The cost of inaction

Report Summary

A free option on the mispricing of carbon

The Swedish public pension fund Fjärde AP-fonden (AP4) is governed by legislation that requires it to take sustainability into account, but without giving up returns. When AP4 decided to scrutinise the climate-related risks in its investment portfolio, it began by measuring the carbon footprint of the S&P 500 index. The pension fund’s managers decided that, as they sought to mitigate the climate-related risk in their holdings in the index, they did not want to take any sector stances—specifically, they did not want to take any explicit bets against fossil fuels.

Motivations for investors

As growing numbers of institutional investors address the climate-related risks in their investment portfolios, they are driven to act by risk management goals, financial returns and regulatory mandates. For those that have not yet taken steps to address the long-term risks they face, here are some reasons to do so:

The cost of inaction

Research Methodology

Building climate change resilience in cities - The private sector's role

Arctic Summit 2014 - Climate change and the Arctic

A presentation from Sir Brian Hoskins, Director Grantham Institute for Climate Change, Imperial College.

HSBC: risk and return

HSBC, a global financial services firm headquartered in the UK, has developed a range of responses relating to climate adaptation, from both a risk perspective and in terms of opportunity. On the risk front, it released a report in 2009, focused on the G20, which assesses the risk to different countries from expected climate impacts, in terms of food losses, water stress, and rising healthcare costs. This assessment is intended to advise both the bank and its clients on looming risks, but can also help to shape future products.

Business leaders call for urgent action on climate change

Just under half of respondents to our poll believe that the effects of climate change require immediate intervention. Senior executives from developing countries are particularly concerned about climate risks.

Why gas isn’t the answer to climate change

Listening to the optimists in the gas industry, you would think that the world is on the cusp of a “shale gas revolution” which will tackle climate change, keep down energy bills and enhance energy security.

The Global Energy Conversation

This report, edited by the Economist Intelligence Unit and supported by Shell, follows an event held in June 2011 that brought together energy experts based in London, Singapore and Shanghai for the world’s first live global conversation on the future of energy.

We have invited the same group of experts that participated in the debate to explain their views on the most challenging questions that arose during their discussion. The report also highlights some of the best contributions made in the online debate that surrounded their conversation.

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