COVID-19 and the climate hole

In this Fiduciary Investors Series podcast Amanda White talks to Professor Cameron Hepburn,  Professor of Environmental Economics, and the director of the economics sustainability programme, at the University of Oxford.

They discuss: some of the more recent energy innovations; and the ideal price on carbon; as well as what is needed to move to a net-zero carbon economy.

Importantly Professor Hepburn discusses the role of finance and the need to recognise that both the finance and climate environments are complex adaptive systems, and that backward-looking analysis is not appropriate for adequate risk management.

“We need to get out of the old paradigms,” he says. “Even the concept of the Black Swan, doesn’t really help us to capture the fact these distributions are not bell shaped, or fat tailed or non-normal distributions. These are interactions between parts of the economy that are shifting the distribution altogether. So these things that are supposed to be a 1 in 10,000 event become the mean because you’ve shifted the distribution.”

He ends by offering some advice to institutional investors on how they should be including climate risks and opportunities into their investment decision-making, and the best way of doing that.

For further reading go to The Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment, Oxford University[vc_quotes layout=”accordion” quotes=”%5B%7B%22name%22%3A%22Cameron%20Hepburn%22%2C%22job_role%22%3A%22Director%20of%20the%20Smith%20School%20of%20Enterprise%20and%20the%20Environment%20(United%20Kingdom)%22%2C%22content%22%3A%22Cameron%20Hepburn%20is%20the%20Director%20of%20the%20Economics%20of%20Sustainability%20Programme%2C%20based%20at%20the%20Institute%20for%20New%20Economic%20Thinking%20at%20the%20Oxford%20Martin%20School.%20He%20is%20also%20Director%20and%20Professor%20of%20Environmental%20Economics%20at%20the%20Smith%20School%20of%20Enterprise%20and%20the%20Environment%2C%20a%20Fellow%20at%20New%20College%2C%20Oxford%2C%20and%20a%20Professorial%20Research%20Fellow%20at%20the%20Grantham%20Research%20Institute%20at%20the%20London%20School%20of%20Economics.He%20has%20published%20widely%20on%20energy%2C%20resources%20and%20environmental%20challenges%20across%20a%20range%20of%20disciplines%2C%20including%20engineering%2C%20biology%2C%20philosophy%2C%20economics%2C%20public%20policy%20and%20law%2C%20drawing%20on%20his%20degrees%20in%20law%2C%20engineering%20and%20doctorate%20in%20economics.%20He%20is%20on%20the%20editorial%20board%20of%20Environmental%20Research%20Letters%20and%20is%20the%20managing%20editor%20of%20the%20Oxford%20Review%20of%20Economic%20Policy.%20Cameron%E2%80%99s%20research%20is%20often%20referred%20to%20in%20the%20printed%20press%2C%20and%20he%20has%20been%20interviewed%20on%20television%20and%20radio%20in%20many%20countries.Cameron%20provides%20advice%20on%20energy%20and%20climate%20policy%20to%20government%20ministers%20(e.g.%20China%2C%20India%2C%20UK%20and%20Australia)%20and%20international%20institutions%20(e.g.%20OECD%2C%20UN%20organisations)%20around%20the%20world.%20Cameron%20began%20his%20professional%20life%20with%20McKinsey%2C%20and%20has%20since%20had%20an%20entrepreneurial%20career%2C%20co-founding%20three%20successful%20businesses%20%E2%80%93%20Aurora%20Energy%20Research%2C%20Climate%20Bridge%20and%20Vivid%20Economics%20%E2%80%93%20and%20investing%20in%20several%20other%20social%20enterprises%2C%20such%20as%20Purpose%20and%20Apolitical.%20He%20also%20serves%20as%20a%20trustee%20for%20Schola%20Cantorum%20of%20Oxford.%22%2C%22image%22%3A%2231863%22%2C%22linkedin%22%3A%22https%3A%2F%2Fwww.linkedin.com%2Fin%2Fcameronhepburn%2F%3ForiginalSubdomain%3Duk%22%7D%2C%7B%22name%22%3A%22Amanda%20White%22%2C%22job_role%22%3A%22Director%20of%20institutional%20content%2C%20Conexus%20Financial%20(Australia)%22%2C%22content%22%3A%22Amanda%20White%20is%20responsible%20for%20the%20content%20across%20all%20Conexus%20Financial%E2%80%99s%20institutional%20media%20and%20events.%20In%20addition%20to%20being%20the%20editor%20of%20Top1000funds.com%2C%20she%20is%20responsible%20for%20directing%20the%20global%20bi-annual%20Fiduciary%20Investors%20Symposium%20which%20challenges%20global%20investors%20on%20investment%20best%20practice%20and%20aims%20to%20place%20the%20responsibilities%20of%20investors%20in%20wider%20societal%2C%20and%20political%20contexts.%20%20She%20holds%20a%20Bachelor%20of%20Economics%20and%20a%20Masters%20of%20Art%20in%20Journalism%20and%20has%20been%20an%20investment%20journalist%20for%20more%20than%2025%20years.%20She%20is%20currently%20a%20fellow%20in%20the%20Finance%20Leaders%20Fellowship%20at%20the%20Aspen%20Institute.%20The%20two-year%20program%20seeks%20to%20develop%20the%20next%20generation%20of%20responsible%2C%20community-spirited%20leaders%20in%20the%20global%20finance%20industry%22%2C%22image%22%3A%2231864%22%2C%22linkedin%22%3A%22https%3A%2F%2Fwww.linkedin.com%2Fin%2Famanda-white-101a7515%2F%22%7D%5D” title=”” el_class=””]

Sponsored Content

Leave a Comment

Florida: Opportunities in a crisis

Florida: Opportunities in a crisis

The Florida State Board of Administration has made some strategic moves to take advantage of opportunities in the dislocation, including in private equity, distressed debt and active listed equities.. But CIO, Ash Williams, is concerned about the underlying real economy.

Sort content by

FIS 2020: Global Policy Response

Two ex-central bankers, Randy Kroszner and Lucrezia Reichlin, said that central banks were doing everything they could to ensure markets continue to function. They said inflation was unlikely.

Society isn’t working: Larry Summers

Former Treasury Secretary, Larry Summers, questioned the successful functioning of US democracy and America’s continued ability to “lead the world”.

FIS 2020: Positioning portfolios

For some investors, plunging equity valuations in March were an opportunity to ‘get back in’ at reasonable prices. More recently the rapid recovery has been a cause to position conservatively once again.

FIS 2020: The policy response

FIS 2020 will discuss how the unprecedented government stimulus in response to the pandemic could affect investor returns and specific allocations. Areas of concern include a sharp rise in zombie companies kept afloat by government support.

What does the future look like

Given the disruption and chaos currently facing the world, society and economies, this session looks at what an imagined future would look like.

The vaccine

This session looks at the development of a vaccine for COVID-19 and what cooperation is needed to fight the virus.

Previous