Carbon
bubble will plunge the world into another financial crisis – report
Trillions
of dollars at risk as stock markets inflate value of fossil fuels
that may have to remain buried forever, experts warn
19
April, 2013
The
world could be heading for a major economic crisis as stock markets
inflate an investment bubble in fossil fuels to the tune of trillions
of dollars, according to leading economists.
"The
financial crisis has shown what happens when risks accumulate
unnoticed," said Lord (Nicholas) Stern, a professor at the
London School of Economics. He said the risk was "very big
indeed" and that almost all investors and regulators were
failing to address it.
The
so-called "carbon bubble" is the result of an
over-valuation of oil, coal and gas reserves held by fossil fuel
companies. According to a report published on Friday, at least
two-thirds of these reserves will have to remain underground if the
world is to meet existing internationally agreed targets to avoid the
threshold for "dangerous" climate change. If the agreements
hold, these reserves will be in effect unburnable and so worthless –
leading to massive market losses. But the stock markets are betting
on countries' inaction on climate change.
The
stark report is by Stern and Carbon Tracker, a thinktank supported by
organisations including HSBC, Citi, Standard and Poor's and the
International Energy Agency. The Bank of England has also recognised
that a collapse in the value of oil, gas and coal assets as nations
tackle global warming is a potential systemic risk to the economy,
with London being particularly at risk owing to its huge listings of
coal.
Stern
said that far from reducing efforts to develop fossil fuels, the top
200 companies spent $674bn (£441bn) in 2012 to find and exploit even
more new resources, a sum equivalent to 1% of global GDP, which could
end up as "stranded" or valueless assets. Stern's landmark
2006 report on the economic impact of climate change – commissioned
by the then chancellor, Gordon Brown – concluded that spending 1%
of GDP would pay for a transition to a clean and sustainable economy.
The
world's governments have agreed to restrict the global temperature
rise to 2C, beyond which the impacts become severe and unpredictable.
But Stern said the investors clearly did not believe action to curb
climate change was going to be taken. "They can't believe that
and also believe that the markets are sensibly valued now."
"They
only believe environmental regulation when they see it," said
James Leaton, from Carbon Tracker and a former PwC consultant. He
said short-termism in financial markets was the other major reason
for the carbon bubble. "Analysts say you should ride the train
until just before it goes off the cliff. Each thinks they are smart
enough to get off in time, but not everyone can get out of the door
at the same time. That is why you get bubbles and crashes."
Paul
Spedding, an oil and gas analyst at HSBC, said: "The scale of
'listed' unburnable carbon revealed in this report is astonishing.
This report makes it clear that 'business as usual' is not a viable
option for the fossil fuel industry in the long term. [The market] is
assuming it will get early warning, but my worry is that things often
happen suddenly in the oil and gas sector."
HSBC
warned that 40-60% of the market capitalisation of oil and gas
companies was at risk from the carbon bubble, with the top 200 fossil
fuel companies alone having a current value of $4tn, along with
$1.5tn debt.
Lord
McFall, who chaired the Commons Treasury select committee for a
decade, said: "Despite its devastating scale, the banking crisis
was at its heart an avoidable crisis: the threat of significant
carbon writedown has the unmistakable characteristics of the same
endemic problems."
The
report calculates that the world's currently indicated fossil fuel
reserves equate to 2,860bn tonnes of carbon dioxide, but that just
31% could be burned for an 80% chance of keeping below a 2C
temperature rise. For a 50% chance of 2C or less, just 38% could be
burned.
Carbon
capture and storage technology, which buries emissions underground,
can play a role in the future, but even an optimistic scenario which
sees 3,800 commercial projects worldwide would allow only an extra 4%
of fossil fuel reserves to be burned. There are currently no
commercial projects up and running. The normally conservative
International Energy Agency has also concluded that a major part of
fossil fuel reserves is unburnable.
Citi
bank warned investors in Australia's vast coal industry that little
could be done to avoid the future loss of value in the face of action
on climate change. "If the unburnable carbon scenario does
occur, it is difficult to see how the value of fossil fuel reserves
can be maintained, so we see few options for risk mitigation."
Ratings
agencies have expressed concerns, with Standard and Poor's concluding
that the risk could lead to the downgrading of the credit ratings of
oil companies within a few years.
Steven
Oman, senior vice-president at Moody's, said: "It behoves us as
investors and as a society to know the true cost of something so that
intelligent and constructive policy and investment decisions can be
made. Too often the true costs are treated as unquantifiable or even
ignored."
Jens
Peers, who manages €4bn (£3bn) for Mirova, part of €300bn asset
managers Natixis, said: "It is shocking to see the report's
numbers, as they are worse than people realise. The risk is massive,
but a lot of asset managers think they have a lot of time. I think
they are wrong." He said a key moment will come in 2015, the
date when the world's governments have pledged to strike a global
deal to limit carbon emissions. But he said that fund managers need
to move now. If they wait till 2015, "it will be too late for
them to take action."
Pension
funds are also concerned. "Every pension fund manager needs to
ask themselves have we incorporated climate change and carbon risk
into our investment strategy? If the answer is no, they need to start
to now," said Howard Pearce, head of pension fund management at
the Environment Agency, which holds £2bn in assets.
Stern
and Leaton both point to China as evidence that carbon cuts are
likely to be delivered. China's leaders have said its coal use will
peak in the next five years, said Leaton, but this has not been
priced in. "I don't know why the market does not believe China,"
he said. "When it says it is going to do something, it usually
does." He said the US and Australia were banking on selling coal
to China but that this "doesn't add up".
Jeremy
Grantham, a billionaire fund manager who oversees $106bn of assets,
said his company was on the verge of pulling out of all coal and
unconventional fossil fuels, such as oil from tar sands. "The
probability of them running into trouble is too high for me to take
that risk as an investor." He said: "If we mean to burn all
the coal and any appreciable percentage of the tar sands, or other
unconventional oil and gas then we're cooked. [There are] terrible
consequences that we will lay at the door of our grandchildren."
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.