Investors must help form climate agreement

It is now more critical than ever for investors to step up their dialogue with policy makers regarding climate change initiatives, the executive director of the Institutional Investors Group on Climate Change, Stephanie Pfeifer, says in the wake of the UN climate change talks in Durban.

“National action continues to be key to investor behaviour, and investors will have a significant role to play in encouraging national and regional governments to step up their ambition levels and put in place investment grade policy,” she says.

“We also need to help ensure that momentum is maintained at the international level and that timeframes are adhered to.”

Pfeifer also says there is still a need to encourage greater recognition of the role for private finance and the conditions under which it will be deployed, as well as further thinking about how public finance can leverage private finance flows into developing countries.

“IIGCC will continue to focus its policy engagement in many of these areas,” she says.

Sponsored Content

Pfeifer, who attended the talks in Durban last week, says it is important that the international process continues.

She says one of the more important outcomes of the UN convention was that the commitment by US and China, the world’s largest emitters, to negotiations for a legal agreement that covers both developing and developed countries.

“The EU had a diplomatic coup in initiating the concept of the roadmap that is central to the Durban platform and it is positive that it found support initially from the smaller developing countries and then the larger emitters. This doesn’t mean that issues around equity won’t still feature strongly in the negotiations for a new deal. But there seems to have been some movement in the positions between North and South, and some recognition of the need for all to cut emissions and of the benefits of moving to a low carbon economy,” she says.

While the talks were a step in the right direction, Pfeifer says there is still some uncertainty including the interpretation of the legal form of the future agreement, and how the Green Climate Fund will be capitalised.

She also says the level of ambition is too low compared with what is scientifically needed. In particular the second commitment period of the Kyoto Protocol covers less than 15 per cent of global emissions.

 

Decisions reached at the 17th Conference of the Parties (COP17) to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change in Durban include:

  • Agreement to launch a new negotiating process that will develop a new ‘protocol, legal instrument or agreed outcome’ by 2015 with implementation by 2020
  • Agreement to establish a second commitment period under the Kyoto Protocol beginning in January 2013 and ending in either 2017 or 2020 (to be determined by COP18).
  • Agreement to establish the operations of the new Green Climate Fund.

 

Leave a Comment

Sort content by

Review highlights obstacles to long-term thinking

The Kay Review into UK equity markets and long-term decision-making is one of the more sensible of a raft of reviews that have evolved from the crisis. It looks at the interaction, behaviour, incentives and decision-making of all the players in the financial services “value chain”. More than some nationalities, the Brits have been concerned

Ethics not returns drive AP7’s ESG policy

Returns are a secondary consideration to the ethical values of members when framing the socially responsible investment policy of Swedish fund AP7. AP7’s head of communications, Johan Floren, says that the fund is less concerned with socially responsible investment (SRI) as a driver of returns rather than as a reflection of the values and ethics

Index providers push into active managers’ domain

Index construction is pushing the boundaries of active management, with index providers launching products such as high beta to take advantage of market movements. S&P Indices is the latest to add to its family of high-beta indexes, recently launching two indexes of developed and emerging markets. Alka Banerjee, S&P Indices’ vice president of strategy and

Advancing the DB versus DC debate

It is possible for the best elements of defined benefit (DB) schemes to be applied to defined contribution (DC) schemes, by replicating real deferred annuities to produce superior pension outcomes for members, according to a new paper by APG. The paper, How to mimic DB-like benefits in a DC product, does what it says. It

Investors favour credit

Towers Watson’s negative outlook for bonds and its advice to increase allocations to high quality credit is being reflected in portfolio shifts by institutional investors.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

EPFR cumulative weekly flows into major fund groups

Source: EPFR Global.mrec4inarticleinline Sponsored Content scnative1 scnative2 scnative3

Previous