences then we do have some
|
|
potentially quite strong policies which
|
|
are so extreme they may not be
|
|
implemented so I've seen some policies
|
|
suggesting let's ban all non-essential
|
|
flights well that would be devastating
|
|
to a number of countries which rely
|
|
heavily on tourism for the economy for
|
|
jobs for economic development and so
|
|
just to highlight that yes we do care
|
|
about these issues very seriously but
|
|
there are also many other considerations
|
|
around that I think this would lead to a
|
|
richer a more nuance and ultimately more
|
|
realistic conversation about climate
|
|
where we can suggest some ways forward
|
|
but both ways forward recognize the
|
|
tradeoffs and therefore they're more
|
|
likely to be implemented okay thanks
|
|
very much I'm going to give to Julian
|
|
for
|
|
the thanks Alex do you do you want to
|
|
sit down we we've got you want to sit
|
|
down yeah sure let's do that yeah let's
|
|
do it that way um so I've got a bunch of
|
|
questions um and and of course as as as
|
|
Alex was talking I was my thoughts were
|
|
being provoked I've got a few similar
|
|
questions um I mean you're raising the
|
|
the trade-offs you are absolutely I
|
|
think of course giving us a much more
|
|
nuanced view of those trade-offs than
|
|
perhaps most of us had had before um a
|
|
couple of the questions I'm going to ask
|
|
you this specific question in a second
|
|
but somebody says given that these are a
|
|
series of trade-offs what's the answer
|
|
uh somebody else says you know how would
|
|
you like us to move away from this
|
|
binary thinking let me sharpen the
|
|
question in the following way which is
|
|
you know we we work at Business Schools
|
|
we we we believe in markets um and as
|
|
you said yourself the market don't get
|
|
it quite right in this case so if we
|
|
have some sort of market failure we
|
|
almost always say then the government's
|
|
job is to step in and to sort of nudge
|
|
the market in the right direction so
|
|
inevitably that leads to questions one
|
|
of the specific ones isn't carbon
|
|
pricing the way forward tell us about
|
|
your thoughts on how governments can
|
|
help to resolve this if you like market
|
|
failure we'll get to the kind of
|
|
corporate response in a second yeah
|
|
thank you it's it's a great question so
|
|
so what does a market failure
|
|
essentially this occurs when there's an
|
|
externality so this is when a company
|
|
has an impact on wider society which
|
|
ultimately doesn't bounce back and
|
|
affect the company's profits in the long
|
|
term and so then the solution to a
|
|
market failure is regulation so one of
|
|
these could be to completely ban certain
|
|
activities so you might ban something
|
|
like child labor but something like
|
|
carbon emissions where we think there
|
|
could be benefits but also costs it's to
|
|
take the milder solution of of taxing so
|
|
that you are recognizing the full social
|
|
consequences of your action so this is
|
|
why I and a lot of economists and a lot
|
|
of um academics who work on this I'm a
|
|
strong advocate for a carbon tax so that
|
|
companies will face up to the
|
|
consequences of their actions because
|
|
actually the market is not failing in
|
|
pricing things the market correctly
|
|
prices carbon emissions under the
|
|
current regime which is not to punish
|
|
emitting companies because there's no
|
|
consequences so the market gets things
|
|
right given the regime but I'm
|
|
suggesting we we need a different regime
|
|
got it so that's and of course we know
|
|
there were challenges technical
|
|
challenges in implementing these things
|
|
but I I do completely buy into that
|
|
direction of travel moving to the
|
|
corporate side then and and and you
|
|
touched on this and I know you've
|
|
written about it elsewhere how should
|
|
what's your advice if you like to to the
|
|
these Chief Executives who are looking
|
|
at these trade-offs and they are making
|
|
this inevitable choice to some degree in
|
|
the short term between of course you
|
|
know doing good in the world versus
|
|
making profits we we know that that's a
|
|
stylized choice we know that the truth
|
|
is of course more nuanced how do you how
|
|
do you advise companies to to to resolve
|
|
that tradeoff I I think it's a great
|
|
question because some people might say
|
|
oh yes if the government is who should
|
|
deal with it but if the government isn't
|
|
dealing with it then the companies need
|
|
to step in I think if there are
|
|
tradeoffs and you're pursuing something
|
|
because you care about the climate and
|
|
there's a financial cost to that I think
|
|
this is fine so I think there are many
|
|
investors who will support companies who
|
|
make make some return sacrifices to
|
|
address the greater good we saw this in
|
|
um the pandemic where many companies
|
|
were giving products for free is this
|
|
because they're forecasting in the
|
|
future our reputation will be improved
|
|
by this and it's going to come back to
|
|
help us or is this because we think this
|
|
is the right thing to do and there are
|
|
many shareholders who supported
|
|
companies doing that or companies which
|
|
may be fur their workers and continue to
|
|
pay them rather than just uh laying them
|
|
off immediately so I think when you have
|
|
this message and you say well it's a
|
|
completely win-win we're going to do
|
|
something and there's never going to be
|
|
a financial cost then shareholders then
|
|
get upset if you deliver substandard
|
|
results but if you're upfront as to why
|
|
you're doing this I think this gives a a
|
|
a much better message and you're more
|
|
likely to be supported why do
|
|
shareholders invest in the company it's
|
|
not just to get a higher return in the
|
|
future but to get a higher standard of
|
|
living in the future right when I retire
|
|
in I know 40 years time I don't just
|
|
care about my income but whether the
|
|
planet is two degrees warmer or whether
|
|
we have a cus of society so there are
|
|
many investors and the Pension funds
|
|
survey their beneficiaries and they
|
|
realize that they don't just care about
|
|
financial returns they are willing to
|
|
pay the price of a trade of but just be
|
|
upfront that there is a price to be paid
|
|
and many in the audience remember Danon
|
|
the French company Emanuel Fab was the
|
|
chief executive who was very very uh you
|
|
know thoughtful about the environment he
|
|
I think they made them into a big uh
|
|
benefit Corporation he lost his job at
|
|
least in part because the board felt he
|
|
was wasn't delivering enough financial
|
|
returns any any Reflections on that I
|
|
mean did he just push sh say too far CU
|
|
a lot of what he did was things that I
|
|
think you and I would probably agree
|
|
were good things to be done yeah so this
|
|
is interesting so if you if you read
|
|
sort of how this is often portrayed they
|
|
say this was a Visionary CEO who wanted
|
|
to do the right thing but it was the
|
|
short termism of the stock market which
|
|
prevented him from doing so but the
|
|
reality was that he was that down on for
|
|
6.5 years so this was a long time period
|
|
and the company stock price was flat
|
|
whereas the kakah Hun which is the the
|
|
peer group that had gone up by 50% unila
|
|
other competitors have gone up by 50%
|
|
and why is this well Janis has also done
|
|
some work on this it's because of the
|
|
some poor strategy some poor strategic
|
|
decisions some poor acquisition some
|
|
poor corporate governance and so what
|
|
this suggests is that yes you can do
|
|
good things for the environment and for
|
|
society but you are also a business and
|
|
so the challenge of a CEO yes you do
|
|
need to deliver on ESG goals but you are
|
|
also business and you also need to
|
|
deliver in the standard stuff as well
|
|
indeed a final question um you and I
|
|
Yannis we we're all teaching our
|
|
students um we're hopefully doing a
|
|
decent job um are we teaching outdated
|
|
theories because there's a there's a
|
|
hypothesis out there that all of our
|
|
theory is rooted in this sort of
|
|
traditional shareholder based view of
|
|
the world and that that's somehow
|
|
actually teaching our students the wrong
|
|
stuff another great question and I have
|
|
incentive to claim that we are why so
|
|
the um textbook that I I I I learned
|
|
when I was an undergrad at Oxford and
|
|
when we started at Morgan Stanley was
|
|
principles of corporate finance by
|
|
brillian Myers I am now a co-author of
|
|
that book for the 14th Edition which
|
|
came out a few years ago I would love to
|
|
claim I completely rewrote the book
|
|
scrapped 30 years of outdated work and
|
|
I'm now I'm changing it but that's not
|
|
the case because actually in many cas's
|
|
traditional business theory is about the
|
|
longterm now it may well be that the
|
|
longterm 100 years ago was an oil
|
|
company engaging in Exploration and
|
|
production and that is not what we would
|
|
call long-term right now but that aspect
|
|
of investment that long-term investment
|
|
was something supported by business
|
|
principles what is shareholder value the
|
|
very first class in finance shows you
|
|
that shareholder value is the present
|
|
value of all future dividends right
|
|
until the end of time so somewhat
|
|
bizarrely maybe some of the concerns are
|
|
not enough focused on shareholder value
|
|
and this might seem heretical but the
|
|
problem is companies are focusing too
|
|
much on shortterm profit short-term
|
|
profit is not long-term shareholder
|
|
value long-term shareholder value would
|
|
say to a car company invest in electric
|
|
cars this is something which will cost
|
|
you in the short term but in the long it
|
|
will benefit you beyond climate
|
|
long-term shareholder value will say
|
|
invest in a diverse and inclusive
|
|
Workforce it will cost you in the short
|
|
term but it will benefit you in the long
|
|
term and I think the message that we
|
|
need to complete scrap the rule book and
|
|
go to something new that can be a
|
|
damaging message because then some
|
|
companies think we've been successful
|
|
for so long without this why do I
|
|
suddenly need to change or do I have to
|
|
go with something unfamiliar and untried
|
|
and untested but given that what makes
|
|
business successful and has done so for
|
|
centuries is a focus on long-term value
|
|
creation I think that message is
|
|
something which should still be getting
|
|
across perfect we are going to close
|
|
there thank you very much Alex for a
|
|
fascinating
|
|
talk
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
### think ahead: Meeting the Climate Challenge
|
|
URL: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_LE1nBUDaDQ
|
|
|
|
Idioma: en
|
|
|
|
[Applause]
|
|
thank you junian and uh thanks for
|
|
having
|
|
me thank you all right wonderful thank
|
|
you so much so uh let me briefly
|
|
introduce myself and then I'll I'll call
|
|
up uh the two panelists in the room and
|
|
we have a remote panelist as well so my
|
|
name is um uh Sylvia pavoni uh I am a
|
|
journalist uh I work for the financial
|
|
times group so not the company but the
|
|
sorry not the newspaper but the company
|
|
and I write for a new title called
|
|
sustainable views we focus as you can
|
|
imagine on sustainability and in
|
|
particular on policy and regulations so
|
|
all the stuff that may uh feel perhaps
|
|
not as sexy but actually is really
|
|
driving uh arguably the space uh but
|
|
during this panel we're going to talk
|
|
about the challenges that specific uh
|
|
Industries and companies face uh and not
|
|
tackling uh when uh considering climate
|
|
change uh so let me invite uh on stage
|
|
um Tom and Mata who are going to help us
|
|
uh through the discussion so Tom Grande
|
|
is the CEO of hybrid uh vehicles and he
|
|
will tell us he will tell you all about
|
|
the compan is fascinating uh and we have
|
|
Mata here who is the CEO of EDF
|
|
Renewables UK obviously perhaps we are
|
|
more familiar with what uh mata's
|
|
company does but uh surely is going to
|
|
tell us uh a great uh more detailed
|
|
about uh new projects and then joining
|
|
us remotely I'm sure we're going to see
|
|
him appearing on the virtual stage very
|
|
soon is Richard uh W hi Richard who is
|
|
the UK head of sustainability for hundas
|
|
bankin so welcome everyone right so we
|
|
are going to talk about of course the
|
|
challenges the companies face um dealing
|
|
with climate change so it's not a
|
|
particularly easy uh task um to uh to
|
|
handle um
|
|
but there are different levels of
|
|
success and different measures that uh
|
|
your companies and your industries peps
|
|
may want to see um to really help you
|
|
progress um and so let's uh maybe start
|
|
with some initial thoughts uh on what
|
|
you think uh on the kind of broader
|
|
risks that your industries face and
|
|
let's start with you Tom so you can tell
|
|
us a little bit more about what exactly
|
|
it is that you do um and then we talk
|
|
about specifics okay well um thank you
|
|
Sylvia I'm Tom Grundy I'm chief exective
|
|
of hybrid air vehicles and that puts us
|
|
squarely in the aviation industry uh
|
|
we're developing the world's most
|
|
efficient or most sustainable large
|
|
aircraft so we're really working to
|
|
scale up um technology that allows us to
|
|
make an impact on emissions from the
|
|
aviation sector and that's a huge
|
|
challenge so I look at what the sector's
|
|
dealing with overall Aviation is one of
|
|
the hardest sectors to decarbonize
|
|
um that being through the simple fact
|
|
that you need to lift your own fuel up
|
|
into the air uh before you can do
|
|
anything else useful so that
|
|
decarbonization challenge is very real
|
|
is very present um and uh and it's a big
|
|
deal you know uh aviation's 2 to 4% um
|
|
of our um climate forcing emissions um
|
|
the difference between the two and the
|
|
four being depending on how you account
|
|
for the non-co2 effects of Aviation
|
|
which are significant in themselves but
|
|
it's it's also an activity that only
|
|
really a few people around the world
|
|
currently use so about eight out of 10
|
|
people around the world haven't gotten
|
|
an airplane yet put those two things
|
|
together um and if you take one long
|
|
haul flight you've used up about one fif
|
|
of your own personal Paris climate cord
|
|
emissions budget so five Long Haul
|
|
flights for each of us and that's our
|
|
entire budget done um so big challenge
|
|
the head for
|
|
Aviation thank you Tomy and then we'll
|
|
talk a little bit more about the what
|
|
you're trying to what you're doing uh
|
|
with a company what you would like to
|
|
see happen so that Innovation can
|
|
actually um take us to to a much uh
|
|
better place in terms of uh our
|
|
environmental impact um Mata tell us a
|
|
little bit about the challenges you're
|
|
facing at the moment yeah so so good
|
|
afternoon everybody um so EDF renewable
|
|
is part of EDF group uh you probably
|
|
have heard of EDF group is one of the
|
|
world leader in low carbon electricity
|
|
generation so 90% % of the electricity
|
|
we produce come from low carbon
|
|
technology including nuclear Hydro wind
|
|
solar and we also do
|
|
storage so uh the the heart of our
|
|
purpose is basically to help uh achieve
|
|
Net Zero so that's that is basically low
|
|
carbon electricity electrif
|
|
electrification and uh helping people
|
|
use electricity decarbonizing their
|
|
their
|
|
footprint uh so there is a big role for
|
|
for our industry into uh into Net Zero
|
|
and just to give you a bit of a sense
|
|
today of you know uh energy usage 80% of
|
|
the energy we use or and more than 80%
|
|
comes from coal gas and oil so you know
|
|
that's where our emission come from or
|
|
most of our emission come from and if
|
|
you look at the usage of this energy 40%
|
|
is power more than 40% is power so
|
|
that's electricity and heat we've got
|
|
20% roughly around with transport and
|
|
another % industry and the rest is
|
|
building and construction so we have two
|
|
things to do on our side one is to
|
|
decarbonize elect electricity uh which
|
|
is entirely doable and then is to
|
|
Electrify to enable Industries transport
|
|
to be de
|
|
carbonized so those are the the
|
|
overarching challenges and then again
|
|
we're going to talk about what you are
|
|
doing um with your projects here in the
|
|
UK to to tackle them Richard over to you
|
|
so obviously you look at this from um a
|
|
different perspective you uh you work
|
|
for Bank banks finance all these
|
|
projects in theory that Mata and Tom are
|
|
working on but also you under the
|
|
spotlight um for your involvement in
|
|
some other parts of uh of the um economy
|
|
that um contribute to to pollution so
|
|
after this lovely introduction to what
|
|
to what the to the responsibility of the
|
|
financi financial services um industry
|
|
has tell a little bit about the
|
|
challenges you face yeah thanks so much
|
|
Sy and I wish I could be in room with
|
|
you today so apologies for that but um
|
|
yeah I'll come on to talk briefly about
|
|
the role of banks overall which you
|
|
started to sketch out there but just a
|
|
set of context handles Bank in itself is
|
|
a Swedish based northern European Bank
|
|
um so major focuses around uh the
|
|
Swedish domestic Market the UK domestic
|
|
Market again uh and and the Dutch
|
|
domestic Market those those are are sort
|
|
of um big and growing Footprints um
|
|
we're particularly uh focused I
|
|
mentioned the word domestic probably
|
|
three times there so that gives you a
|
|
bit of a sense that's that's sort of the
|
|
way that we work with uh local uh
|
|
branches and with uh individuals
|
|
householders uh small and mediumsized
|
|
businesses um for the most part but then
|
|
we do have a a significant portion of um
|
|
which is devoted to the the larger and
|
|
indeed largest companies within those
|
|
marketplaces so so that sort of frames
|
|
uh thinking that's Al also probably the
|
|
most boring part about handles Bank
|
|
really um because where we are known I
|
|
would say we're probably best known as a
|
|
values Le
|
|
organization uh one that uh has a has
|
|
roots in in responsible banking um and
|
|
that's particularly uh uh remembered
|
|
probably through through the financial
|
|
crisis uh both both in the nordics and
|
|
and then in uh at a global level um and
|
|
that's very much down to the business
|
|
model that we've operated now for for 50
|
|
of our 150 years which is about uh
|
|
empowering um everyone throughout our
|
|
organization to take uh responsibility
|
|
and to take decisions in their areas of
|
|
uh areas of focus um so what's that mean
|
|
for for for this whole agenda today well
|
|
it it's meant that we've seen fairly
|
|
early on our responsibility when it
|
|
comes to climate change and indeed to
|
|
the developing broader sustainability
|
|
agenda and we've set ourselves uh some
|
|
what we what we believe are ambitious
|
|
goals at least which I would say
|
|
probably best represented by the uh 2040
|
|
Net Zero goal which covers our
|
|
investments our lending and our own
|
|
operations as
|
|
well um you mention of course the the
|
|
the role the banks more broadly um and
|
|
the position they're coming from so so
|
|
we tend to divide that up as an industry
|
|
into thinking about uh Greening finance
|
|
and financing green so when we talk
|
|
about Greening Finance it's actually
|
|
making sure that our organizations
|
|
themselves are set up and governed in
|
|
such a way that uh in the shortest time
|
|
possible we we're at a point where every
|
|
decision uh that's made within the
|
|
organization
|
|
has a lens on it of of climate change
|
|
has a lens on it of nature of
|
|
biodiversity and sustainability and so
|
|
this um you know this affects the
|
|
operational developments of the
|
|
organization but of course the the
|
|
Strategic development of the
|
|
organization as well the areas it does
|
|
choose to go in um the directions
|
|
perhaps it chooses to move away from as
|
|
well um and i' probably say in that
|
|
context to what you were saying Sylvia
|
|
that it was a few years ago that uh
|
|
handles bank and
|
|
uh took the decision to um to have a
|
|
very minimal presence in the in the
|
|
fossil fuel sector for instance uh and
|
|
it's now you know what you might
|
|
describe as a nominal level with some of
|
|
the tightest internal guidelines around
|
|
that um that we're aware of in the
|
|
industry as well so these twin roles you
|
|
know we've got to we've got to treat
|
|
ourselves first as one might say but
|
|
also to then support uh in a in a sort
|
|
of strategically focused way the real
|
|
economy uh to understand its
|
|
opportunities understand its risks
|
|
understand climate change as Professor
|
|
Edmund was talking about um climate
|
|
literacy earlier on and I do think you
|
|
know in all of our
|
|
organizations um there there is a
|
|
challenge there to get that more nuanced
|
|
understanding um of of of the way
|
|
forward here thank you so much uh rich
|
|
and I hope uh you all in the in the room
|
|
and um watching us remotely can actually
|
|
hear clear clear audio okay very good so
|
|
right so the uh policies that uh Banks
|
|
and investors have put in place in terms
|
|
of where they wish Capital to flow and
|
|
of course some of them may exclude
|
|
certain parts of the industry and you
|
|
mentioned also uh Financial well not
|
|
Financial climate literacy um within the
|
|
financial services sector but also more
|
|
broadly uh throughout the economy and I
|
|
would argue also policymaking right
|
|
that's also very very important um
|
|
because of course whether your projects
|
|
and your companies surely would want to
|
|
get the support of private Capital be
|
|
it's through a bank or an investor um
|
|
they I'm sure would also wish to see
|
|
perhaps a stronger um support from
|
|
policy makers and from from Regulators
|
|
um how can can you tell us how you feel
|
|
about the current level of support that
|
|
you're getting for example for uh
|
|
innovate in in the aviation uh area and
|
|
what are the tension points
|
|
Point yeah it's a it's a very Broad and
|
|
complex space um the impact of policy on
|
|
what we're doing um the first thing I'd
|
|
say is I would split domestic policy and
|
|
international policy in the aviation in
|
|
the Aviation Space I'm not Aviation as
|
|
an industry is regulated under ik which
|
|
is a un body and that has some effects
|
|
for
|
|
example um on again under the Paris
|
|
Accords
|
|
um if you take off on a flight in the UK
|
|
and you land in the UK the carbon that's
|
|
been emitted by that by that flight is
|
|
the responsibility of London it's it's
|
|
on our carbon accounts here if if you
|
|
fly internationally it's not it doesn't
|
|
form part of uh part of the the UK
|
|
accounting and and that covers carries
|
|
on globally it falls to Iko which is a
|
|
un body and so policy starts from there
|
|
for international Aviation um and
|
|
therefore
|
|
uh it's multilateral it tends to be a
|
|
very long process um it's taken uh some
|
|
years for there to be a voluntary
|
|
offsetting arrangement in place within
|
|
the airline industry and if you come
|
|
back then to domestic Aviation that
|
|
really does um fit within the remit of
|
|
individual governments so where we're
|
|
finding um there's a lot of support for
|
|
what we're doing is in Nations that have
|
|
legislated for early Net Zero targets
|
|
and have explicitly recognized that
|
|
transport is a big part of that
|
|
mix and tell us which countries is yeah
|
|
so France is uh France has led the way
|
|
France has banned domestic flights where
|
|
you can take a train in less than two
|
|
and a half hours for example um Spain
|
|
looks like it's following our launch
|
|
Airline customer for our product um has
|
|
reserved 20 airplanes to go and serve
|
|
passenger markets in Spain um and I
|
|
should just say our aircraft that we're
|
|
developing is a is a large airplane it's
|
|
100 seats uh but but it flies a lot
|
|
slower than other aircraft so the idea
|
|
is you get there slower than the
|
|
airplane but you're going on very short
|
|
sectors so it's a small time Delta much
|
|
faster than the train journey and of
|
|
course there's lots of parts of the
|
|
world where you can't put the train
|
|
track in in the first place so it's
|
|
about being there with an efficient
|
|
airplane it's quite different for the
|
|
aviation industry to engage with that
|
|
compared to the tubes with wings flying
|
|
fast that we're all used to um
|
|
Andra we've got that um we've got that
|
|
traction because of policy um there um
|
|
the airplane is a um our technology is a
|
|
lifting Wing uh so we we take that bit
|
|
from um normal sort of aircraft
|
|
aerodynamics and then we add in some
|
|
lifting gas from the lighter than air
|
|
technology sector things like airships
|
|
um that blimps that people are aware of
|
|
and we mix the two so what we're doing
|
|
is using a little bit of lifting gas to
|
|
give us a bit of a head start Against
|
|
Gravity uh but not enough to have the
|
|
airplane floating like an airship ship
|
|
um that makes the economics much better
|
|
for the operator and um it means that on
|
|
these sectors domestic flights we can
|
|
deliver passengers to their destination
|
|
more comfortably quietly um and at a
|
|
price that's the same or below the price
|
|
of today's Jet flights between those
|
|
regions critically you get to your
|
|
destination with less than 10% of the
|
|
carbon footprint that you would
|
|
otherwise have okay so which are all
|
|
very interesting statistics what would
|
|
you like to see to
|
|
really from a policy perspective to
|
|
really help you develop this technology
|
|
so um from a policy perspective I think
|
|
Aviation overall and and our and our
|
|
policy view of Aviation is pulling two
|
|
different threads together one is the
|
|
economic benefits that Aviation brings
|
|
to society and the other is the
|
|
disbenefits the ex externalities
|
|
particularly carbon I think there's a
|
|
massive choice to be made here and I
|
|
think from a policy perspective we need
|
|
to be more honest about the costs the
|
|
environmental costs of Aviation I
|
|
actually price those in um versus the
|
|
benefits so ticket we play we pay would
|
|
have to be higher or subsidies well if
|
|
you look at it doesn't necessarily
|
|
follow because we forget the role of
|
|
Technology here so yeah if you look at
|
|
today's flights you can price in those
|
|
externalities and the price goes up for
|
|
the passenger demand goes down and but
|
|
but what you're also doing is
|
|
encouraging technology into the mix so
|
|
you take the technology that that we've
|
|
developed we have needed to move past
|
|
the hurdle of saying this is cheaper
|
|
this this doesn't require a green
|
|
premium for passengers before we can
|
|
start to have a conversation about um
|
|
emissions um so the lack of Taxation on
|
|
aviation fuel the lack of pricing of
|
|
carbon externalities becomes an extra
|
|
barrier that we have to get over if
|
|
those that can be changed it's
|
|
encourages more technology into the
|
|
market all right okay so the taxation
|
|
one of the big things um that we'll have
|
|
to look into thank you so much um M so
|
|
clearly the technology behind Renewables
|
|
is been long proven but there are still
|
|
a few economic and bureaucratic
|
|
challenges right so take us through
|
|
those yeah well I mean we speak in our
|
|
sector of energy transition so it's
|
|
moving from oil and gas moving into
|
|
Renewables or other low carbon
|
|
generation like nuclear so usually start
|
|
with setting some targets so uh most
|
|
countries have set some Target to
|
|
decarbonize electricity because it's
|
|
possible as you said you know we have
|
|
the technology to do it um so in the UK
|
|
for example it's 203 35 we're saying
|
|
that none of the electricity will Pro
|
|
will produce will come from oil gas or
|
|
or coal MH so the um and beyond that
|
|
then as I mentioned you know we'll need
|
|
to Electrify so we need to grow uh the
|
|
the generation capacity massively so we
|
|
we're speaking of huge growth of the
|
|
industry if you think about our industry
|
|
it's a lot of infrastructure so uh you
|
|
know there are big investment required
|
|
you know we speak of grid but Power
|
|
stations and so forth there is a big
|
|
supply chain behind so we are looking at
|
|
a lot a lot of investment and um and
|
|
infrastructure so the the policy is key
|
|
in setting the environment that will
|
|
enable this infrastructure or this
|
|
investment to happen um so it's key on
|
|
the planning side it's key on setting
|
|
the uh investment environment so that
|
|
people continue to invest and grow their
|
|
industry being supply chain or like our
|
|
s developers and operators um what we'
|
|
seen is you know Chang in policies I
|
|
think the uh I mentioned about targets
|
|
being set everywhere what we see for
|
|
example in North America or in Europe or
|
|
in China you know is is also the support
|
|
that is provided uh to enable that
|
|
energy transition so support in terms of
|
|
speeding up planning support in terms of
|
|
enabling supply chain industry to grow
|
|
uh and developers like ourselves to
|
|
invest in in their project um but there
|
|
is still a lot to be done because the uh
|
|
we've done the easy part of
|
|
decarbonizing uh uh you
|
|
know um phasing out the coal was the
|
|
easy part we've done it in the UK in the
|
|
last 10 15 years yeah now growing at the
|
|
pace we need we need a lot more uh uh
|
|
policy uh to to enable that and that
|
|
that is true not just of the UK but
|
|
across Europe across all over the world
|
|
of although you mentioned Co and they
|
|
did make a comeback right following
|
|
recent uh really sad events so the war
|
|
in Ukraine so actually we we started
|
|
seeing some calls being um relooked at
|
|
uh across Europe and of course that
|
|
remains uh a source of energy in other
|
|
parts of the world so I mean it's easier
|
|
to have an exclusionary policy for
|
|
example thinking about where uh Richard
|
|
would uh you know with with um not look
|
|
at um when it comes to Coal but then
|
|
it's not as easy for every jurisdiction
|
|
around the world and um and then there
|
|
are other events that take place that
|
|
make us rethink
|
|
about sources so what what can um your
|
|
industry do to really help make the case
|
|
for ditching completely those highly
|
|
polluting uh energy sources yeah but I
|
|
mean the uh electricity is not to
|
|
produce like or energy is not to produce
|
|
like a any other produce you you can't
|
|
stop from uh you know needing
|
|
electricity or driving a car uh so uh
|
|
you need it all the time so
|
|
unfortunately what we see is you know
|
|
it's a the high dependency that we have
|
|
in the energy sector so here in the in
|
|
in in Europe but like in many other
|
|
places it's it's mainly gas other places
|
|
can be cool you know if you Source your
|
|
your gas or coal from a region where
|
|
abolutely you can't Source it from uh
|
|
you have to make difficult choices and
|
|
it maybe switch back on some some coal
|
|
plants um so I think removing this
|
|
dependency is key uh and the policy that
|
|
will make sure that actually there are
|
|
incentives so that for example
|
|
manufacturing of solar panel doesn't
|
|
just happen in China or so we there is a
|
|
rule for making sure that there is
|
|
Industries uh locally being developed so
|
|
we are not as dependent as we are for
|
|
example in Europe of f fuel coming from
|
|
other other places I think that that is
|
|
a big one so we see industrial
|
|
Renaissance with nuclear the wind
|
|
industry in Europe has been strong hisor
|
|
historically but it has been challenged
|
|
recently I don't know if you heard about
|
|
orad which is a massive player or cement
|
|
really struggling financially because
|
|
there is not the financial support
|
|
needed and you know the supply chain is
|
|
slightly struggling to keep Pace with
|
|
the investment needed to meet the growth
|
|
so we see that we need to protect that
|
|
industry and there are other Industries
|
|
like solar for example we were the
|
|
largest producer of solar panels uh in
|
|
the world in Europe and St we generate
|
|
less than 5% you know 80% plus comes
|
|
from China so you you really need to
|
|
think industrial policy and strategy you
|
|
know it's not just uh it's just not just
|
|
enabling this project is making sure
|
|
that you reduce the dependency you have
|
|
uh across uh some sensitive regions so
|
|
so very quickly before um bringing
|
|
Richard back in so um there there is a
|
|
series of policies at European level at
|
|
least um that look uh exactly what you
|
|
discuss so for example Ro critical
|
|
materials uh and other
|
|
you know we can talk about the uh uh the
|
|
carbon pricing schemes and seum and all
|
|
of that all these wonderful acronyms so
|
|
are you seeing those as positive do you
|
|
think that they're actually going to
|
|
help at least this part of the world so
|
|
I think they the we have we have
|
|
instruments you know in uh in our
|
|
toolkit so you spoke about carbon prices
|
|
I think we need to uh it's carbon
|
|
pricing mechanism is too weak at the
|
|
moment to really make big shift so there
|
|
are other instruments but defintive
|
|
carbon is a key one that needs to be uh
|
|
just to give you an example on the solar
|
|
example uh the producing a panel in
|
|
Europe is 50 50% more expensive than in
|
|
China if we were just to price a carbon
|
|
element right yeah because in China uh
|
|
you know the carbon intensity of
|
|
electricity is much higher than in
|
|
Europe you know we will will reduce our
|
|
cost by 10% right so that will start
|
|
Bridging the Gap so you can see but it's
|
|
not a one Magic Bullet so in it all you
|
|
can see the policy is complex there are
|
|
many aspects to it and certainly carbon
|
|
is a is a key element to the uh to the
|
|
policy so do you think the CMA for
|
|
example which is the carbon board
|
|
adjustment mechanism is going to play a
|
|
role in this taxing for example Imports
|
|
that come from jurisdictions that don't
|
|
they're not seen as equivalent I think
|
|
it's essential that you've got this
|
|
right signal okay yeah so for example
|
|
you could see a Chinese manufacturer
|
|
coming to Europe and starting to produce
|
|
in Europe which would be a good way to
|
|
do a bit of Technology transfer it used
|
|
to be the other way around what we need
|
|
in this case is technology transfer back
|
|
to Europe so that's one of the tensions
|
|
that play out so this is a global
|
|
problem of course a global crisis but
|
|
then it's still a divided world uh and
|
|
we we need to navigate all of us through
|
|
these complexities absolutely and now
|
|
before bringing Richard be in just to of
|
|
course let you know that we we are going
|
|
the panels um panelists are going to
|
|
take a questions so I can see a couple
|
|
coming through already so make sure to
|
|
uh uh to to type them up if you would
|
|
like to uh to have any any if you have
|
|
any pressing uh issues that you would
|
|
like to raise with the our experts
|
|
Richard okay so I mean we we've heard of
|
|
course very interesting examples of uh
|
|
What's happen in terms of innovation
|
|
across Aviation and the Renewables um
|
|
industry and also pressure points um and
|
|
you I'm certain you're looking at all of
|
|
this uh and you have access to
|
|
wonderfully complex and and uh big uh
|
|
samples of data uh but how challenging
|
|
is it to actually understand where to
|
|
deploy capital um whether you're looking
|
|
at a certain industry or a certain uh
|
|
geography and is is this exercise
|
|
becoming easier what would you like to
|
|
see uh to help you um achieve
|
|
uh yeah I think um the challenge is
|
|
becoming uh clearer or maybe the
|
|
solution is becoming clearer I'm not
|
|
sure I would go as far as to say it's
|
|
becoming easier yet just listening to
|
|
mat talk then about the uh the policy
|
|
Dynamics uh that affect his business
|
|
you it just it just reminds of how
|
|
fishlyn so so that part um you know will
|
|
keep this fish complicated well into the
|
|
future um I think you're alluding
|
|
towards the the data aspects of this as
|
|
well um and I think uh we um sort of as
|
|
an economy as a whole and and certainly
|
|
in the finance industry are making and
|
|
have been making really good progress
|
|
around uh establishing data
|
|
standards um being able to then work
|
|
with our counterparties to ensure that
|
|
they sort of have a shared sense of
|
|
those standards and they you know they
|
|
are what they would expect or what
|
|
they're planning for as well um and of
|
|
course that's not the end of that
|
|
challenge either there there there's
|
|
plenty still to do you know if we look
|
|
at our own Gap analysis as it goes on
|
|
there are plenty of areas where we don't
|
|
feel we have sufficient um or or in some
|
|
Cas is high enough quality data for the
|
|
for the risk analyses that we might want
|
|
to do um or for the strategic um mapping
|
|
that we want to do as an organization to
|
|
to chart our Direction but then we
|
|
wouldn't have expected to at this stage
|
|
either so it is it is partly about being
|
|
comfortable with that ambiguity uh and
|
|
keeping pushing towards having a greater
|
|
level of granularity I think one
|
|
particular area um that I've probably
|
|
talked about ad nauseum in the past uh
|
|
that has
|
|
uh especially difficult challenge is is
|
|
what you might call well the sector such
|
|
as you can call this a sector um because
|
|
on the one hand they they they they're
|
|
just as heterogeneous as as larger
|
|
companies arguably you could say more so
|
|
but they typically lack the resource to
|
|
have dedicated focus on some of these
|
|
complex areas um not all of them can
|
|
afford to pay expensive Consultants
|
|
either um and so there is a real sort of
|
|
Market risk there economic transition
|
|
risk there uh that we need to try to
|
|
find a way of filling and I think gaps
|
|
have a sorry gaps banks have a really
|
|
important role in helping to do that so
|
|
there's there's an interesting project
|
|
just as an example right now uh that
|
|
Bankers for Net Zero that we're a member
|
|
of a UK organization is pushing forward
|
|
and that's called project perus and it's
|
|
trying to um work with uh industry
|
|
representative bodies sector bodies uh
|
|
and government to establish standardized
|
|
uh data criteria for smaller businesses
|
|
uh ones that will work for them but of
|
|
course will work for um the capital
|
|
allocation that we came into this
|
|
talking about so you know Banks being
|
|
able to see enough to make reason
|
|
decisions investors being able to do
|
|
exactly the same thing and all the way
|
|
back up the
|
|
chain in that sense is getting it's
|
|
improving as you was were saying through
|
|
these uh initiatives to to standardize
|
|
data now all of you here are part of
|
|
Industry that are heavily regulated uh
|
|
and and so in in your case uh Richard of
|
|
course you have the regulator also
|
|
looking at your own uh the way in which
|
|
uh the bank uh manages risk uh and risk
|
|
related to Financial Risk related to
|
|
climate um how is that changing the way
|
|
in which you feel the industry is moving
|
|
at least in
|
|
Europe I think in in very helpful ways
|
|
so um you know we have different uh
|
|
strands of of of uh
|
|
supervisory attention if you like uh on
|
|
the credential side uh the work that uh
|
|
the international central banks and
|
|
Regulators have been doing um around um
|
|
scrutinizing and and setting some
|
|
expectations on um risk management how
|
|
to identify the risks at at the
|
|
portfolio level but of course to do that
|
|
you need to you need to have good
|
|
systems in place to identify them at the
|
|
uh at the client level as well uh and
|
|
then how those move through your systems
|
|
uh integrate into your existing risk
|
|
analysis systems all the way through to
|
|
uh your you know the sort of Financial
|
|
and strategic end of things you know
|
|
what does this mean in in how many years
|
|
time for uh for the shape of your of
|
|
your balance sheets and the risks that
|
|
sit on it so I think I think that's
|
|
being really helpful I think it's been a
|
|
continues to be a collaborative approach
|
|
between regulators and the industry and
|
|
long may that continue um and then we
|
|
have the conduct strand um of of of risk
|
|
uh management through through our
|
|
financial conduct Authority and their
|
|
particular Focus complementary Focus I
|
|
would argue is is around uh governance
|
|
uh the banks and others have in place um
|
|
to ensure uh Integrity uh in the
|
|
marketplace so that um one's claims
|
|
match the reality at the entity level
|
|
just as much as at the the customer
|
|
level um and that the outcomes then that
|
|
are being delivered uh as a result of
|
|
decisions taken by these organizations
|
|
are in the best interest of of the
|
|
customers just as the credential
|
|
regulator might think of the same
|
|
question but say in the wider interest
|
|
of the banking system of financial
|
|
economy thank you so much Richard
|
|
question is actually flying in so let me
|
|
uh start the Q&A part of of uh this
|
|
panel so that there is a really
|
|
interesting variety of them I'm going to
|
|
start with one um that um is for you mat
|
|
in particular and so what do you expect
|
|
coming out of cop 28 of course we're
|
|
here uh today uh thinking that cop is
|
|
only a couple of weeks um um ahead of us
|
|
um what are your expectations from uh a
|
|
Renewables industry point of view uh
|
|
well there is I think a point which is
|
|
about the growth of Renewables and I
|
|
think it's about tripling Renewables uh
|
|
investment uh in in a very short term so
|
|
and of course I mean I'm sure you're all
|
|
very much aware but cop this year is
|
|
going to be hosted um in Dubai um and
|
|
heavily um attended by of course um oil
|
|
and gas companies Petro States so uh
|
|
many leaders so that that probably the
|
|
main point I think is is more leadership
|
|
into uh into the the N zero agenda
|
|
because it takes a huge commitment and
|
|
you know making the changes that we're
|
|
speaking about in the aviation industry
|
|
uh mhm enabling the banking world to
|
|
support the The Net Zero decarbonization
|
|
of the world takes huge leadership so I
|
|
think what I expect of a cup 28 is
|
|
leaders to show that they're ready to
|
|
lead the way to a net zero is what you
|
|
would like to see or what you think is
|
|
actually going to happen well I think
|
|
you will see commitment because people
|
|
cannot afford not to make progress so I
|
|
would think uh there will be progress
|
|
but there will always be compromises and
|
|
the question I think what would be
|
|
interesting is to see you know the
|
|
commitment that we the progress that has
|
|
been made commitment that we make to
|
|
accelerate yeah the the transition that
|
|
that would be what I'm looking for and
|
|
what is the sort of stance uh commitment
|
|
that leaders are willing to take yeah as
|
|
part of cup 28 all right so um thank you
|
|
Mata so let me um ask you Tom but also
|
|
um R mat if you like to comment on on
|
|
this other question so be because we
|
|
talked about regulation and the role of
|
|
Regulation and how it could be
|
|
beneficial uh to develop certain
|
|
um certain Solutions can it also hinder
|
|
do you think uh innovation in other
|
|
parts of the
|
|
world I I do and I think you know that
|
|
relates very closely to what I think we
|
|
might see come out of cop in our sector
|
|
and what I'd like to see come out
|
|
there's going to be a lot of talk about
|
|
sustainable aviation fuel as an example
|
|
which is a very nice solution if we can
|
|
get there economically because it just
|
|
drops into existing Technologies but you
|
|
know there are a lot of disbenefits
|
|
there there's environmental harms that
|
|
need to be taken into account there's
|
|
actually the economics there's the fact
|
|
that we've been trying to scale
|
|
sustainable Aviation fuels for over 10
|
|
years now we're still at 0.1% of
|
|
aviation fuel is actually sustainable
|
|
right now and I think there's an area
|
|
where um you know something that looks
|
|
attractive and gets a lot of focus can
|
|
actually hinder Innovation going on
|
|
elsewhere in the sector um I talked a
|
|
little bit about taxation I'd like to
|
|
see Aviation sto being treated as a
|
|
special case here there is no tax on
|
|
aviation fuel at all really today 37
|
|
cents a liter which is less than we pay
|
|
when we go to the petrol pumps here MH
|
|
that would be enough um by by some
|
|
estimates to tip the balance in favor of
|
|
hydrogen technology in aviation which
|
|
does offer the potential of real net
|
|
zero actual zero operations so it's a
|
|
it's a great case where actually over
|
|
focusing on one potential answer can
|
|
really hinder the ability to innovate
|
|
somewhere else that's got much stronger
|
|
longer term potential in my
|
|
opinion thank you um Richard uh mat
|
|
would you like to comment on this as
|
|
well so where the you feel the
|
|
regulation for example in the EU uh May
|
|
H Innovation elsewhere in the
|
|
world I can use I don't know if I yeah
|
|
yeah I can use a thre example today uh
|
|
death Nest so that's the department for
|
|
energy and Security in in the UK is
|
|
announcing a change to the cfd the
|
|
maximum price you can get through a cfd
|
|
auction cfd auction is a is a way to
|
|
enable renewable investment by fixing
|
|
the price for 15 years for for
|
|
technology so they are annual auctions
|
|
and what we had as the last auction is
|
|
no offshore projects uh securing a cfd
|
|
actually no projects participated
|
|
because the prices were too low and um
|
|
what we're looking for in in the UK is
|
|
not just fixed floating so the
|
|
foundation that are fixed in the sea but
|
|
floating uh because that allow to give
|
|
access to much more uh uh uh places
|
|
where to to build offshore wind and
|
|
today's announcement uh is a good
|
|
success for a good news for the industry
|
|
because we we've been arguing that
|
|
prices you know the cap prices at the
|
|
auction were too low to enable a supply
|
|
chain and developer in uh operator to
|
|
make this Investments and they announce
|
|
a 50% increase for example for floating
|
|
wind so we have a project floating
|
|
projects in in development there are a
|
|
few more uh uh developers operator in
|
|
the UK having one and the potential for
|
|
floating is huge across the world but in
|
|
the UK it's also a key technology to
|
|
enable Net Zero but this wasn't a
|
|
consequence of uh regulation in the EU
|
|
or no but it's a it's a I mean the
|
|
general the EU regulation uh you know
|
|
set some targets and some enbl so are
|
|
equivalent right in uh but it's just to
|
|
show you know the specific how policy
|
|
can really bring Innovation and enable
|
|
Innovation the impact the impct on that
|
|
it thank you Richard I wonder whether
|
|
you would like also to comment on this
|
|
point I would yeah only briefly add that
|
|
of course um you know policy makers will
|
|
only put 90 or 95% of their focus into
|
|
into what's going to be effective uh
|
|
within their locus of influence or the
|
|
locus of policy making um it's good when
|
|
we see that there has been some um sort
|
|
of international collaboration ahead of
|
|
ahead of major policy announcements and
|
|
um but we I suppose in reality we can't
|
|
always expect that to be the case and we
|
|
and we haven't with Ira just as much as
|
|
we haven't with uh some of some of our
|
|
EU policy But ultimately if it's
|
|
inspiring uh other jurisdictions to to
|
|
take stronger action as well as I
|
|
suppose we're seeing with the cbam now
|
|
committed for the UK uh then probably
|
|
it's ultimately to the
|
|
good all right thank you thank you so
|
|
much as we we keep on going back to to
|
|
those um highly complex uh and and
|
|
potentially very consequential rules um
|
|
so I I will try to to finish the panel
|
|
not too uh not with too big a delay
|
|
because I'm very conscious about um uh
|
|
what's going to happen next which I
|
|
think is lunch um but I still would like
|
|
to uh I still would like to um to pick
|
|
up a couple of other questions that came
|
|
in and of course the ones that you feel
|
|
uh the panel hasn't really addressed do
|
|
feel free to get in touch with all of uh
|
|
I'm sure you'll be very happy to um to
|
|
hear from every everyone um uh today um
|
|
and um continue the conversation so
|
|
we've been talking about policy and
|
|
regulation quite a lot but uh uh someone
|
|
is asking sure this is important what
|
|
about individual companies what can
|
|
individual companies private sector
|
|
companies do to improve things and I'm
|
|
going to also uh add another part to
|
|
this question which is about climate
|
|
literacy so what can companies do to um
|
|
go ahead with Innovation and really
|
|
tackle climate change but also as part
|
|
of this what are you doing what can
|
|
companies do in terms of improving
|
|
climate literacy Tom shall I start with
|
|
you uh yes so so I think uh it's a very
|
|
relevant and real question for for us as
|
|
a business um we have built the
|
|
technology that we've developed around
|
|
capability gaps useful places to operate
|
|
in the market on the one hand and the
|
|
ability to drw the emissions of the
|
|
overall sector where the technolog is
|
|
invested on adapted on the other I I
|
|
think you know I'm very aware that in
|
|
the middle of all of that we've got a
|
|
company to scale and as we scale that
|
|
company move our product into production
|
|
balancing the hard decisions um about
|
|
how far how fast do you go with
|
|
infrastructure projects how do you scale
|
|
up in the right way how do you trade off
|
|
speed to Market so the ability for
|
|
inservice emissions to be dropped versus
|
|
any impacts we might have along the way
|
|
and we don't we don't have all the
|
|
answers to that we're working to improve
|
|
our literacy as a as a leadership team
|
|
actually as anme without dedicated
|
|
resource in there to do that um so it's
|
|
the leadership it's the question for so
|
|
there it's about leadership but I think
|
|
it's also about engagement so the the
|
|
other example and the the the um the
|
|
example I have in mind you watching a
|
|
business alongside us we're about to set
|
|
up a a production line in the north of
|
|
England um business alongside that
|
|
alongside us there has invested heavily
|
|
in developing carbon literacy in its own
|
|
Workforce and it hasn't relied within
|
|
the company on top down yes leadership
|
|
but stimulating bottom up ideation and
|
|
Innovation within the business
|
|
operations I think that's a fantastic
|
|
model and one that we're looking to
|
|
develop and employ so you mean by that
|
|
being a becoming aware of uh carbon
|
|
literacy and your own impact your own
|
|
impact your own your own life at
|
|
individual level in the operations that
|
|
you deliver within the bus drive those
|
|
ideas up through the organization okay
|
|
so gathering this information and
|
|
sharing that that's AIT having
|
|
leadership highly committed to doing so
|
|
let me go to Richard uh next and then
|
|
I'll I'll we'll wrap up with you m yeah
|
|
I very much resonate with what Tom was
|
|
just saying there about you know from
|
|
the ground up and initiating uh but not
|
|
trying to spoon feed an organization I
|
|
part of that certainly um you know in
|
|
our organization is that you have
|
|
different knowledge requirements quite
|
|
distinct knowledge requirements in
|
|
different roles within an
|
|
organization um and so it setting a
|
|
framework setting an understanding
|
|
overall about uh you know in our case
|
|
our banks commitments uh and our bank's
|
|
view on where things are going where
|
|
they need to be going uh is enough uh to
|
|
to then give the you know the department
|
|
over here or the Frontline advisors over
|
|
here um the you know the direction they
|
|
need that to to start looking into the
|
|
issues themselves and it really takes
|
|
fire just like Tom was saying it really
|
|
takes fire when people start to come up
|
|
with their own ideas start to test some
|
|
other hypothesis and you know being
|
|
there to do to to to be the sounding
|
|
board for that and to help develop that
|
|
is so much more effective than you know
|
|
desiging the next year's mandatory
|
|
training whatever it might
|
|
so do for example your you know the team
|
|
involved in origination originating the
|
|
do they are they aware of the finance
|
|
the missions for example of a potential
|
|
deal is it something that they might
|
|
help is it something you're doing yeah
|
|
yeah that's that's what we're looking to
|
|
spread through the organization uh
|
|
making some pretty good progress I think
|
|
but it's uh it isn't something that
|
|
everyone switches on to overnight and so
|
|
you know we've got to do some degree of
|
|
calibration on that uh and we've got to
|
|
make sure we've got sufficient resource
|
|
in the organization as things progress
|
|
uh to be able to meet these needs but
|
|
you do have to be sort of a little bit a
|
|
little bit Fleet a little bit flexible
|
|
around this uh and in the end I suppose
|
|
that's certainly it's our decentralized
|
|
way anyway in the end we know through uh
|
|
through experience and that's a much
|
|
more effective way that just you know
|
|
try to drill things into people thank
|
|
you Richard mat last word yeah I mean
|
|
there the I really like the two points I
|
|
mean they they comes back to um uh you
|
|
know to make that transition we need
|
|
people to change their behaviors mhm to
|
|
change their behaviors in fact we need
|
|
to invest in so that people understand
|
|
what they can do uh what is expected of
|
|
them how can they do it so engagement
|
|
about understanding or impact is
|
|
essential skills uh to change the way we
|
|
do things is important if I just look at
|
|
you know what we how we try to enable
|
|
that with businesses something as simple
|
|
as changing the way you procure your
|
|
energy today uh into Renewables is quite
|
|
challenging because of the complexity of
|
|
the uh energy electricity market and
|
|
it's relatively simple you know that a
|
|
simple things to switch from let's say a
|
|
gas to a Renewables by with a corporate
|
|
PPA now if you look at the industry
|
|
looking to change the way they do their
|
|
process so chemical industry for example
|
|
we are investing into we're negotiating
|
|
with Des again so that the department
|
|
for energy Security in the UK uh a
|
|
nitrogen project so we will procure
|
|
green nitrogen to chemicals industry and
|
|
this chemical industry some in some
|
|
cases already have process and system
|
|
using estrogen in some cases they would
|
|
have to replace maybe burning gas into
|
|
estrogen that is a huge change in a
|
|
company you know changing the way they
|
|
process the industrial uh uh path so
|
|
there is not that that while the uh you
|
|
know the technology is there we know how
|
|
to do it the switch you know the uh is
|
|
we spoke about policy but we speak about
|
|
in fact is how people do things we have
|
|
to do things
|
|
differently so we need to invest into
|
|
people and people need to understand
|
|
what they can do to make that the
|
|
changes enable these changes wonderful
|
|
what the what a lovely way to uh to end
|
|
a panel that is uh organized by an
|
|
institution that of course looks at
|
|
training people and creating new skills
|
|
because of course um uh academic
|
|
institutions do also play a very
|
|
important uh role here thank you so much
|
|
for uh for joining us thank you so much
|
|
to Tom M and Richard for sharing their
|
|
thoughts I I found uh everything that
|
|
you guys have said fascinating I hope
|
|
you also found it fascinating too and
|
|
now um like a big round of applause to
|
|
for everyone and
|
|
um
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
### think ahead: How Regulation is Supporting the Path to Net Zero
|
|
URL: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HyC66Ybmhok
|
|
|
|
Idioma: en
|
|
|
|
our next panel how regulation can
|
|
support the path to Net Zero this is
|
|
going to be a panel like all the others
|
|
where you can ask questions uh but the
|
|
questions will be moderated uh by our
|
|
moderator our pan moderator and that is
|
|
same as last before lunch Sylvia please
|
|
I'm going to let give you the floor and
|
|
you can ruce the panel thanks very much
|
|
thank you so much uh it's good to be
|
|
back um so we started talking about
|
|
policy and regulation in the previous
|
|
panel and then judging by the the
|
|
comments that a few of you um uh submit
|
|
in the q& uh through the Q&A app there
|
|
was some push back right against policy
|
|
I mean so is it just policy should the
|
|
companies do more but actually quite a
|
|
lot of it I I would argue and maybe you
|
|
would expect that from me given that I
|
|
cover this day in day out for uh
|
|
sustainable views um a lot of this
|
|
really a lot of this area a lot of the
|
|
world of sustainability and ESG and then
|
|
we will continue actually talking about
|
|
a lot of this the big and ever expanding
|
|
alphabet soup that describes this area
|
|
is driven by regulation so in this panel
|
|
we actually going to uh to talk a little
|
|
bit more and really dive deeper into
|
|
what
|
|
regulation uh is looking at the moment
|
|
when addressing climate change but also
|
|
sustainability uh concerns and to do
|
|
that let me introduce you to our
|
|
panelist
|
|
so we have uh at the at my far right uh
|
|
lucrecia rlin who is a professor of
|
|
Economics here at the lbs uh next to her
|
|
we have Emily McKenzie who is technical
|
|
director at the task force for on nature
|
|
related Financial disclosures uh and uh
|
|
right next to me is Marcel Alber who is
|
|
assistant professor of accounting so he
|
|
can really give us some very detailed
|
|
interesting uh aspects of this um here
|
|
at lbs and joining us remotely uh is
|
|
jaier hiier who is the the CFO of hro a
|
|
s I can see your back uh your back there
|
|
it's a bage reclaim so uh welcome
|
|
welcome everyone so um regulation right
|
|
the first thing to I guess to address is
|
|
the language of sustainability and the
|
|
the language of Regulation because this
|
|
is becoming a very
|
|
confusing uh subject to address uh not
|
|
least because uh of the terminology that
|
|
uh we are ending up using so from ESG
|
|
environmental social and governance and
|
|
arguably already this a pretty clumsy
|
|
clumsy not particularly attractive and
|
|
some might say meaningless uh term to uh
|
|
other uh abbreviation such as csid sfdr
|
|
esrs issb issb and many other the NFD as
|
|
well so I issb is the uh the initiative
|
|
um of the uh of International Accounting
|
|
standard set ifs uh and uh it looks at
|
|
creating a global Baseline for the way
|
|
in which companies disclose information
|
|
around sustainability which can help uh
|
|
understand what companies doing the same
|
|
way that uh we mostly investors but also
|
|
other stakeholders uh are now um able to
|
|
understand what they do from a financial
|
|
perspective so look let me start with
|
|
you you're being um very active uh in
|
|
the developments of the work of the issb
|
|
why don't you take us through uh how you
|
|
feel this the language that is
|
|
underpinning sustainability through uh
|
|
the work that you're doing is is
|
|
developing okay thank you Sylvia and uh
|
|
you know it's very nice to be here with
|
|
you know a lot of people interested in
|
|
sustainability that's good uh so for
|
|
transparency let me say I'm a professor
|
|
of Economics that's my main job but I'm
|
|
also a trustee of the if s which is the
|
|
International Foundation for reporting
|
|
standards and um I think the this F the
|
|
ifs is the global standard Setter for
|
|
financial accounts so think what the
|
|
financial system would be like if we did
|
|
not have standards for financial
|
|
accounts so how would company you know
|
|
read
|
|
performance of companies around the
|
|
world how investor would you know read
|
|
this information if we did not have
|
|
global standards which are auditable
|
|
assur and so on so now the world is
|
|
changing there are new risk new risk New
|
|
Opportunities and uh you know the
|
|
climate uh uh risk is huge as has been
|
|
discussed it's not the only risk we have
|
|
risk related to depletion of nature we
|
|
have risk which are related to Social
|
|
and so on but these risk and
|
|
opportunities have to be taken in
|
|
consideration by companies investors
|
|
want to know
|
|
this information so we need standards we
|
|
need to achieve in sustainability what
|
|
20 30 years ago have been achieved for
|
|
for financial accountant for financial
|
|
accounting okay so the ifs after a
|
|
consultation with stakeholders companies
|
|
and regulator ask do we need these
|
|
standards and actually 20 in the last 20
|
|
years a lot of organization like this
|
|
sby the integration reporting Foundation
|
|
a lot of these organization actually
|
|
formulated some standards uh on you know
|
|
and these are private organization which
|
|
were followed by companies on a
|
|
voluntary basis but uh in a way so we
|
|
started this consultation in 2020 from a
|
|
situation in which there were lots of
|
|
Standards lots of initiatives lots of
|
|
you know different acronyms and you know
|
|
that was called in fact the alphabet
|
|
soup and so in our consultation we asked
|
|
do we need to
|
|
harmonize and do we need to aggregate
|
|
these different initiatives and should
|
|
should we do it as Financial Accounting
|
|
standard centers the ifs and actually
|
|
the result of the consultation was yes
|
|
yes yes and uh so then you know I led
|
|
the task force that actually you know
|
|
eventually uh let you know form the the
|
|
SSB uh um and I think it was a
|
|
fascinating work because it was the
|
|
result of of you know combination of a
|
|
bottom up process so something that
|
|
aggregating from something that was
|
|
actually already there in the market and
|
|
the top up process because in order to
|
|
be a you know a a an aggregator of those
|
|
initiatives we needed to have the
|
|
support of the Global Financial
|
|
Regulators which we got and so the
|
|
support of the iosco the market regulat
|
|
the G7 the G20 and so on and so you know
|
|
in 2021 at cop 26 we uh establish the
|
|
issb now Emanuel faar that the CEO of
|
|
donon that Julian talked about is now
|
|
the chair of the
|
|
SSB so uh and then you know the
|
|
standards are out so and I've been out
|
|
after consultation so they're going to
|
|
start uh you know kicking in from
|
|
2024 and um and these are standard for
|
|
the global market okay that's a very key
|
|
thing so that we are a global standard
|
|
sets why because the Capital Market is
|
|
global and so we need standards that
|
|
work in China work in Africa work in
|
|
Europe and work in the US this is not
|
|
easy because legal Frameworks and public
|
|
policy tools are very segmented so but
|
|
we need a global regulator okay so we
|
|
came out with this IDE idea of the
|
|
global Baseline so we uh you know we
|
|
have a concept which we uh you know we
|
|
ask companies to disclose standards
|
|
which are financially material and then
|
|
maybe we we can discuss later what that
|
|
means and then if there are jurisdiction
|
|
which are more ambitious that you want
|
|
to standards because they want achieve
|
|
the green deal like for example Europe
|
|
they have a top up okay but the
|
|
important things is that there is a
|
|
coherence between these different level
|
|
of disclosure so that the preparers and
|
|
the counters don't get crazy okay
|
|
basically we need something which is Rel
|
|
relatively easy and transparent and
|
|
understandable or otherwise there would
|
|
be a backlash yeah yeah perfect okay so
|
|
this is the issp and how many obviously
|
|
I can't see the hands if they would ever
|
|
go up uh uh back where you're looking at
|
|
us from your offices or homes but here
|
|
how many of you are familiar with for
|
|
example the ISB or the uh t a few hands
|
|
okay good wonderful
|
|
uh so my students of course all your
|
|
students yes I'm I'm
|
|
students wow you have been warned um so
|
|
um very important and relevant uh
|
|
initiative um
|
|
Emily why they need to have another
|
|
Global initiative that looks in this
|
|
case at nature so on the back of another
|
|
uh similar task force that we're looking
|
|
specifically at climate related
|
|
Financial uh factors why nature and how
|
|
does your work um gel with the ISB and
|
|
any
|
|
others yes there's increasing
|
|
recognition from from governments from
|
|
um Regulators from central banks and
|
|
supervisors from investors and from
|
|
companies businesses themselves that
|
|
nature more broadly than just climate
|
|
change we are experiencing historically
|
|
unprecedented loss of Nature and its
|
|
diversity uh driven by climate change
|
|
but driven by other things also is
|
|
creating material risks and also
|
|
presents
|
|
opportunities
|
|
um important Milestones have happened in
|
|
December last year we had the Paris
|
|
moment for nature where nearly 200
|
|
governments agreed to a set of global
|
|
goals and targets to Halt and reverse
|
|
nature loss so recognizing this as a so
|
|
a global
|
|
issue the network for Greening the
|
|
financial system which is a network of
|
|
central by 100 over 100 central banks
|
|
and supervisors also recognize that
|
|
nature loss creates R macroeconomic
|
|
consequences and risks to financial
|
|
stability so is core to the Mandate of
|
|
central banks and supervisors and we
|
|
have a growing number of investors for
|
|
example Black Rock Aviva others who at
|
|
norus Bank investment management which
|
|
is the biggest Sovereign wealth fund in
|
|
the world who are also recognizing that
|
|
their portfolios are exposed to these
|
|
risks and then you have large corporates
|
|
who are actually up the front line of
|
|
seeing pollinator collapse or water
|
|
supply issues or failure to be able to
|
|
get permits because of uh the impacts
|
|
that they're having um a variety of of
|
|
physical risks as well as transition
|
|
risks apply to Nature as a whole and in
|
|
many ways we've made tremendous traction
|
|
through thinking about climate change
|
|
and climate mitigation But ultimately
|
|
we're under one planet it has a number
|
|
of Earth Systems we know um from the
|
|
Stockholm resilience Center that
|
|
actually six of those nine if you think
|
|
of them as Earth system boundaries are
|
|
outside of their safe space climate is
|
|
just one of six so in many ways we're
|
|
just drawing it's like an entry point
|
|
into seeing the risks more broadly so
|
|
that's all backdrop for why nature I
|
|
think very clear argument for why this
|
|
is
|
|
presenting um implications for Society
|
|
at large but also for business and for
|
|
finance
|
|
um so why another initiative because
|
|
there was another initiative uh with
|
|
another four-letter acronym that has um
|
|
I think been hugely successful in
|
|
creating momentum around climate that
|
|
was the task force on climate related
|
|
Financial disclosures tcfd uh which
|
|
created a set of recommendations back in
|
|
2017 which um were around disclosure but
|
|
also around risk management for these
|
|
issues around climate and it's had huge
|
|
huge implications I think not only for
|
|
disclosure and uh for disclosure for
|
|
investors but also for improving
|
|
strategy governance and risk management
|
|
improving decision- making and capital
|
|
allocation so we tnfd saw that success
|
|
and also realized that climate and
|
|
nature are tightly interlined you can't
|
|
really think about climate risks and
|
|
opportunities without thinking about
|
|
nature because we know uh 30% uh of um
|
|
uh nature of climate risks are driven by
|
|
nature and and climate is one of the
|
|
biggest drivers of nature loss so we
|
|
thought we'd build on the same model the
|
|
same process we established a market Le
|
|
task force so we're actually not we're
|
|
certainly not regulation and we're not a
|
|
standard we're a set of market-led
|
|
recommendations because the market is
|
|
recognizing this is a material issue and
|
|
we see the issb as an absolutely
|
|
critical milestone for creating this
|
|
consistency it's already Consolidated a
|
|
large number of the alphabet soup indeed
|
|
tcfd sister organization has just
|
|
sunsetted and declared success because
|
|
their recommendations are now folded
|
|
into the climate standard as to that
|
|
issb has launched so we hope one day
|
|
also part of thef part of issb it is
|
|
folded in and they have declared success
|
|
since 2017 with isb's momentum so we
|
|
stand ready to support issb as and when
|
|
they have you know they've completed
|
|
their agenda consultation process see
|
|
where nature is a priority uh stand
|
|
ready we've worked very hard to create
|
|
the consistency with the standards so
|
|
that we'll make it as easy as possible
|
|
to to dock in so I think I think
|
|
generally I see the path of recognizing
|
|
these issues having the momentum to make
|
|
progress which sometimes needs a
|
|
four-letter acronym yeah but then over
|
|
time issb has created this really
|
|
important platform for that consistency
|
|
for the Baseline yeah and we've been
|
|
quite thoughtful about how we can then
|
|
enable that top up so the European
|
|
jurisdiction is helpful for us because
|
|
they've already gone further so how can
|
|
we make sure our framework can not only
|
|
help to meet the isb's B Baseline but
|
|
help sort of 10 10,000 or more companies
|
|
in Europe who also need to disclose on
|
|
their impacts regardless of financial
|
|
materiality perfect so the issb is
|
|
serving uh also as an umbrella for other
|
|
existing or pre-existing uh uh reporting
|
|
standards such as sby we mentioned and
|
|
also Incorporated um some of the uh
|
|
principles under TCF and and what you're
|
|
doing essentially is also helping
|
|
companies with their strategy right so
|
|
internally they they become more aware
|
|
of uh the importance and the impacts of
|
|
of nature nature laws uh on their
|
|
activities and again as you know there
|
|
are many other uh reporting Frameworks
|
|
and standards that have been developed
|
|
over the years um lots more to come uh
|
|
and Marcel coming to you now has have
|
|
any of these actually
|
|
helped well uh I'm obviously not in the
|
|
position to give a perfect answer to
|
|
that or any answer to that i' like to
|
|
take one step back and help us think a
|
|
little bit about um the the usefulness
|
|
uh of all of this I think um lcia and
|
|
Emily have given fantastic overviews of
|
|
where we are are really in the Practical
|
|
weeds one step back um something we
|
|
academics care about what's the theory
|
|
uh behind that and and why do we do that
|
|
does that make sense and to also give
|
|
you some insights into what do we do as
|
|
professors at lbs and with many
|
|
colleagues uh all around the world it's
|
|
thinking about is disclosure disclosure
|
|
regulation a powerful part of overall
|
|
climate regulation that can help us get
|
|
to a net zero and that's why we're here
|
|
so one could ask the question why do
|
|
that and look has given um a very
|
|
practical argument Capital markets need
|
|
this information of course so why not
|
|
say okay let's disclose as much as we
|
|
can it's not straightforward how to do
|
|
that well the reason is that disclosure
|
|
can also create costs for companies and
|
|
I think Kier will will uh confirm that
|
|
compliance cost somebody has to uh
|
|
report and file these uh reports that
|
|
why why we have so many accountants in
|
|
the world maybe but also all sorts of
|
|
other proprietary costs for example your
|
|
competitors see exactly what you do so
|
|
it's not straightforward that full
|
|
disclosure and full transparency is
|
|
always um the the perfect um
|
|
solution I guess the main idea here
|
|
behind climate related uh disclosures to
|
|
be a bit more narrow and the issp is
|
|
that well to help investors but also
|
|
induce certain behaviors of companies in
|
|
the sense that like sunlight is is the
|
|
best disinfectant so if we disclose
|
|
things have companies become transparent
|
|
then we can measure things and as as we
|
|
also say at Business Schools only what
|
|
measured uh can be managed so the key
|
|
question I would like to give a brief
|
|
overview of what we know does this work
|
|
MH disclosure General um does this work
|
|
and we have a bunch of studies um I
|
|
think Alex Edmund would say some of
|
|
those are more rigorous than others but
|
|
they paint a consistent picture uh
|
|
meaning that if we mandate companies to
|
|
disclose about their sustainability
|
|
activities and environmental outcomes um
|
|
more narrowly then they reduce
|
|
apparently um their their dirty Behavior
|
|
their pollution effect sizes here have
|
|
been documented to be relatively large
|
|
10 to 25% I don't know whether CFO like
|
|
kavier would would believe that that
|
|
companies reduce emissions by 10 to 20
|
|
uh% because they have to disclose so it
|
|
seems to work so it can be a powerful
|
|
tool a caveat of course these have been
|
|
effects found at the margin for firms
|
|
just being pushed in into this sort of
|
|
um mandatory uh disclosure regime like
|
|
in the UK since 2013 and my students
|
|
will know UK companies have to report on
|
|
greenhouse gas emissions and those
|
|
affected firms apparently reduced
|
|
emissions by a to 10% relative to
|
|
European PE firms however only in the
|
|
first and second year so this effect was
|
|
transitory so I think it's obviously an
|
|
important Milestone um to have a
|
|
globally a consistent disclosure
|
|
framework uh but that's only one um one
|
|
aspect of Regulation probably we need
|
|
more intrusive regulation as well uh to
|
|
help um get to Net Zero
|
|
okay so emissions have gone down and of
|
|
course then also we need to talk about
|
|
uh the numbers behind that right so that
|
|
this decrease is it because they
|
|
actually stopped emitting as much or is
|
|
it because they've used some other
|
|
instruments such as for example carbon
|
|
offsetting to reduce uh those stated
|
|
emissions but we'll talk about carbon
|
|
offsets as well which I know is one of
|
|
those really really hot subjects that
|
|
usually people like to hear about uh
|
|
Javier okay you are the one that
|
|
actually has to put together this data
|
|
disclose it I'm sure you have have
|
|
plenty of um investors and other
|
|
stakeholders asking you for that data um
|
|
tell us how complicated it is to uh to
|
|
put together a meaningful sustainability
|
|
report and and to look also the risks
|
|
that uh all these factors um have on on
|
|
a company such as yours right thanks
|
|
Sylvia and good afternoon I'm very sorry
|
|
for not to be there but um I'm I'm I'm
|
|
also here in the back at call trying to
|
|
make sure that you're having a
|
|
successful holiday for some of you that
|
|
might be tempted to go out this weekend
|
|
so and I think in terms of
|
|
sustainability well first of all I think
|
|
this is an absolute uh sift in the way
|
|
we operate as as as a business I think
|
|
particularly Aviation I think is a very
|
|
iconic uh
|
|
industry is is an industry that has this
|
|
perception that this a hard to evate and
|
|
uh and and and therefore for many years
|
|
I think at hro we have been really
|
|
working on sifting our overall strategy
|
|
because I think that becoming a
|
|
sustainable able business is not just a
|
|
matter of uh values it's a it's actually
|
|
a matter of of value and license to
|
|
operate I think if if we continue
|
|
creating a conflict between flying and
|
|
Planet uh Planet uh should and will win
|
|
and therefore I think the question for
|
|
us the way that we are addressing
|
|
sustainability is very much about how
|
|
can we protect the benefits of aviation
|
|
in a world free of carbon that is
|
|
ultimately carbon would is killing uh
|
|
the planet I think Aviation has many uh
|
|
has a critical role in terms of
|
|
delivering at least nine of the 177
|
|
United Nations sustainable development
|
|
goals but carbon is definitely something
|
|
that um needs to be removed and needs to
|
|
be removed at speed and therefore
|
|
urgency I think is one of the
|
|
fundamental things and I think sometimes
|
|
when we talked about regulation and
|
|
Reporting I think I think one of the
|
|
important things that we shouldn't
|
|
forget the goal of all of that I think
|
|
we we ended up where we ended up today
|
|
in terms of the impact on planet because
|
|
over two centuries we have been
|
|
optimizing our economies to a single
|
|
currency and that currency is Sterling
|
|
Pounds or US dollars but actually what
|
|
we have learned over the last couple of
|
|
decades is that in the process of
|
|
optimizing against that currency we have
|
|
neglected the consequences it has in
|
|
terms of creating
|
|
externalities H to to the planet and
|
|
therefore what we really need to figure
|
|
out now is how can we H change the
|
|
reporting how can we give enough uh data
|
|
points to investors to change the way
|
|
they measure success not purely in
|
|
economic terms but actually economic uh
|
|
terms adjusted by the impact on on
|
|
planet and that's and that's the
|
|
fundamental challenge how we can help
|
|
investors which is ultimately the goal
|
|
of all these ifs standards how we can
|
|
help investors to allocate Capital more
|
|
effectively against a slightly more
|
|
complicated metric which is a risk
|
|
adjusted a carbon risk adjusted economic
|
|
value and I completely agree with Lucan
|
|
actually is fantastic that the Lucan and
|
|
the other colleagues in ifs has created
|
|
the ISB because is the in my view the
|
|
most powerful and if there's a single
|
|
horse to back that's the issb to really
|
|
put order when it comes to
|
|
sustainability standard because I think
|
|
we all have a duty to provide uh data to
|
|
investors to allocate Capital more more
|
|
effectively I think part of my role as
|
|
CFO is that I spent U significant import
|
|
part of my time raising funds to fund uh
|
|
the terminals that hopefully you enjoy
|
|
in my career I have raised uh 44 billion
|
|
pounds of financing globally and I have
|
|
seen a huge uh increase in investors
|
|
seeking that uh carbon risk adjusted
|
|
value value generation that's why I
|
|
think is is really important the work
|
|
that is that is happening at this stage
|
|
unfortunately this stage is a bit too
|
|
complex uh there are too many standards
|
|
and um and I think that we all need to
|
|
keep uh co-creating uh this environment
|
|
where we try to move as fast as possible
|
|
because if there's one thing that we
|
|
don't have when it comes to
|
|
sustainability and and climate is is we
|
|
don't have too much time we are already
|
|
late and therefore uh trying to really
|
|
converge to a single uh platform which I
|
|
hope uh and we are working hard uh to to
|
|
make that happen is is the ISB and the
|
|
IFRS new
|
|
standards part also of my role is I
|
|
co-chair the European for leader
|
|
leadership networks in the UK to really
|
|
on on on reporting matters and uh and I
|
|
think that we are working quite closely
|
|
with the ASB to try to make the rules
|
|
simple and uh but also to create a safe
|
|
space where people can can report I
|
|
think one of the best news that has
|
|
happened also apart from the creation is
|
|
also the appointment of the leaders of
|
|
the SB Emanuel Faber L mentioned is a
|
|
pragmatist he has been a CFO and a CEO
|
|
before so he has suffered the
|
|
consequences of Po regulation and I
|
|
think that one of the great things one
|
|
of the great news is that he's an
|
|
absolute pragat is the same with Su
|
|
Lloyd the vice chair of of the ISB she
|
|
has been setting standards for many many
|
|
years and therefore I think the issb is
|
|
doing a fantastic job but they need help
|
|
and I think that the best way of helping
|
|
them to create a powerful regulation is
|
|
rather than complaining rather than
|
|
moaning about the regulator actually the
|
|
best thing that we can do is to put in
|
|
practice those standards as fast as
|
|
possible
|
|
so we can find the challenges that those
|
|
standards unconsciously or inadvertently
|
|
can create for for corporates so one of
|
|
the things that we have been doing at
|
|
hro but most of the big organizations in
|
|
the UK are doing is to take in a
|
|
voluntary adoption of the standards
|
|
voluntary adoption of tcfd tnfd because
|
|
I think that what we really need is
|
|
collectively to create standards that
|
|
can be flexible enough to create an
|
|
environment of trust because is the most
|
|
polluting company the ones that needs to
|
|
start disclosing early for those
|
|
companies who are have a perfect uh
|
|
sheet of paper and they are not
|
|
embarrassed to disclose they are not
|
|
going to be the ones really H helping to
|
|
remove carbon from the air or removing
|
|
uh or or supporting nature I think are
|
|
those who are H creating the worst
|
|
impact into that the the ones that needs
|
|
to see and that's why I think the ISB
|
|
also has done a very good job in terms
|
|
of creating clear guidance but again
|
|
being guidance not being too
|
|
prescriptive to try to avoid uh people
|
|
misreporting thank you so muchier so um
|
|
we still have uh in theory five minutes
|
|
to to have a little conversation among
|
|
us but then I we really like to open the
|
|
the floor to questions uh which are
|
|
already coming in so thank you so much
|
|
for submitting them essentially
|
|
reporting is good right we all want to
|
|
have uh pertinent information available
|
|
um too much reporting uh means that of
|
|
course there is a burden on companies
|
|
and you all the companies and CFOs I
|
|
speak to they have the same reaction
|
|
that you do Cav which came through the
|
|
video this deflation like oh there is
|
|
too much too many too many Frameworks
|
|
too much um too many requirements too
|
|
many standards so number one good there
|
|
is a global um effort to bring them
|
|
together but of course there isn't
|
|
really yet agreement um on uh I would
|
|
say on uh what um is important the key
|
|
important things to focus on because and
|
|
here we start talking about materiality
|
|
what is material to companies and
|
|
whether uh that should be the sole focus
|
|
of these reporting standards or whether
|
|
we should also try to analyze and
|
|
disclose companies impact on the
|
|
environment and on society which is the
|
|
point of view of the EU which has been
|
|
also very active uh in its regulatory
|
|
work uh and uh and um you know being
|
|
quite vocal as well about the importance
|
|
of of measuring impact in this sense
|
|
look let me come back to you so how do
|
|
you see this conflict because I think it
|
|
is a conflict isn't it being resolved
|
|
well uh I don't think it's necessarily a
|
|
conflict I mean there are two ways of
|
|
understanding this uh this problem first
|
|
let me Define it okay so uh at the F FRS
|
|
there is a tradition as standard seter
|
|
for financial accounts we have a concept
|
|
of materiality okay so that you disclose
|
|
what do you disclose what is financially
|
|
material so what makes a difference for
|
|
an investor to decide to invest or not
|
|
to invest in a company or for Capital
|
|
Market uh you know so is this this is a
|
|
very you know clear concept which has
|
|
been used for financial account and that
|
|
uh and this is the same definition that
|
|
we use for sustainability this has
|
|
certain advantage of transparency and
|
|
also it allows to relate sustainability
|
|
disclosure with financial disclosure
|
|
because you know at the end of the day
|
|
in you know maybe in the future we want
|
|
to have a fully integrated reporting in
|
|
which all these risk and opportunities
|
|
for the companies will be fully
|
|
disclosed now U the European commission
|
|
comes and says not only the European
|
|
commission but also the G or other
|
|
organization around there they say no
|
|
what we want to know is also what
|
|
companies
|
|
you know do impact on the environment so
|
|
we want the other side of materiality I
|
|
call that you know more impact than but
|
|
they call it double
|
|
materiality now um you know the double
|
|
the the the second part of materiality
|
|
of course is very difficult to Define so
|
|
material for whom material in what sense
|
|
material Horizon so you know it's very
|
|
difficult to measure so that that's one
|
|
you know but a public so an institution
|
|
which has a public policy tool like for
|
|
example the European Union which have
|
|
the legisl you know the the legal
|
|
framework to impose these standards they
|
|
may want to ask companies to disclose
|
|
what they think is useful for their
|
|
public policy objectives now as a global
|
|
regulator we are not we don't have these
|
|
tools because we have to serve a number
|
|
of jurisdictions which have different
|
|
legal Frameworks and different
|
|
objectives so we would not you know so
|
|
that would be uh you know just going
|
|
beyond what we are uh you know supposed
|
|
to do and what so I mean and this is how
|
|
you know we got we Define this concept
|
|
of the global Baseline in which say we
|
|
have this base which is the financial
|
|
materiality concept and then if a
|
|
jurisdiction has other objectives they
|
|
can put a double materiality on top of
|
|
it and the gri which is an organization
|
|
which uh is also is a private sector
|
|
type of organization has also developed
|
|
some you know standards that the is is
|
|
building on and we are working with the
|
|
EU and with the J to make this interop
|
|
operable okay to provide
|
|
interoperability now but one thing I
|
|
want to make sure that everybody
|
|
understand that to say to limit the
|
|
concept of materiality to financial
|
|
materiality that doesn't mean that we do
|
|
not have to look at Al the interaction
|
|
of what companies do with the
|
|
environment because of course you know
|
|
these risk and opportunities are very
|
|
much you know the two things are related
|
|
so in instead in fact in our standards
|
|
we ask companies to disclose about C CO2
|
|
emission scope one scope two and scope
|
|
three so we have also this metrics so
|
|
now if we look at the standards of
|
|
European commission and our standards on
|
|
climate we are very very similar and
|
|
what we are trying to you know what
|
|
we're working on now is trying to make
|
|
sure that it is clear for the
|
|
preparers what is SSB specific what is
|
|
EU specific and what where there is the
|
|
overlap now of course because on climate
|
|
transition risk are important what
|
|
happened to public policy has an effect
|
|
of what is financially material so you
|
|
know this connection is very important
|
|
for us so and uh and so you know so it's
|
|
not that mechanical okay that's yeah
|
|
thank you so there already a couple of
|
|
questions about the ISB so forgive me I
|
|
I'll have to uh stay with with L but do
|
|
perhaps you also have something uh to
|
|
add to to those points so one of them is
|
|
about uh well so G and sasb are they
|
|
going to disappear potentially yes now
|
|
but they have already not not g ssby has
|
|
already so s is part of the issb a gri
|
|
yeah so that's the direction of travel
|
|
um and another question is about carbon
|
|
taxation so we started talking about
|
|
carbo pricing um and uh the person
|
|
asking the question is is asking whether
|
|
the ice speak could ever become a sort
|
|
of
|
|
designer of a globally consistent and
|
|
integrated carbon tax system carbon tax
|
|
no I think it's you know I mean the
|
|
accountant are not going to solve the
|
|
climate transition problem okay so that
|
|
how much I you know I love the
|
|
accountants you know this is a very
|
|
complex which mean which requires
|
|
different tools and different policy
|
|
tools so the carbon tax is one of these
|
|
tools disclosure is about the
|
|
information architecture so we need to
|
|
have the information in order I mean for
|
|
Capital markets and for Public Policy uh
|
|
but you know disclosure uh once you
|
|
disclose it doesn't mean that uh you do
|
|
something you know you just disclose it
|
|
okay now you're not going to see
|
|
anality then you want to have ta we want
|
|
to have a carbon tax May and actually it
|
|
is my opinion that you need more than a
|
|
carbon tax because you also need
|
|
investment and uh you also you know you
|
|
need public investment and uh because
|
|
you know there is not just an
|
|
externality but there is also the need
|
|
to to build an infrastructure and also
|
|
to incentivize technology which is very
|
|
risky in the private Market may not
|
|
necessarily go for risk investment so we
|
|
have to think about a broad set of tools
|
|
just doing a little bit okay not a job
|
|
for not a job for the ISB but the
|
|
question about carbon pricing and the
|
|
global uh price for carbon meaning
|
|
either through um markets or through um
|
|
tax is there Mel what's are we ever
|
|
going to have a global uh and high
|
|
enough carbon price yeah hopefully
|
|
certainly we're not there countries like
|
|
going to blame it Germany uh does not
|
|
have a carbon uh tax but there was a
|
|
blueprint uh out there or there is a
|
|
blueprint out there since 2021 showing
|
|
how this can actually work because as L
|
|
has pointed out these types of
|
|
regulations tax law is jurisdictional so
|
|
you need individual jurisdiction like a
|
|
country or the you um to um to design
|
|
and impose the tax so your question is
|
|
how can this work at global scale
|
|
because we're addressing a global
|
|
problem of course um the blueprint was
|
|
um the global corporate minimum tax so
|
|
2021 many countries jurisdictions came
|
|
together at the oecd level as kind of
|
|
the organizer to agree on the concept of
|
|
a global corporate minimum tax and
|
|
that's now only two years later being
|
|
implemented in more than 100 countries
|
|
worldwide so this is the way it can work
|
|
uh companies um coming together at
|
|
events like cop for example in principle
|
|
agree on a design commit to a certain
|
|
level and then introduce it um at the
|
|
domestic or jurisdictional uh level so
|
|
there are processes and blueprints out
|
|
there and and hopefully um this will
|
|
happen okay so let me ask jaier and then
|
|
I wanted to ask a question to you Emily
|
|
would you like to see a carbon tax a
|
|
global carbon
|
|
tax well I think I think carbon costs
|
|
money and I think that you can call it
|
|
tax or you can call it uh a price for
|
|
for carbon I think it's uh to be honest
|
|
if we use an analogy I think that we saw
|
|
the case of Bitcoin a few years ago when
|
|
suddenly it was an exercise to try to
|
|
measure the whole value of the economy
|
|
against 21 million units h of of a of a
|
|
particular currency and that's why that
|
|
set a price for for for for that
|
|
particular currency I think with carbon
|
|
something similar will happen I think
|
|
that uh in the fible future we have a
|
|
limited carbon budget that collectively
|
|
we can use and therefore that's going to
|
|
create a quantification of uh of a
|
|
carbon unit that today I think is uh
|
|
from a shadow perspective is trading but
|
|
I think at certain point it will be more
|
|
than a shadow market and therefore
|
|
that's going to create h a price for for
|
|
every carbon carbon unit so I think that
|
|
the only thing I I I would disagree with
|
|
lucrea is that I I do believe that
|
|
accountants will be the ones sorting
|
|
climate uh change and the reason for
|
|
that is because we are the ones who can
|
|
quantify what's the cost of these
|
|
externalities and once that happens I uh
|
|
personally believe that that Capital
|
|
markets will play their magic and will
|
|
create the right incentives to uh
|
|
penalize the wrong behaviors and
|
|
incentivize the right Technologies to to
|
|
sort it out so as a prate accountant I I
|
|
I do think that we have a a huge role to
|
|
play all right account as a
|
|
revolutionary okay there is there is
|
|
certainly a comeback of of account as s
|
|
do you have an accounting background as
|
|
well I have an economics background but
|
|
I have a love of accounting you have a
|
|
love of accounting okay yeah so I am
|
|
also with Javier in the path of of of um
|
|
I guess moving from economics to realize
|
|
the reality of externalities to then
|
|
witness the gaps in policy and I mean
|
|
all of us taking responsibility for this
|
|
as as both voters and consumers to to
|
|
solve these externalities and in their
|
|
absence I see disclosure as a way of of
|
|
filling these missing markets addressing
|
|
them that it cannot solve all problems
|
|
we will still need uh policy and
|
|
regulation to play play a role um and in
|
|
the meantime uh coming back to your
|
|
point about what what we we can only
|
|
manage what we measure it is actually
|
|
increasing this recognition that yes we
|
|
have um produced Capital we have human
|
|
capital we have natural Capital that the
|
|
depletion of that natural cap is
|
|
something that we need to be accounting
|
|
for account you can bring us into the
|
|
accounting system and look at the
|
|
implications of it in terms of risk and
|
|
opportunities that will bring all of
|
|
this to life so I like Javier have great
|
|
faith in accountant saving saving the
|
|
world Wonder wonderful and so if you're
|
|
the questions coming in are about
|
|
tradeoffs and and one in particular is
|
|
about um the trade-off of for example
|
|
reducing uh emission through means that
|
|
may have a negative impact on nature how
|
|
challenging is it to measure those those
|
|
tra trade off are you looking at those
|
|
I'm sure you yes well there's a there's
|
|
a there's a downside and that there are
|
|
tradeoffs um you know for for um for
|
|
many different areas where we may be
|
|
looking at solutions for renewable
|
|
energy there may be then the source of
|
|
minerals for for fulfilling that that is
|
|
going to deplete um important uh parts
|
|
of nature but there are also upsides in
|
|
that there are potentially big solutions
|
|
for climate change through restoration
|
|
and conservation of I mean basically the
|
|
planet as a carbon s sink and a source
|
|
of sequestration that we can use to
|
|
solve uh the problem so I think yes we
|
|
need to be keenly aware of the
|
|
trade-offs and we need to be keenly
|
|
aware of the synergies and that's where
|
|
I think the very interesting challenge
|
|
uh I was talking to the credit here is
|
|
going to come for the issb now having
|
|
developed its first standard with a set
|
|
of General requirements for
|
|
sustainability overall and then taking
|
|
one size of climate now thinking about
|
|
the interactions of climate and nature
|
|
where there may be both synergies and
|
|
trade-offs and then of course the
|
|
important Dimension and all of this of
|
|
people at the at the heart of this yes
|
|
um so I I I mean I think it's a yeah it
|
|
and having started I I um I I sort of
|
|
switch sometimes thinking why why is
|
|
everybody so limited and only think
|
|
about climate mitigation not to be a you
|
|
know critique of this day's conference
|
|
having a focus of that but in many ways
|
|
it's an asset in that people have come
|
|
to think about this one issue and then
|
|
can use that as a bridge to thinking
|
|
about others that are connected um but
|
|
in some ways is it's so tough to solve
|
|
that one thing and coming back to the
|
|
reporting context with Javier right one
|
|
of the reactions uh we get when
|
|
presenting tnfd work would be oh another
|
|
issue but it's not just another issue
|
|
it's an interconnected issue you cannot
|
|
solve one without the other so we are
|
|
asking a lot of all of us to solve
|
|
interconnected problems and that's going
|
|
to be you know uh a really exciting but
|
|
challenging part of what we'll all help
|
|
issb to to address so to wrap up this
|
|
session and given that we're here
|
|
talking about this uh subjects um ahead
|
|
of cop let me ask you all to share just
|
|
a couple of minutes um about what you
|
|
think will actually come out of cop in
|
|
terms of Regulation I'm going to start
|
|
from um
|
|
Javier well I think I think hopefully
|
|
what it will come out of cop is a bit
|
|
more Focus um I think time is the thing
|
|
that uh we we do not have uh I think cop
|
|
is going to start focusing more in more
|
|
specific uh areas and I genuinely hope
|
|
that what we get is a bit more focus and
|
|
and simplicity which is what we really
|
|
need I think a carbon out today is uh is
|
|
much better than a unit of carbon out
|
|
tomorrow so I think that I hope that
|
|
what we get is focus and
|
|
simplicity a simpler system Marcel I'm
|
|
sure you agree with with that as well
|
|
absolutely I mean obviously a lot will
|
|
be um uh focus on on the global stock
|
|
Tech this year of course in in terms of
|
|
Regulation and bring this this together
|
|
with kier's ask or demand for Focus I'd
|
|
hope as an academic that we focus on
|
|
what we know really works transparency
|
|
in disclosure is very powerful and we
|
|
also know that um tax policy either as a
|
|
carrot providing incentives for
|
|
investment like through the inflation
|
|
reduction act or as a stick carbon taxes
|
|
can also provide very powerful
|
|
incentives for corporations to to change
|
|
Behavior if we focus on that uh I think
|
|
that would already be a success all
|
|
right so Simplicity and um effective
|
|
ways of changing Behavior ta Emily um I
|
|
think once again there's going to be a
|
|
strong emphasis at this cop on the
|
|
connections between nature and climate
|
|
so I think increasing awareness and
|
|
understanding that that is the Paradigm
|
|
we're moving towards and um and have to
|
|
move towards and then I think also just
|
|
continued momentum there will be
|
|
dialogues at cop between the market L
|
|
framework developers like ourselves the
|
|
standard Setters um like issb and The
|
|
Regulators like to continue on that
|
|
on on goinging dialogue which because
|
|
we're all moving with urgency fast but
|
|
these are complicated things to create
|
|
that consistency that everybody's asking
|
|
for is um toates that ongoing dialogue
|
|
you have to have very nimbly be sharing
|
|
things to make sure everything we're
|
|
doing remains consistent so I think
|
|
those conversations will continue
|
|
consistency thank you look yeah I think
|
|
that you know we have made the first
|
|
step which is uh you know we have now a
|
|
standard sets at least for climate and
|
|
then there will be a discussion about
|
|
how to go beyond climate but now they
|
|
the challenge is adoption mhm and for
|
|
adoption you really need a global
|
|
dialogue and we don't have a a global
|
|
dialogue I'm not particularly optimistic
|
|
about
|
|
cop uh and this is for just for what
|
|
concerns what we have discussed in this
|
|
panel but you know in general you know
|
|
that we need I mean according to the IMF
|
|
we need about5 trillion dollar annually
|
|
of a green investment every year from
|
|
now to 2030 a lot of that will have to
|
|
be private a lot of of that will have to
|
|
be coming from emerging markets and
|
|
money are not going to Emerging Markets
|
|
so I think that Emerging Markets is the
|
|
key issue and uh and also you know to
|
|
get that money in Emerging Markets we
|
|
need a global dialogue and also in that
|
|
you know that's is going to be you know
|
|
the main political issues is is there
|
|
okay so that of course so uh for a green
|
|
transition we also want it to be a just
|
|
transition that works at po same
|
|
government levels including um uh
|
|
supporting Emerging Markets uh
|
|
transitioning to uh to a Greener economy
|
|
uh and they of course agly and
|
|
effectively the most exposed uh to the
|
|
effects of climate change and also uh
|
|
you want to be able to channel private
|
|
Capital towards the the companies and
|
|
initiatives that are um arguably
|
|
hopefully better at uh tackling this
|
|
Challenge and so let's hope that
|
|
accounting will will help and by the way
|
|
if I can advertise so starting from next
|
|
week the wheeler Institute at Lando
|
|
business school will have uh you know
|
|
four lectures on standards and adoption
|
|
in African countries and we have a lot
|
|
of you know already demand for this kind
|
|
of also capability buildings which I
|
|
think is very important where business
|
|
school can have a role and you were
|
|
already you were saying that were
|
|
already uh there was quite already a
|
|
High um level of takeup which indicates
|
|
the interest that there is in this
|
|
subject so that's it thank you so much
|
|
for joining uh for joining this ation um
|
|
it's uh it's wonderful and the more you
|
|
get into the detail the more interesting
|
|
it gets uh I think uh so do keep on
|
|
following uh all of the panelist work in
|
|
this area thank you jaier also for
|
|
joining us uh all the way from hro from
|
|
uh from the floor um and thank you of
|
|
course to also to mcel to Emily and to
|
|
lcia and for anyone of course also want
|
|
in peps to have a look at the kind of
|
|
coverage we do at sustainable views on
|
|
policy and regulation come and check us
|
|
out at sustainable views
|
|
thank you again so
|
|
[Applause]
|
|
much
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
### think ahead: Climate Transition and Emerging Markets, led by the Wheeler Institute
|
|
URL: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jKanGWK6WmA
|
|
|
|
Idioma: en
|
|
|
|
thank you Julian let me start by
|
|
congratulating those of you whom I've
|
|
seen from early in the morning uh uh
|
|
today who who stuck it out clearly uh
|
|
highlights the both the importance of
|
|
the phenomena we're going to study we're
|
|
going to discuss uh but also the energy
|
|
that's behind uh uh behind uh all the
|
|
solutions that we will hopefully uh
|
|
discussing have been discussing all
|
|
along uh we have an absolutely star
|
|
studded panel uh here um and uh I'm
|
|
going to very briefly introduce
|
|
introduce some of them uh Nick Hughes
|
|
did my immediate right uh uh Nick is a
|
|
work in case study actually case studies
|
|
in the plural because uh at lond of
|
|
business school we teach a case on Mesa
|
|
the mobile money Service uh I see some
|
|
heads nodding you've heard you read it
|
|
uh um that Nick started in a in East
|
|
Africa that transformed um many
|
|
communities in East Africa and has
|
|
served as an inspiration for many others
|
|
uh around the world Nick then moved on
|
|
he's always on to the next big thing uh
|
|
that moved on to uh another uh
|
|
initiative M Copa uh which seeks to
|
|
address the 600 million number that Alex
|
|
Edmund uh Edmonds mentioned earlier
|
|
today which is uh the the the fact that
|
|
so many uh in Africa in particular but
|
|
around the world still lack access to
|
|
energy not just clean energy energy and
|
|
now mopa using some super cool
|
|
technology state-of-the-art in very many
|
|
ways uh uh addresses uh that challenge
|
|
of uh energy and Nick then moved on oh
|
|
by the way that's another lbs case
|
|
uh which all our first year MB is Du um
|
|
and then we haven't written the case yet
|
|
but uh Nick's current Venture is called
|
|
cavex uh which I'm sure you'll talk
|
|
about some more uh Nick and I also teach
|
|
a class uh called innovating for impact
|
|
at London Business School so Nick
|
|
welcome back uh uh antoinet another dear
|
|
friend of the school and of the uh of uh
|
|
this particular Community anet vermil is
|
|
the is the co-founder with John
|
|
of the galif foundation which which
|
|
forces us uh in very many ways partly
|
|
through Sher force of personality but
|
|
partly through the the the vision and
|
|
the and the importance of the phenomena
|
|
uh to look at areas that we often ignore
|
|
specifically the
|
|
oceans and uh Plastics and the oceans
|
|
and the impact that this combination has
|
|
on a whole bunch of other things I'm
|
|
sure anet could tell us tell us all
|
|
sorts of
|
|
[Music]
|
|
um scary statistics on on that
|
|
combination uh the galif antonet and
|
|
John have been oh sorry the vermilia
|
|
have through their Foundation been uh uh
|
|
wonderful supporters um I think we have
|
|
at least one galif scholar here uh and
|
|
from uh the scholarship that they they
|
|
have endowed at L business school
|
|
antonet welcome uh gor meta another case
|
|
study uh gorov um runs a remarkable
|
|
organization in India um called Dharma
|
|
life uh Dharma Life Works in 14 states
|
|
in India now 14 states in India is the
|
|
equivalent of you know the the
|
|
particular States inv worlded is the
|
|
equivalent of uh all of Europe and the
|
|
United States and a whole bunch of other
|
|
countries yeah uh one state alone is the
|
|
size of Brazil yeah so uh 14 States and
|
|
they work on um Rural Entrepreneurship
|
|
that has a social impact and energy is
|
|
one of the uh uh particular areas but
|
|
back to the the point that uh was made
|
|
in the earlier panel that it's not just
|
|
climate it's a whole bunch of other
|
|
things and each of them recognizes and
|
|
tries to address that uh in their own
|
|
way uh from uh from uh their vantage
|
|
point now the focus of the session is on
|
|
Emerging Markets we've heard Emerging
|
|
Markets referred to many times um and
|
|
and and so I I'll start the conversation
|
|
with just figuring out what's different
|
|
about Emerging Markets you know very
|
|
often uh the discussion is almost as if
|
|
um these are
|
|
victims um that oh gosh through our lack
|
|
of empathy or care uh we're causing
|
|
victimization uh uh to all of these
|
|
hundreds of Millions millions of or
|
|
billions of people or they're villains
|
|
yeah either they're they're you know the
|
|
oceans are rising and they you know air
|
|
is being polluted or they're the ones
|
|
cutting down the trees uh they're the
|
|
ones uh doing you know dirty coal etc
|
|
etc I suspect this group has a slightly
|
|
different perspective from experience on
|
|
Emerging Markets so let me start with
|
|
you Nick and then we'll go to the group
|
|
as a whole what is different in Emerging
|
|
Markets uh especially contemporary
|
|
Emerging Markets as we think about cop
|
|
28 yeah sure thanks well it's a pleasure
|
|
to be here um well I'm I'm a a
|
|
practitioner uh thanks for the plugs on
|
|
the cases but um you know when when I
|
|
look at um subsaharan Africa in
|
|
particular um I actually see a a huge
|
|
opportunity in front of us to think
|
|
about redesigning the infrastructure
|
|
that we can deliver clean energy to to
|
|
the 600 million people that are simply
|
|
Off the Grid I mean it's inexcusable
|
|
that number of people
|
|
cannot access grid technology today and
|
|
yet we have technology at our disposal
|
|
which can solve for that problem it's
|
|
just and I think the previous panel only
|
|
caught a little bit of the conversation
|
|
but it boils down to inertia in the
|
|
political systems it boils down to
|
|
financing um the practicalities of how
|
|
we design that infrastructure need to be
|
|
thought through so we shouldn't go into
|
|
Africa or or other parts of Asia and
|
|
start to think about centralized Energy
|
|
Systems I mean that's crazy if we landed
|
|
on the planet today and looked around we
|
|
both in terms of energy and in water you
|
|
would not design the systems that we use
|
|
today and in many ways similar to Mesa
|
|
you know when we when we were thinking
|
|
about empa we we were moving money
|
|
around on phones 20 years ago long
|
|
before we had Apple pay and iPay and
|
|
smartphones because we designed the
|
|
solution for the person that just had a
|
|
feature phone we have to think about the
|
|
way we design the next generation of
|
|
energy systems for people that don't
|
|
have the same needs that we've we've
|
|
grown into over the last 200 years let's
|
|
think about decensored systems let's
|
|
let's think about smart grids I mean
|
|
there was a conversation earlier today
|
|
about the rise of electric vehicles I I
|
|
I've been pestering the World Bank for
|
|
decades to give me a business case for a
|
|
smart grid it doesn't actually happen
|
|
because you don't have the anchor
|
|
consumption to use the energy on a grid
|
|
and you can't bet your get back your
|
|
capital expenditure but suddenly we've
|
|
got electric vehicles in the mix
|
|
suddenly we might have an anchor use
|
|
case to roll out smart distributed grids
|
|
properly and so you can a smart grid is
|
|
a grid where you you come onto a grid
|
|
it's been installed maybe it's us
|
|
clean energy at its source so in in
|
|
across Africa there's more solar energy
|
|
potential that we can actually use
|
|
across the globe there's geothermal
|
|
energy in especially in East Africa
|
|
that's that's under the ground it's it's
|
|
clean to access we could put that onto
|
|
the grid and the smartness comes when
|
|
you pay for what you use you don't just
|
|
build a a distributed a centralized
|
|
system push energy down load shedding is
|
|
happening all across Africa they simply
|
|
don't know where to put that energy the
|
|
energy companies are only interested in
|
|
there what they're called cni customers
|
|
the commercial customers they're not
|
|
they're not interested in getting to
|
|
households we've got a jettison that
|
|
thinking and design much more
|
|
appropriate systems where where they're
|
|
smart the energyy is going to where its
|
|
needs and and we give people the ability
|
|
to pay for what they use using using
|
|
fair pricing and um so so you know if
|
|
you look into that into that you know
|
|
whole you know where sort of I'm grossly
|
|
simplifying the opportunity because it's
|
|
complex and it's hard and it needs money
|
|
but the opportunity is there for us to
|
|
rethink the way we build um Energy
|
|
Systems and we do need to start doing uh
|
|
the talk earlier today about in
|
|
internalizing some of these external
|
|
costs we need to build in the pricing
|
|
for the global South that gives them the
|
|
incentive to move down this path and and
|
|
and I do think the Glo through
|
|
mechanisms like the carbon markets the
|
|
global North and the polluters can
|
|
should be we should be finding ways to
|
|
get that money from that Source down to
|
|
incentivize these new clean cleaner more
|
|
cleverly designed um infrastructure
|
|
systems great so I'm hearing you say the
|
|
word you use a few times was
|
|
opportunity um but then the
|
|
infrastructure necessary to create the
|
|
opportunity uh as well as the the some
|
|
you alluded to the interconnected nature
|
|
of the World perhaps that's a topic
|
|
antoanet more generally what is uh uh as
|
|
you look at developing countries uh what
|
|
what do you find what is your Vantage
|
|
Point so today I've been here by the way
|
|
thank you very much for having me and
|
|
it's really nice to be here and to have
|
|
this audience so I've been listening and
|
|
I it's it's very much where we're
|
|
looking at using technological solutions
|
|
to solve problems which is great and I I
|
|
think it's very much needed but we need
|
|
to realize that in a very finite World
|
|
we're using more and more resources to
|
|
do that and in the end where are we
|
|
getting most of those resources those
|
|
are from our emerging markets and in
|
|
addition to that most of the effects of
|
|
us doing that are actually affecting
|
|
those countries more than us because the
|
|
effects of climate change are actually
|
|
the consequence of extraction um and of
|
|
our industry in creating those
|
|
Technologies so it's not and again going
|
|
back to Alex um and his of
|
|
externalities um it's really important
|
|
that when we move forward we are really
|
|
considering how we move forward to solve
|
|
a problem that it is not solving one
|
|
problem and creating others and that's
|
|
something that we are very very involved
|
|
with you know if you think about it that
|
|
indigenous people who comprise 4% of the
|
|
world's population have been protecting
|
|
70% of the world's
|
|
biodiversity and so therefore I'm more
|
|
interested in how can we make
|
|
nature-based Solutions lucrative and I
|
|
hate saying that I hate the word
|
|
lucrative but it's got to be an
|
|
incentive that we are finding ways to
|
|
work also with those kinds of solutions
|
|
that sorry that can help um solve this
|
|
the the poly crisis because I think
|
|
earlier I think Julian was saying about
|
|
the planetary boundaries technically six
|
|
have been crossed scientists are well
|
|
it's seven and we've only got two left
|
|
so we really are running out of time and
|
|
so in in that respect when I'm looking
|
|
at uh at Emerging Markets boy we do
|
|
describe them as the victims but oh my
|
|
gosh I also work um in areas where we
|
|
are very closely in touch with people
|
|
who are incredibly creative come up with
|
|
amazing Solutions um but every day they
|
|
are faced in the oceans you can't go
|
|
anywhere where your Beach is not
|
|
completely inundated with plastics the
|
|
fish that they are fishing is complet
|
|
completely filled with plastics they
|
|
can't even sell some of it because it's
|
|
it's polluted inside and out so we have
|
|
to be so this is not just like it's them
|
|
it's them it's it's all interconnected
|
|
and all of us have a role to play in
|
|
that and that's what I actually enjoy is
|
|
looking at where can we all start making
|
|
those changes so I'm hearing you point
|
|
on multiple levels to the externalities
|
|
um so the negative effects that actions
|
|
here or there uh might have on those
|
|
communities that are not uh factored in
|
|
um I'm also hearing you say something
|
|
about the interconnections uh uh that
|
|
that exist we might come back to that
|
|
and I'd love to learn more about the
|
|
ocean context which you're you're so
|
|
closely involved in as well gorov uh
|
|
your point of view on Emerging Markets
|
|
you left a uh a career in finance uh in
|
|
in Europe to to uh head to India uh and
|
|
work in rural India what do you see when
|
|
you go to Emerging Markets what are the
|
|
what is the reality so I see I think
|
|
make three points I the first one is
|
|
actually a huge amount of inspiration
|
|
towards this challenge I think we can we
|
|
see um we can see good examples of
|
|
Emerging Markets deep frogging uh you
|
|
know versus you know outed markets I
|
|
think the solutions you find especially
|
|
I mean I work in rural India amongst
|
|
rural communities and you can see I
|
|
think how they actually adapt to the
|
|
situation in some cases there are
|
|
challenges and we come to that data but
|
|
I think the Innovation is amazing and um
|
|
also the other thing you'll find is that
|
|
traditional ways of uh you know
|
|
operating or living were actually
|
|
climate friendly so actually the these
|
|
communities are much closer to what it
|
|
used to be and if you actually go back
|
|
to the modernization leads to um I mean
|
|
modern things from Western countries
|
|
seem exciting and aspirational to people
|
|
people but then they are sometimes
|
|
causes of these uh you know these
|
|
externalities at the Village level so I
|
|
mean if you work with uh if you go back
|
|
to some of the I mean modernized some of
|
|
the traditional methods of of uh living
|
|
of uh kind of consuming you will
|
|
actually be able to be climate positive
|
|
neutral and what's an example example is
|
|
um example would be I mean I can give an
|
|
example so I I work on households I work
|
|
on micro businesses and I work on
|
|
communities and in the micro business s
|
|
if you look at I'll take an example of
|
|
art forms and art right I think we
|
|
consume traditional art forms so we we
|
|
looked at Supply chains of traditional
|
|
hand embroidery or traditional um hand
|
|
weaving and if you go back to the
|
|
traditional ways of doing this it was
|
|
all using natural ingredients and having
|
|
circular processes now you are seeing
|
|
using chemical paints using there's so
|
|
many ingredients now which are in the
|
|
Advent of massive scaleup being used
|
|
everywhere and they are being brought to
|
|
these art forms which destroys the kind
|
|
of pureness of them and makes them
|
|
environmentally unfriendly and these are
|
|
then sources of water pollution wasas
|
|
creation um un know climate air
|
|
pollution because of energy and health
|
|
health obviously implicitly there's uh
|
|
kind of other influences on the personal
|
|
health and and living conditions and
|
|
working conditions so I think that's one
|
|
thing I mention and quickly the other
|
|
thing would be um I mean there is that
|
|
is if you go back to that um the other
|
|
thing I see is uh why I changed and
|
|
wanted to make a difference was because
|
|
it's sad to see what the situation is in
|
|
a lot of cases so it's a huge hugely
|
|
important to help these communities
|
|
modernize um and get what they're
|
|
supposed to get I mean versus why should
|
|
be I think niiki mentioned it why should
|
|
they be off grit why should they be so I
|
|
think there's the other side of it is
|
|
that the poverty and the issues these
|
|
communities face is also you know
|
|
something which is a problem so one has
|
|
to find a way to solve that and uh have
|
|
some sort of just transition yeah I
|
|
heard you use the word modern modernize
|
|
and I also heard you use Trad tradition
|
|
uh so modernize in a traditional manner
|
|
somehow maybe you'll come to that great
|
|
now and that all of that allude to some
|
|
of the challenges maybe we could talk a
|
|
bit about the the challenges that you
|
|
you see we've heard a lot about the the
|
|
you know the need for finances resources
|
|
uh what challenges do you see um
|
|
question yeah more anybody yeah sure
|
|
um uh where to start so so um if we take
|
|
the carbon markets as a can I I'll use
|
|
that as as an example um they've been
|
|
around 20 years I I mean before I got
|
|
into the telom space I worked at BP I
|
|
went to cop 6 in the ha and I came away
|
|
from cop 6 and I thought I'm never going
|
|
to go to another cop and I weirdly I
|
|
find myself going back into these cops
|
|
now and talking about how we can use
|
|
digital technology to solve for it so so
|
|
what's the challenge with the carbon
|
|
Market is it's a lovely economic concept
|
|
we'll create a cap so we'll either put
|
|
it in with a compliance cap or a tax but
|
|
allow people to offset that by finding
|
|
somebody who's got some excess credits
|
|
to save that that's a beautiful economic
|
|
theory how do you make that work in in
|
|
practice and for 20 years they bumped
|
|
along and we've we've seen market
|
|
failure they've disappeared over the
|
|
last even over the last you know three
|
|
to four months some of this um outing of
|
|
greenwash where these flaky credits are
|
|
getting sold they're getting sold to
|
|
Brokers the money doesn't make it to the
|
|
projects there's a much better way to
|
|
run these markets and again I'm going to
|
|
come back to digal tools we can there
|
|
are several things we can do now to
|
|
ensure the Integrity of a carbon credit
|
|
we've got uh remote sensing imagery that
|
|
we can use to monitor oceans and
|
|
mangroves and forests we've got internet
|
|
of things that you can't go anywhere on
|
|
the globe and not be under a network
|
|
somewhere whether it's the gsm network
|
|
the mobile operators Network where it's
|
|
Elon Musk is going to continue pushing
|
|
out with his low orbit satellites
|
|
connectivity is there data collection
|
|
can be done you can aggregate things on
|
|
the cloud you can interrogate remote
|
|
data uh third parties can go right down
|
|
to the very source of the activity that
|
|
you want to attach a carbon credit to
|
|
whether it's a reforestation or
|
|
protection of some Mangrove or it's
|
|
displacing a petrol pump somewhere and
|
|
putting in a solar
|
|
installation the this is all possible
|
|
and we can but the challenge is how do
|
|
we how do we build that monitoring
|
|
infrastructure that gives us the
|
|
evidence that the clean activity is
|
|
happening and if we can monetize it
|
|
using carbon markets we can use those
|
|
micro incentives so companies that are
|
|
setting Net Zero goals and using carbon
|
|
markets properly first of all they
|
|
should be reducing everything they they
|
|
can in terms of their own emissions but
|
|
if they need to need use credits to get
|
|
to Net Zero then let's find a way to
|
|
give them confidence to buy credits from
|
|
the emerging economies and move that
|
|
move that money down to the projects on
|
|
the grounds that are now that are
|
|
following a cleaner energy path so but
|
|
it's it's hard to make that work you
|
|
need you need that blend of you need
|
|
some committed I think the Net Zero um
|
|
sort of the the use of the net zero
|
|
policy and companies signing up to it
|
|
has been brilliant because it suddenly
|
|
gives you buy side demand and the
|
|
regulations and the regulations need to
|
|
come and enforce it and I I think if we
|
|
can make those things happen we can
|
|
deliver those Solutions using digital
|
|
technology there's no reason if I wanted
|
|
to offset my journey into London today
|
|
and move 500 Shillings down to an Essa
|
|
wallet I can do that I can I can do it
|
|
now if I can give an incentive to a
|
|
small holder farmer to use a use a solar
|
|
pump there's no reason why I shouldn't
|
|
be able to do that and yet we keep
|
|
hearing about all these scams exactly
|
|
all these carbon phony carbon credits in
|
|
emerging markets absolutely and and
|
|
that's what with that again that's
|
|
inexcusable we have technology to
|
|
demonstrate the Integrity of the
|
|
activity on the ground and we should use
|
|
that technology wisely and just to make
|
|
sure uh we are following so can you give
|
|
us an example so I'm a farmer with a
|
|
water pump what happens this is an
|
|
actual case you're working on
|
|
you work so uh typically you might go
|
|
and spend let's say $200 if you can
|
|
borrow it probably from an MFR you'll
|
|
borrow $200 you'll buy a a pump you've
|
|
got a choice as a small holder farmer do
|
|
you want a petrol pump or do you want to
|
|
those solar pumps look good but it's
|
|
another three it's $300 not $200 okay my
|
|
running costs are low but actually I've
|
|
got if I've got to find $300 why would I
|
|
make that decision because cash is very
|
|
real for me I'm going to make the
|
|
cheapest I'm going to buy the petrol
|
|
because I can get $200 I'll buy it now
|
|
if who said you buy this you you take
|
|
this solar pump what you're going to get
|
|
is a monthly credit to your impesa
|
|
account that every single month you'll
|
|
get let's say a th000 Shillings 10 Bob
|
|
10 10 $10 to incentivize you to take
|
|
that path and or we can use that to
|
|
finance that pump for you so there
|
|
you're using small micro payments to
|
|
incentivize the right choice between
|
|
petrol pump or solar pump and the money
|
|
for it is coming from the carbon credit
|
|
would come from I'm I'm I'm
|
|
um let's think of a big water company in
|
|
the UK that's trying to get itself out
|
|
of a dark corner let's say t water I
|
|
I've got a I've got a I've got a net
|
|
zero commitment I've got to find 15,000
|
|
tons of credit I like that that's linked
|
|
to water strategically I can see the co-
|
|
benefits exist for the farmer in terms
|
|
of its clean water being used for
|
|
irrigation that's driving up social
|
|
economic benefits I'll P those credits
|
|
give me the data that that's actually
|
|
happened we can we can do we can
|
|
complete that Loop yeah uh so and I can
|
|
see why you started with the point about
|
|
infrastructure because all of this
|
|
relies on financial infrastructure uh
|
|
Communications
|
|
infrastructure uh uh even in places
|
|
where there is no road infrastructure
|
|
that's exactly right yeah we have this
|
|
incredible digital infrastructure to use
|
|
today amazing
|
|
antonet and back to the point about
|
|
challenges you see I I already see the
|
|
entrepreneur here coming up with
|
|
Solutions a perun nod to challenges and
|
|
we always go to the solutions which is
|
|
awesome maybe you have a more sobering
|
|
thought for us so well I think it's I
|
|
love listening because I'm like oh yes
|
|
there's that and there's that absolutely
|
|
I totally agree there's and there are a
|
|
lot of technologies that are being used
|
|
in and blockchain as well which are
|
|
super important to track the The
|
|
credibility of of many of the things but
|
|
I just I just want to give a a bigger
|
|
picture of my my my world view which is
|
|
is a Learning Journey um so I think I
|
|
don't know how many of you know here
|
|
that Plastics come from fossil fuels I
|
|
mean they are basically a direct output
|
|
of it um and because of the growth of
|
|
the EV Market um fossil fuel companies
|
|
are now focusing on Plastics as their
|
|
next Market which is a estimated growth
|
|
of up to 40% by 2050 and most of that
|
|
about 40% goes on single use packaging
|
|
so something that you get from your
|
|
supermarket and literally use for a
|
|
maximum of5 minutes or have in your
|
|
fridge for a week that's it and so what
|
|
happens to those those get recycled and
|
|
I'm def definitely using my ant hands or
|
|
waste to energy which is another set of
|
|
ant hands um and the reason is because
|
|
we've learned and we've tracked actually
|
|
I was just telling rajes that in crumble
|
|
Road tesos they put some trackers in for
|
|
recycled goods and they found them in
|
|
Slovakia and in Turkey for open litter
|
|
burning
|
|
so the point about recycling is it is a
|
|
very open loop and there are too many
|
|
holes in it and there is there's not
|
|
enough accountability waste to energy is
|
|
another thing is where we take our
|
|
Plastics and we burn them in
|
|
incinerators and say that they will feed
|
|
energy the problem with that is that
|
|
we've discovered that the off um gassing
|
|
are forever chemical products that are
|
|
even the who does not accept them there
|
|
dioxins furland pasas and these remain
|
|
in the soil and in us forever so we've
|
|
got to sit back and go hang on where's
|
|
the logic here what are we doing and the
|
|
other point about it is that Plastics
|
|
are also um contain endocrine disrupting
|
|
chemicals and poor rajes has heard this
|
|
100 times but basically at the rate that
|
|
we're going in the last 40 years male
|
|
sperm count has dropped 50% due to
|
|
endocrine disrup in chemicals and is on
|
|
track to hit statistic statistical zero
|
|
in about 20 years great news um so the
|
|
point is that we're dealing with a
|
|
product that is pretty foul and toxic
|
|
and we still keep using it and we kill
|
|
so that's up here this is where we are
|
|
what happens with all of that that stuff
|
|
is it gets exported to countries that
|
|
are IL equipped to deal with it in
|
|
climate condition that basically pour
|
|
them into the ocean with every Monsoon
|
|
extreme weather event or whatever so
|
|
we're dealing with an issue that is
|
|
social justice uh social injustice
|
|
environmental damage and human health
|
|
damage so what has been amazing for me
|
|
though has been not so much that we can
|
|
find solutions to deal with a problem
|
|
that is a problem it we're just
|
|
literally putting lipstick on a pig what
|
|
we really want to do is stop that and so
|
|
the ideal thing is to try and limit this
|
|
fire hose of plastic production there
|
|
are some ways that that is being done
|
|
which is happening right now in Kenya at
|
|
unep there's the the global plastic
|
|
pollution treaty where it's like the cop
|
|
but it's the cop of plastics and we're
|
|
trying to negotiate ways to basically
|
|
address the plastic life from production
|
|
to the end that is amazing because that
|
|
has been driven and started mainly by
|
|
people from countries that were the most
|
|
affected by this the Philippines
|
|
Indonesia Africa those were the
|
|
countries that were driving so much of
|
|
this we've also passed something called
|
|
the Basel convention which now regulates
|
|
plastic as a hazardous waste so you
|
|
can't export it to another country
|
|
without prior agreement so these are
|
|
huge steps forward but they're more the
|
|
legislative regulatory thing because the
|
|
market the free market before then only
|
|
allow owed for very unsustainable and
|
|
untenable Solutions um so in that sense
|
|
I'm those are the things that I'm seeing
|
|
on the regulatory stage on the other
|
|
thing within communities and I've often
|
|
told rajes about this is that there is
|
|
um one city in the Philippines basically
|
|
um they tried an experiment where they
|
|
got everyone every stakeholder involved
|
|
and they had plasticfree ordinances
|
|
targeting businesses and all the people
|
|
who were involved in plastic uh
|
|
collection were reallocated to collect
|
|
everyone's waste from their homes and of
|
|
that 80% of the community's waste was
|
|
diverted from being dumped in landfills
|
|
and it saved them
|
|
$750,000 per year in landfill and
|
|
transport costs and the waste workers
|
|
which is a social justice issue were
|
|
treated as formal employees so this
|
|
became something that was one of those
|
|
amazing Stories where it was just just a
|
|
win-win win and has kept
|
|
going
|
|
um I we'll come back to the point about
|
|
oceans and what I heard also from you
|
|
was uh the interconnected nature going
|
|
from Tesco to the Philippines or turkey
|
|
or Slovakia uh the interconnected nature
|
|
of this phenomenon because the ocean
|
|
surrounds Us in part but also Supply
|
|
chains surround us uh whether they are
|
|
Supply chains that were originally
|
|
designed uh as to be used a certain way
|
|
or not uh um gorov challenges and I
|
|
suspect you'll come up with Solutions as
|
|
well at least that's been the trend so
|
|
challenges that you see um as you seek
|
|
to make an impact on climate related
|
|
issues in Emerging
|
|
Markets so I think uh for me the biggest
|
|
elephant in the room is financing
|
|
challenge I think it's been talked about
|
|
that the capital required to address
|
|
some of these issues is huge and it's
|
|
not really clear how it will I think
|
|
we're have massive Gap and I think
|
|
that's we heard about a trillion dollars
|
|
and so on trillions trillions I think
|
|
it's more than that but I think if I
|
|
break it down to my context which is the
|
|
micro level I mean you would talk about
|
|
how do you mitigate for imagine a rural
|
|
farmer in female farmer in a village a
|
|
typical thousand household Village I
|
|
mean first they asked to mitigate their
|
|
their footprint which in the scheme of
|
|
things is probably doesn't sound that
|
|
much but you aggregate it it's a hugee
|
|
issue second they have to mitigate um or
|
|
kind of they have to mitigate but they
|
|
have to become resilient climate
|
|
resilient so they face they face the
|
|
issues I
|
|
think which are kind of caused by others
|
|
which they face in their crop in their
|
|
current water situation Etc so they have
|
|
to adapt basically their their practices
|
|
and then maybe yeah technology is there
|
|
hopefully there'll be Solutions but
|
|
mostly that technology is still too
|
|
expensive to finance for them right so
|
|
these are micro level challenges at the
|
|
let's say a single farmer or farmer
|
|
group at the Village level so you know
|
|
not all of that can be addressed with
|
|
it's Capital it's Behavior change it's
|
|
kind of mindset change it is uh who will
|
|
fund the loss and damages is there a
|
|
loss and damage fund there's talks about
|
|
this obviously at cop but you know how
|
|
do you bring it to that level I mean
|
|
even reaching it to that level we have
|
|
the tools we have the technology to do
|
|
this but it's a massive Challenge and uh
|
|
and I mean how do you explain to that
|
|
also how do you explain that to them I
|
|
mean like if you so we s working with
|
|
women entrepreneurs we trying to explain
|
|
this um yeah in some cases it's very
|
|
tangible so easy to explain but
|
|
especially the things which don't have
|
|
any immediate direct impact you know
|
|
because mostly that's the case or have
|
|
any direct benefit or direct consequence
|
|
uh you know require a lot more effort to
|
|
explain why the the fair question is why
|
|
should they be changing their behavior
|
|
whereas others have been allowed to
|
|
develop our Behavior change on their
|
|
part when we're full of inertia many
|
|
issues right in terms of norms or even
|
|
fairness so Justice becomes an issue as
|
|
well right fairness and Justice so I'm
|
|
just again probably being on the
|
|
borderline negative as well but I think
|
|
these are the real challenges I mean and
|
|
not Solutions comes next I'll honor your
|
|
sequence and and how are you addressing
|
|
that
|
|
challenge I think um it's a work in
|
|
progress but basically what we've been
|
|
doing is we've been trying to look at
|
|
these Market these failures and um and I
|
|
think some of them have um Clear
|
|
Solutions and those get adopted I think
|
|
if I look at the let's say the micro
|
|
business I'll go to the micro businesses
|
|
first I mean there's the solutions which
|
|
are Roi positive right so whether it's I
|
|
think we've been looking at um the big
|
|
issue at rural level is wastage of foods
|
|
right so a solar drying use case where
|
|
you can dry it's actually a very Roi
|
|
positive use case so these things then
|
|
Finance themselves and so you can start
|
|
with those uh the solar pumps are also a
|
|
good example at that in that context um
|
|
solar um because for irrig micro
|
|
irrigation I think they're efficient
|
|
Solutions solar cooling is still
|
|
borderline because the the cost of solar
|
|
scholing so you have basically three
|
|
categories one is things which are
|
|
automatically ready adopt ready
|
|
adoptable right and because the arrow is
|
|
positive and uh you have you have models
|
|
of financing which develop and
|
|
Technologies which Finance them with pay
|
|
as you go models then you have things
|
|
which are you need subsidy you need an
|
|
offset to actually make them uh and
|
|
again there we come to the point of can
|
|
we create outcome Payment Solutions
|
|
because the climate benefits which Nick
|
|
alluded to they are not really
|
|
translatable directly to that household
|
|
so you need an efficient access to
|
|
carbon markets uh through technology so
|
|
using usage tracking you know maybe
|
|
unique IDs through blockchain where you
|
|
can track it back um and then uh to
|
|
solve that so that could be done not the
|
|
expensive impact bonds which are being
|
|
propagated with 30 40% cost you can do
|
|
that with technology now so that's kind
|
|
of that's the second category and third
|
|
one is where the use case is still
|
|
experimental where you don't know I mean
|
|
there's a lot of innovation required on
|
|
the tech side to solve the problem and I
|
|
mean here um I mean there's there's many
|
|
examples
|
|
but that's kind of we group into these
|
|
three and then we can take at least on
|
|
the second which is interesting
|
|
especially given the finance backgrounds
|
|
of of a number of folks here uh I see G
|
|
Muki who's here who's done a lot of work
|
|
with impact bonds Etc um so the logic if
|
|
I understand well we're working on uh
|
|
some research together uh through with
|
|
the wheeler institutes and DL Labs on
|
|
so-called results based financing maybe
|
|
you could talk a bit about how that
|
|
links to potentially with climate change
|
|
uh yeah so I think the simple way if you
|
|
have this financing Gap um there could
|
|
be two ways either it has to be
|
|
subsidized or it has to be financed and
|
|
the cost of capital is an issue so we
|
|
are I mean creating a tech platform and
|
|
that's as an example uh not a plug which
|
|
just you can just use very simple
|
|
technology of image um AI based image uh
|
|
classification to prove that this
|
|
household uh is the one deserving it so
|
|
you can validate the kind of uh
|
|
targeting of such a household is most
|
|
needy through technology you can um
|
|
track the climate impact through sensors
|
|
where if only the usage gets paid I
|
|
think a lot of criticism of carbon
|
|
markets is that you're survey based
|
|
paying out the carbon benefits your
|
|
technology allows you to actually track
|
|
climate you know footprint and then
|
|
paying out against the footprint two
|
|
sensors and the third thing is that you
|
|
create a unique record that this thing
|
|
is not duplicated so this one household
|
|
actually gets this Ben business gets
|
|
this benefit and this is not repeated
|
|
and so you have some sort of trust in
|
|
the process to by creating a simple leaf
|
|
ID on the blockchain so that's a very
|
|
simplistic way and you can just prise
|
|
this uh directly so hope that answer
|
|
just relating to some of the points
|
|
you've made uh there's a there are a
|
|
series of questions coming through uh as
|
|
well I don't know if that's up there um
|
|
with there are questions coming through
|
|
from from the online panel um and one of
|
|
them is uh Alex Edmonds talked earlier
|
|
about the need for climate
|
|
literacy um how do we achieve this in
|
|
Emerging Markets what does that even
|
|
mean in the context uh lucreta made a
|
|
plug for uh this terrific webinar that
|
|
she's organizing on behalf of the
|
|
wheeler Institute on on uh climate
|
|
standards and Africa uh what about on
|
|
the Grassroots if those were not dialing
|
|
in the folks the the small holder farmer
|
|
or that Community member in the
|
|
Philippines or the or the uh Village
|
|
rural Indian villager what does climate
|
|
literacy even mean in those contexts
|
|
Anon I I think they're living it I think
|
|
they see it every day you I mean you're
|
|
in your if you're on a coast you're
|
|
seeing Front Line the amount of plastics
|
|
are hitting your Shore you're seeing the
|
|
fact that the weather is getting much
|
|
more extreme there are countries that
|
|
are going underwater right now um and
|
|
it's not just I mean I always again
|
|
carbon tunnel vision the these are
|
|
countries that are not just losing their
|
|
land they're losing their culture their
|
|
spiritual connection this is much bigger
|
|
um so I what I'm sort of when I hear
|
|
this I think that um we talk about
|
|
climate literacy that's because we're so
|
|
disconnected I think that when you are
|
|
front line you know full well what the
|
|
changes are and you're having to cope
|
|
with them front line and particularly in
|
|
in coastal areas this is a you know I
|
|
was in my home state uh in India uh
|
|
Kerala a few weeks ago uh and the person
|
|
who was cooking uh at this little hotel
|
|
we were in on by the beach uh was a
|
|
fisherman it turned out uh and we say so
|
|
what are you doing here instead of
|
|
fishing apparently that beach used to go
|
|
3 kilometers
|
|
out in my Homestead I had no idea uh and
|
|
and to him it's very palpable and his
|
|
children are not becoming fishermen
|
|
anytime soon uh they are doing other
|
|
professions and and so they see the way
|
|
the world is headed from their
|
|
particular initial uh unique uh
|
|
perspective um so and is that enough I
|
|
think I think obviously there are all of
|
|
us when we start looking at the
|
|
interconnectedness of what we're doing
|
|
you can sit there and say well maybe the
|
|
way that they dispose of waste or maybe
|
|
the way there are Chang changes but I
|
|
think that within Villages and we've
|
|
leared this that when you work with the
|
|
elders in the village they are super
|
|
important in um educating their their
|
|
communities on better ways and that's
|
|
probably the uh it actually started with
|
|
Al G with his climate talks educating
|
|
you know you you just keep going down
|
|
till you get to the point where there is
|
|
that level of education and literacy but
|
|
the level of literacy that you need
|
|
there is probably quite different to
|
|
Global Financial markets or whatever
|
|
which are too disconnected that's where
|
|
I think the the biggest true true but I
|
|
was thinking Nick of your example of the
|
|
small holder farmer with the pump that
|
|
farmer needs to trust that you will keep
|
|
giving the 10 sure every month yeah and
|
|
so at some level the farmer needs to
|
|
understand that there's somebody out
|
|
there who has a stake in whether he or
|
|
she uses the pump in a c a particular
|
|
kind of pump or not and and so there
|
|
needs to be some at least implicit
|
|
understanding of of cash flows and so on
|
|
yeah really but but um remember what
|
|
you're doing if you're getting 10 you
|
|
know a, Shillings or $10 a month to a
|
|
small holder farmer the the the benefit
|
|
of that is huge um you know this is the
|
|
the strange thing about carbon Market
|
|
you've got a you've got a dollar
|
|
currency and if if I'm T's war and I'm
|
|
buying uh you know I should I don't you
|
|
know I'm not picking on T water I'm t
|
|
water if I 10 10 pound or $10 per ton to
|
|
me if I'm after if I'm chasing 16 20,000
|
|
tons per year to hit my Net Zero the you
|
|
know I need to understand that you know
|
|
as a finance director I'm making
|
|
decisions about do I buy now at this
|
|
price and at this volume and there are
|
|
other things I might want to think about
|
|
like these co- benefits that that's a
|
|
different type of literacy to a small a
|
|
of farmer who's who's who's getting $10
|
|
a month $10 a month is going to drive
|
|
that you know that's what makes the
|
|
difference $10 a month is real income to
|
|
a small of farmer and you know it might
|
|
sound like we're fiddling around the
|
|
edge talking about one small hold of
|
|
farmer or one household but there are
|
|
literally hundreds of millions of people
|
|
like this and we have to think about how
|
|
do we create that at an aggregated level
|
|
then you start to see a material shift
|
|
but I would say bring it back to money
|
|
bring it back to some money in the
|
|
wallet of that small holder farmer or
|
|
money in the wallet of that household
|
|
that displaces their charcoal burning
|
|
because there's also health issues
|
|
linked there and they're getting a an
|
|
incentive payment to move across to
|
|
clean energy and when you you start to
|
|
multiply that by hundreds of millions of
|
|
people then you start to make a little
|
|
bit of a dent on on on the challenge and
|
|
it can all be done I think in the short
|
|
term longer term we're going to need
|
|
bigger Solutions we're going to need
|
|
direct air carbon capture we're going to
|
|
have to be pulling literally millions or
|
|
hundreds of millions of tons of carbon
|
|
out of the atmosphere we don't have the
|
|
technology to do that yet but we do have
|
|
the the the capability and the systems
|
|
to do this at at Big scale to do this
|
|
sort of shortterm stuff that brings
|
|
social economic impact and if we if we
|
|
link L to money link it to real money in
|
|
their wallet every month that's what
|
|
will drive Behavior
|
|
change yeah more of a behavior change
|
|
you're you're involved in uh lots of
|
|
activities on at the Grassroots level uh
|
|
that is around Behavior change some of
|
|
which is around uh around climate uh or
|
|
at least the environment yeah I think
|
|
definitely needed I think at different
|
|
levels I think at the house at the
|
|
individual level I think the government
|
|
of India's mission life is a good
|
|
example where you know there a policy
|
|
driven or I mean prime minister driven
|
|
initiative to get people to live in a
|
|
climate friendly way which I think is
|
|
not only an educational tool it's also
|
|
kind of creating a movement towards
|
|
changing your mindset to actually you
|
|
know save water reduce plastic all these
|
|
I think six seven behaviors they've
|
|
outlined and I think it's a great
|
|
example of a top- Down you know kind of
|
|
movement it still will have to view the
|
|
results but I think it's definitely
|
|
required and secondly I think the
|
|
business um micro business level and I
|
|
mean just adding to what Nick said I
|
|
think obviously the benefits passing on
|
|
the benefits will help but I think there
|
|
it's about pivoting and iterating the
|
|
business models where I think the
|
|
education would be around you know can
|
|
you help them actually you know have a
|
|
future proof uh business model uh and
|
|
the education would be around that and
|
|
using Tech and other things to to do
|
|
this because it will have to all pivot
|
|
and and iterate I see we have 2 minutes
|
|
and 14 seconds so I'm going to uh uh
|
|
wrap by asking you uh a question
|
|
question so throughout the day we've
|
|
heard and Anon did a particularly good
|
|
job of uh uh reminding us of all of the
|
|
challenges uh everything from sperm
|
|
counts to uh to
|
|
uh all the awful stuff that's happening
|
|
in the oceans
|
|
um it all sounds kind of
|
|
depressing although you've done a
|
|
remarkable job of giving us some you
|
|
know uh Solutions and reasons to um be
|
|
optimistic what keeps you going in this
|
|
where it seems like there are so many
|
|
thousands of uh players involved not
|
|
just a cop but much Beyond uh it seems
|
|
like these are such big problems with
|
|
all of these interconnections and all of
|
|
these inter externalities what keeps it
|
|
can seem futile sometimes uh perhaps
|
|
what keeps you going yeah it does feel
|
|
like it sometimes doesn't it but look
|
|
look look at how the world responded to
|
|
covid you know look we came up with we
|
|
shortened the R&D time you know by by
|
|
decades and B Solutions out that have
|
|
helped and you know we can have big
|
|
debates about you know about that but I
|
|
I think humans are are we would you know
|
|
I'm I am an optimist I do think we'll
|
|
find Solutions I think we are you know
|
|
as a as a race we can be quite ingenious
|
|
when we need to be um but as a just on a
|
|
pure business basis by 2050 one in four
|
|
adults on this planet will be on the
|
|
African continent as a business
|
|
opportunity why aren't we thinking okay
|
|
that sounds exciting what in four adults
|
|
on this on the planet
|
|
will be in subs and Africa if we're not
|
|
investing now in good Solutions smart
|
|
solutions for Africa then we're not
|
|
doing our job in in the you know in a
|
|
business yeah so big problems mean big
|
|
opportunities uh and you see that uh and
|
|
where keeps you going I think it's I
|
|
mean the fact that everyone's here in
|
|
this room it's it's the it's the
|
|
everyone is en engaged in one way or
|
|
another so I think I get my Hope from
|
|
action I hate just not doing anything
|
|
and all of us can do something if some
|
|
if all of you just left today and said
|
|
I'm going to do something today that's
|
|
one thing the other thing is high level
|
|
action that's what I look
|
|
for gorov you you I was you know you've
|
|
had two hours of sleep and this is not
|
|
ra frequent I know this and you're
|
|
working nonstop on these things I'm just
|
|
amazed at the level of energy you put in
|
|
what keeps you going thank you it's the
|
|
if you it's always a question of
|
|
perspective or you from which
|
|
perspective you're looking at it I think
|
|
for me it's working for the women
|
|
entrepreneurs in the village if you see
|
|
the challenges they face the challenge I
|
|
think the unpredictability and um issues
|
|
they they have I think it's just a tiny
|
|
thing for us to keep going it's
|
|
responsibility it's a duty it's it's an
|
|
honor to be able to do this so as long
|
|
as you can do it and that's what keeps
|
|
me going and it's always a question of
|
|
perspective thank you on that not note
|
|
of uh of Duty uh let's uh let's all do
|
|
our duty and I'll do my duty and end on
|
|
more or less on time thank
|
|
[Applause]
|
|
you
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
### think ahead: Fireside Chat Hosted by Christopher Caldwell
|
|
URL: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bc5pYw7tppQ
|
|
|
|
Idioma: en
|
|
|
|
grateful thank you very much Julian it's
|
|
um thank you very much everyone for
|
|
coming here um my name is indeed
|
|
Christopher Coldwell I'm a um I'm CEO of
|
|
United Renewables which is a clean tech
|
|
investor and a renewable energy
|
|
developer probably more importantly
|
|
though I'm alumni of London Business
|
|
School member of the alumni Council and
|
|
also member of the the sustainability
|
|
group here so in delighted today to have
|
|
a far side chat with um a as rati uh who
|
|
is a award-winning journalist a um
|
|
senior reporter of climate so Bloomberg
|
|
and a person who has a frankly
|
|
unreasonable level of knowledge about
|
|
all things climate and amazingly manages
|
|
to stay optimistic in face of all of
|
|
that knowledge so I just say Julian
|
|
there without any further Ado um so it's
|
|
a great pleasure to to speak to you
|
|
thanks for thanks for this yeah thank
|
|
thanks for having me wonderful and
|
|
you've got such a um your leading voice
|
|
um but also very well-known voice
|
|
because you're also the host of a you
|
|
know phenomenal podcast uh for for for
|
|
Bloomberg uh but the theme for the day
|
|
is future Generations yes and future
|
|
Generations is both a source of great
|
|
optimism but also a source of great
|
|
concern uh concern because the the world
|
|
that we're living in the mother and
|
|
nature has tapped us on the shoulders
|
|
and said hey you cannot continue to be
|
|
acting as you're doing uh you cannot
|
|
continue continue as you are is giving
|
|
us warnings throughout the L now the
|
|
source of optimism comes from the fact
|
|
that well we're all working in this
|
|
industry and we're all working very hard
|
|
to to be making this right because of
|
|
future Generations you know and also
|
|
future Generations are the source of of
|
|
of Hope the source of the future so if
|
|
we can start by just asking um asking
|
|
yourself um from what's growing up in
|
|
India um what did environments and
|
|
nature mean to you uh so I grew up in a
|
|
small town which by Indian standards is
|
|
small it has about 2 million people uh
|
|
it's called nask and it's very close to
|
|
Mumbai uh and it's uh it's Wine Country
|
|
it's surrounded by mountains uh it's uh
|
|
it was a really beautiful place to grow
|
|
up in and uh you know my parents are
|
|
retired and and they live there and
|
|
maybe I will go back and retire there as
|
|
long as we don't make climate change far
|
|
worse um and so nature was very close to
|
|
uh uh us growing up cuz you know uh if
|
|
if he could drive 3 km we were at a
|
|
river 5 km we were in the mountains uh
|
|
and so Nature's always been an important
|
|
part uh of growing up but also uh the
|
|
other thing that has something that I've
|
|
carried through uh is we saw a lot of
|
|
change in the you know 20 years that I
|
|
lived in in India uh but also within my
|
|
family my grandfather never went to
|
|
University my dad did and was able to
|
|
send us to uh better schools and and and
|
|
eventually over here to study and be
|
|
able to talk to a very smart crowd so we
|
|
saw social Mobility alongside uh access
|
|
to nature which is something that I hope
|
|
everybody gets to experience not just
|
|
now but in future Generations too
|
|
fantastic and you're in your your late
|
|
30s now uh what generation do you
|
|
consider yourself a part of some of us
|
|
are you know like a different generation
|
|
to yourself unfortunately um and it's
|
|
it's a question that to me is very weird
|
|
because I don't think the generations
|
|
quite match up as they do in India
|
|
versus what's you know whatever you
|
|
define as generation x y z in in in West
|
|
so I I'm sort of you know happy to be
|
|
young
|
|
forever amazing amazing and how is your
|
|
reporting evolved over there over the
|
|
over the decades so uh you know I
|
|
started as a science student I did
|
|
chemical engineering then I did a PhD in
|
|
chemistry and so to me coming to the
|
|
climate problem from a science angle was
|
|
how I was introduced to it um and so uh
|
|
you know in all the work that I've done
|
|
I started from the place where uh we
|
|
understand that the science is dire and
|
|
we know that if we keep putting
|
|
greenhouse gas emissions into the
|
|
atmosphere it keeps getting dire that's
|
|
been understood for decades now so what
|
|
can we do about it and where can we
|
|
apply science that's how I started off
|
|
uh to look at Solutions uh and so uh
|
|
initially it was very much focused on
|
|
bringing my skill set to be able to
|
|
understand the solutions that that we do
|
|
have in front of us uh and how to scale
|
|
that up but in the process of reporting
|
|
as you know you mature as a reporter and
|
|
you expand your horizons on trying to
|
|
cover subjects uh you recognize that
|
|
there's only so much Science and
|
|
Technology can take you to a level you
|
|
need other things to make that
|
|
technology actually be useful to people
|
|
uh and so that's why I ended up writing
|
|
this book which is looking at uh trying
|
|
to bring people polic and Technology
|
|
together in different contexts uh and so
|
|
uh now it's not just about solar and
|
|
wind and batteries but also about
|
|
finance and laws and shareholder
|
|
activism to make sure that uh those
|
|
Solutions can be scaled in different
|
|
parts okay fantastic before moving onto
|
|
your book which we will get in get into
|
|
later on um interesting to have a little
|
|
conversation about uh your position as a
|
|
as as a journalist as a reporter um it's
|
|
pretty clear that climate is now part of
|
|
the mainstream media uh so thankfully
|
|
mercifully it's now been been taken on
|
|
by the uh by the by the fourth estate
|
|
but if you look at this in the context
|
|
of of Youth which is the the the frame
|
|
that we're we're discussing this today
|
|
and there's at least a perception that
|
|
youth is served by a different form of
|
|
media by social media and by other other
|
|
channels um how do you feel that the
|
|
that youth is represented um by and the
|
|
future Generations represented by
|
|
mainstream media you know con
|
|
conventional journalism um I think it's
|
|
it's a very good point there was a very
|
|
recent survey one that I can quote for
|
|
an American uh survey because it was
|
|
done by Pew uh we saw Tik Tok becoming
|
|
uh one of the biggest sources of news
|
|
for people under the age of 30 uh which
|
|
is interesting but scary to some extent
|
|
because Tik tok's algorithms are as with
|
|
any other social media algorithm
|
|
very easy to manipulate and we know how
|
|
much of a problem disinformation
|
|
campaigns can have um
|
|
and and yet young people do read good
|
|
journalism we know this from our own uh
|
|
analysis at at Bloomberg uh Bloomberg
|
|
News has a high pay wall uh but we do
|
|
have a web friendly uh output my podcast
|
|
is free my newsletters are free so we do
|
|
know when we do our surveys that young
|
|
people are reading us uh and so it's not
|
|
that just because yes Tik Tok has become
|
|
a big bigger source of of news that
|
|
everything's moved in that direction uh
|
|
but yes it's a the media landscape is
|
|
changing and one that we journalists
|
|
have to keep on top of I slightly
|
|
surprised that um Tik Tok is being used
|
|
as a way of getting the climate
|
|
narrative across because it's the
|
|
climate narrative is is deeply deeply
|
|
complex like we're here at an all day
|
|
events and we're barely scratching the
|
|
scratching the surface with with all the
|
|
the Deep levels of interconnectedness
|
|
here how do you do you see a place for
|
|
Tik Tok well one thing that as news
|
|
journalists we have to be very careful
|
|
about is we go where the audience is and
|
|
so you do have to figure out ways in
|
|
which you can simplify things not dumb
|
|
it down to the extent where they're
|
|
absurd but you can simplify things to be
|
|
able to fit it in a two-minute video
|
|
which is things these are things we've
|
|
made I've not put it on Tik Tok I don't
|
|
have a Tik Tok account but I have put
|
|
them up on YouTube and they do get
|
|
watched by hundreds of thousands of
|
|
people so uh yes I think you know you
|
|
are in the business as a journalist to
|
|
inform the audience and you have to do
|
|
that where the audience is fantastic
|
|
okay and you mentioned that your your
|
|
entry point to the whole kind of climate
|
|
debate uh was was from was as a
|
|
scientist but yet a few years ago you
|
|
wrote a book uh United We Unstoppable 60
|
|
inspiring young people saving our world
|
|
um how did that come about like how did
|
|
the and that gave a kind of very
|
|
unfiltered view from from youth how did
|
|
how did that happen so the origin of
|
|
that B was uh September 2019 pre
|
|
pandemic hopefully a time we all
|
|
remember uh it was when Greta thunberg
|
|
and uh and young people had come to uh
|
|
protest in enormous numbers we are
|
|
talking tens of thousands across cities
|
|
around the world and I'm talking about
|
|
September 2019 in the leadup to the UN
|
|
General Assembly where a lot of climate
|
|
conversations do tend to happen uh
|
|
however as as a journalist what I saw
|
|
was the only person and the name I
|
|
picked up was being highlighted was
|
|
Greta thunberg but she wasn't the only
|
|
one who story uh needed to be told
|
|
because there were all these people from
|
|
very different backgrounds some many of
|
|
them coming from developing countries
|
|
whose voices hadn't been heard and so to
|
|
me that was a place to try and allow
|
|
those uh young people and I had uh
|
|
everyone from I think 11 years old till
|
|
late 30s uh in the book and uh everybody
|
|
across uh all the five continents and
|
|
from 60 different countries so to me
|
|
that was a a chance and opportunity to
|
|
give young people the voice to explain
|
|
themselves uh and why they are taking to
|
|
the streets in such numbers and of
|
|
course Co happened and then we had to
|
|
stop protest but they are coming back
|
|
now so climate protests are are starting
|
|
back very ni so and did
|
|
that impact your journalism in any way
|
|
that they getting all of the insights
|
|
and views from the from from this
|
|
diverse script yeah it's impossible to
|
|
not have the work you do especially when
|
|
it's um learning about stories of people
|
|
and how their lives change also affect
|
|
you so to me I mean coming from a
|
|
developing country uh but also having
|
|
within a developing country uh a
|
|
privileged upbringing which is true uh
|
|
in in my case uh to recognize that and
|
|
be able to look back at other situations
|
|
that people have gone through and how
|
|
they've used them to be um more action
|
|
oriented so protest is uh I find you
|
|
know I've never been uh to a protest I
|
|
now as a journalist I likely never go to
|
|
a protest but I do find it a courageous
|
|
act especially what we are seeing around
|
|
the world now where protesters are being
|
|
uh criminalized and laws are being uh
|
|
brought in to take people who are doing
|
|
peaceful activities but label them as
|
|
criminals and so it is a courageous
|
|
activity and it requires a level of
|
|
commitment that is uh uh one that is
|
|
worthy of us understanding why some
|
|
people feel that they have to take those
|
|
steps sure yeah it's it's kind of hard
|
|
to argue against the moral case for for
|
|
protests and people putting short-term
|
|
disturbances now for the benefit of the
|
|
future but on the Practical side of it
|
|
there there are certainly arguments be
|
|
made of how impactful it is what advice
|
|
would you give to you know to Young
|
|
protesters so a lot of the the nice
|
|
thing about being a journalist and being
|
|
able to follow stories is many of the
|
|
protesters who are in my book are now
|
|
young people in professional careers so
|
|
I've have seen them going from their
|
|
lives as students to being uh being
|
|
people who now have jobs and many of
|
|
them almost everyone I know is working
|
|
in a climate sphere in some sense so you
|
|
can see that that uh desire to make
|
|
change happen once they recognize that
|
|
they also have the power to not just
|
|
make themselves heard but also be a part
|
|
of the solu solution they do take that
|
|
leap and that's a that's a hopeful place
|
|
to be yeah fantastic well we are um
|
|
running the risk of kind of generalizing
|
|
here like one of the themes of your book
|
|
is diversity yes um and how do we add
|
|
Nuance into that into the conversation
|
|
because you can't just say young people
|
|
as a block you know we need to have a
|
|
little bit more Nuance yeah well again
|
|
that's again as a journalist one of the
|
|
things that we are very focused on is
|
|
making sure that we hear from all
|
|
portions of society and all types of
|
|
people within Society so so we regularly
|
|
have uh audits that we do on our own
|
|
stories and look at what sources are we
|
|
quoting where are we getting our stories
|
|
from are we covering the regions around
|
|
the world that are being affected uh so
|
|
you know and yet the problems becoming
|
|
so big and so was that Things fall off
|
|
the crack so the most recent example uh
|
|
is there was an extreme heat wve in
|
|
Madagascar and we missed it and so we
|
|
had to have uh uh and you know we have
|
|
to meet as a group and be like how how
|
|
did we miss this uh you know how can we
|
|
avoid missing such an extreme heat wve
|
|
in a country where probably the the news
|
|
media didn't cover it as well and so it
|
|
didn't come up on our radar so what can
|
|
we do next time to not miss it so it is
|
|
a it is a conscious choice you have to
|
|
make to ensure that you are inclusive in
|
|
your coverage okay fantastic well I
|
|
think we we're pretty clear of the the
|
|
problems and which kind of takes us
|
|
along to the to their to to your book
|
|
clim capitalism um but fantastic great
|
|
congratulations just at a couple of
|
|
weeks now um but the the starting
|
|
premise of the of the book uh suggests a
|
|
need for for optimism and like your your
|
|
opening sentence is is a very optimistic
|
|
uh thought could you explain why
|
|
optimism is so important to you and why
|
|
you framed your book in this I would I
|
|
would call it possibilist so you know
|
|
this is a term I'm copying from Hans
|
|
rosling uh the late Hans rosling who uh
|
|
wrote a wonderful book called
|
|
factfulness and he makes the case that
|
|
if you look at progress we have made TR
|
|
tremendous progress and he charted those
|
|
out and had a wonderful way of
|
|
explaining to people how that progress
|
|
happened whether that's poverty levels
|
|
uh um uh hunger levels uh or uh death of
|
|
children uh born young uh all those
|
|
metrics were going in one direction for
|
|
a while some of those are starting to
|
|
reverse hunger is starting to reverse uh
|
|
and so to me what you know he got
|
|
labeled as an optimist just telling
|
|
people about progress but he said that's
|
|
not true what I'm saying is there are
|
|
possibilities there are possibilities of
|
|
progress and that we can learn from
|
|
those possibilities and apply them in
|
|
other places that's what the book is
|
|
about is trying to show where the
|
|
solutions are scaling what were the
|
|
challenges that people had to overcome
|
|
in different political circumstances
|
|
different economic circumstances uh and
|
|
how they can be applied in other places
|
|
okay fantastic and your your book is
|
|
essentially um a defense of
|
|
capitalism and I think it's pretty fair
|
|
to say the capitalism of the last 100
|
|
years hasn't exactly driven Us in the in
|
|
the right direction um but you we've had
|
|
you know inequalities we've had um you
|
|
know vast consumption of resources that
|
|
has led us to to a place which is like
|
|
frankly unsustainable right now but you
|
|
think we might be near a a Tipping Point
|
|
where where we have caused to be
|
|
optimistic that capitalism can can be
|
|
moving towards solving these problems
|
|
could you could you explain that I would
|
|
say it's a case for how you can tweak
|
|
capitalism to work for uh solving the
|
|
problem rather than worsening it uh
|
|
rather than defense of capitalism as it
|
|
has existed uh that's why the book is
|
|
climate capitalism that climate change
|
|
modifies capitalism uh and it's not a
|
|
book in the sense of making a
|
|
theoretical case it's going out to
|
|
places where that's happened uh and
|
|
again one thing that I don't have to
|
|
tell a business audience but there isn't
|
|
one form of capitalism what we have in
|
|
America in Europe in India in China are
|
|
all different forms of capitalism
|
|
they're all constrained by different
|
|
regulations different political systems
|
|
different economic capacities that those
|
|
countries have uh but what what we can
|
|
see is despite those differences there
|
|
are ways in which you can tweak it to be
|
|
able to deploy Solutions like solar in
|
|
India or carbon capture in the US or
|
|
electric cars in China and those are
|
|
solution sets that we can then apply to
|
|
many of the Technologies we talked
|
|
earlier in the day at this conference
|
|
around emerging Technologies like
|
|
hydrogen and carbon capture and direct
|
|
air capture or carbon removal all things
|
|
that will be needed but now we have the
|
|
road map on how to do them at scale in
|
|
all kinds of uh contexts sure
|
|
but as um an award-winning investigative
|
|
journalist who spends a lot of your time
|
|
popping hopium bubbles 100 yes 100% we
|
|
we we have um a capitalism has brought
|
|
us to a point where there's a lot of
|
|
like smoke being blown and there's
|
|
there's an awful lot of smoke screens
|
|
being being blown uh where we're we're
|
|
supposed to believe that we don't really
|
|
need to change very much because
|
|
there'll be big machines sucking sucking
|
|
carbon out our atmospheres and you know
|
|
so we don't worry guys it's okay um
|
|
where how do you balance that like so
|
|
the the need for optimism and the the
|
|
belief that there will might be near a
|
|
Tipping Point with the history of saying
|
|
that's well we there's most of the
|
|
things that are there that are there on
|
|
the rack now to save us probably won't
|
|
well as a journalist my goal is to try
|
|
and help audiences align themselves to
|
|
what the reality is because there's
|
|
always a gap what we perceive as the
|
|
reality versus what is actually
|
|
happening is there is always a gap and
|
|
that's probably why news journalists
|
|
hopefully even in a world of AI will
|
|
still be around uh but uh what I would
|
|
say is in a way I Define my beat as
|
|
covering Solutions and false Solutions
|
|
and you're absolutely right when
|
|
capitalism is being Modified by climate
|
|
there will be people who would want to
|
|
make a quick buck and so we are getting
|
|
a lot of green washy Solutions come our
|
|
our our way that makes for good
|
|
storytelling for a journalist it nothing
|
|
is easier if it can poke a hole in a
|
|
problem uh in a solution that is that
|
|
has problems but again while that is a
|
|
service that journalism provides and
|
|
it's a crucial service because if we
|
|
don't point to the problem I don't know
|
|
who else will do it at that level and
|
|
tell enough people about it
|
|
um books are a different piece I get to
|
|
sit in a story for years and be able to
|
|
make it make sure that when it's out in
|
|
the audience they can read it for years
|
|
uh and so that's why I wanted to take a
|
|
different stance where I'm not shying
|
|
away from the problems that are there
|
|
and there are many of those but to focus
|
|
on the solutions and how you can
|
|
overcome those problems and I feel like
|
|
both highlighting good Solutions while
|
|
calling out bad Solutions are board
|
|
services that need to be
|
|
journalistically done okay SS sounds
|
|
fair and another point that you you make
|
|
firmly is the importance of policy now
|
|
kind of pulling it back to our our
|
|
original theme on on youth um I think
|
|
it's pretty clear in the UK and a lot of
|
|
places around the world there is a
|
|
political bias preference towards
|
|
looking after older Generations rather
|
|
than younger and certainly more towards
|
|
current Generations rather in future um
|
|
how would you from a climate lens um
|
|
suggest that polic is is is tweet oh
|
|
that's an interesting one um it's also I
|
|
mean it that's down to the demographics
|
|
of the places you've just mentioned
|
|
right when it's an aging population
|
|
that's what the population is trying to
|
|
do that's not the case in India India's
|
|
median age is
|
|
25 uh and so you are you know many
|
|
policies that are oriented towards young
|
|
people if anything there is more uh
|
|
unemployment in India among youth uh
|
|
than there needs to be and it's sort of
|
|
a place where a lot of young people uh
|
|
and their talents may be wasted if those
|
|
young people aren't given jobs that's so
|
|
India has a youth problem whereas
|
|
invested societies it's an aging problem
|
|
um I think one thing that we can look at
|
|
least from a climate climate lens is
|
|
that there needs to be intergenerational
|
|
Equity that people in the older
|
|
Generations need to recognize that they
|
|
lived on this planet being ignorant of
|
|
the fact that climate change was being
|
|
rought under them now we are not
|
|
ignorant anymore we know the science we
|
|
know the responsibility of historical
|
|
emissions of many of the people who are
|
|
in the older Generations today many of
|
|
the countries that became rich on the
|
|
back of those emissions not knowing the
|
|
problem then but knowing the problem now
|
|
and so if there is a way in which and I
|
|
don't know what the policy level would
|
|
be but if there is a way in which older
|
|
Generations can be made to understand
|
|
that historical responsibility we may
|
|
get more support for policies that are
|
|
climate Progressive mhm okay okay that's
|
|
hopeful in a in a
|
|
sense so um one of the another one of
|
|
one of your kind of principles is is
|
|
again towards optimism um but it's quite
|
|
striking as you mentioned earlier on uh
|
|
quite how pessimistic on average the
|
|
younger generation seem to be um and you
|
|
mentioned kind of Cl climate protest as
|
|
a as a as a result of that
|
|
um what reactions have you had you
|
|
mentioned that you've seen um young
|
|
people do enjoy your your your
|
|
newsletters and journalism what
|
|
reactions have you had what
|
|
conversations have you had with with
|
|
young people on on your book yes uh so
|
|
there was a recent survey done of UK uh
|
|
young people in the UK and uh that
|
|
survey found 30% feel that we are
|
|
heading towards a doomis scenario a
|
|
cataclysm a catastrophe uh and that
|
|
nothing can be done about it which is a
|
|
very high percentage of people under the
|
|
age of 25 wanting to not
|
|
really uh participate in what is a
|
|
completely possible scenario where you
|
|
can participate in Solutions make sure
|
|
that catastrophe can be minimized if not
|
|
avoided uh and so my hope with the book
|
|
was to try and show that those Solutions
|
|
are possible that progress has been made
|
|
right we were on a track to 4° C warming
|
|
before the Paris agreement was signed
|
|
we're now on track for 2.8 that's the
|
|
most recent United Nations um report
|
|
that came out just before cop 28 uh and
|
|
so we've shaved up 1.2 de C from the top
|
|
it's still pretty bad at 2.8 uh but we
|
|
have time to be able to try and bend
|
|
that even further does that mean we
|
|
can't we can avoid all the problems
|
|
coming our way no right we continue to
|
|
put greenhouse gas emissions into the
|
|
atmosphere and thus we'll keep warming
|
|
the planet uh but we can try to minimize
|
|
the impact every .1 de celi matters as
|
|
as we heard earlier and speaking of
|
|
running out of time we are seriously
|
|
running out of time so if I can ask just
|
|
kind of one one final question a little
|
|
piece piece of uh advice to you know
|
|
people people in the audience and people
|
|
listening um how do you feel we should
|
|
be uh talking to younger people younger
|
|
Generations about the current
|
|
crisis um so I said my beat is trying to
|
|
tell you about Solutions and false
|
|
Solutions but what I often end up doing
|
|
is a layer below that which is how do we
|
|
talk about climate change uh and I think
|
|
one thing that I have found over my uh
|
|
seven years of covering climate change
|
|
is that every year the pace of change in
|
|
trying to deal with the problem has uh
|
|
changed and uh the pace of impact is
|
|
changing right it's all accelerating
|
|
both Solutions are accelerating and the
|
|
problems are accelerating ating so we
|
|
should start from the point talking to
|
|
any young person that we must recognize
|
|
that we are going to live for the next
|
|
few decades on a two track world where
|
|
climate impacts will keep getting worse
|
|
but climate Solutions will get keep
|
|
getting
|
|
accelerated if that is a world that
|
|
feels too dissonant well that's the
|
|
reality we are in but you can be on the
|
|
part of the solution and try and make
|
|
those impacts be as minimal as possible
|
|
yeah great and thank you very much for
|
|
the the U all the great work that you're
|
|
doing in trying to increase the pace of
|
|
the the positive outcome rather than the
|
|
negative that been a wonderful
|
|
conversation thanks for
|
|
[Applause]
|
|
much
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|
|
### Hopes for COP28
|
|
URL: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DM6cHHwLwbY
|
|
|
|
Idioma: en
|
|
|
|
[Music]
|
|
one of the key issues Business Leaders
|
|
should focus on at cop 28 are public
|
|
private Partnerships these are tools
|
|
that can help enable new projects in
|
|
developing economies and ensure that the
|
|
transition is just and Equitable a key
|
|
issue is the decide of effective
|
|
regulation to mitigate climate change
|
|
research shows that so far existing
|
|
rules have not yet leveraged their full
|
|
potential to motivate business
|
|
businesses to address environmental
|
|
sustainability there is a significant
|
|
Gap that now needs to be identified and
|
|
addressed at cop 28 these gaps relate to
|
|
providing capital from some of these
|
|
institutions to the underdeveloped
|
|
institutions and see how we can actually
|
|
make them more practical and more
|
|
feasible what we need to prioritize is
|
|
how to incentivize early action by
|
|
businesses to tackle climate problems a
|
|
key issue step business leader should
|
|
focus in cop 28 will be on increasing
|
|
resilience towards impact of climate
|
|
change as more countries will inevitably
|
|
experience the impact of climate change
|
|
it's important for us to develop and
|
|
Implement a workable solution for this
|
|
issue I think one of the key issues is
|
|
energy diversification uh energy
|
|
diversification is important to prevent
|
|
disruption of energy Supply I think a
|
|
big issue is finding the capital and
|
|
expertise to invest in companies that
|
|
improve the green
|
|
infrastructure basically generating
|
|
energy from Green sources battery
|
|
storage solutions and smart
|
|
[Music]
|
|
grids I think the cop 28 is a fantastic
|
|
opportunity for Business Leaders to
|
|
really get together and talk about
|
|
shared issues and start excellent
|
|
collaboration programs to really aim to
|
|
solve the current climate crisis
|
|
together my hope is for policy and
|
|
Business Leaders to agree on an
|
|
ambitious framework for tax policy that
|
|
reduces carbon emissions and fosters
|
|
investment in green technologies I hope
|
|
that we can achieve more ambitious
|
|
climate commitment from participating
|
|
countries more collaboration between
|
|
countries on climate actions and more
|
|
concrete plan for funding for adaption
|
|
one of the positive changes I want to
|
|
see is greater introduction of
|
|
Regulation particularly around
|
|
sustainability reporting my biggest hope
|
|
for cop 28 is for all the stakeholders
|
|
to realize that we are all in this
|
|
together and so we need to work together
|
|
for something that addresses the
|
|
iniquities and in injustices that affect
|
|
people who are especially the most
|
|
vulnerable out of cop 28 I hope that
|
|
there's more dialogue and progression
|
|
and actions from both governments and
|
|
[Music]
|
|
businesses
|
|
[Music]
|
|
|
|
---
|
|
|