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CLIMATE SCIENCE
Funds worth $37 tn failing to meet climate goals: analysis
By Patrick GALEY
Paris (AFP) Nov 27, 2019

Six scientific journals denounce Trump environmental reform
Washington (AFP) Nov 26, 2019 - The editors-in-chief of six major scientific review journals on Tuesday denounced a pending US regulation that would limit the scientific process for developing environmental and public health policies.

The US Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has increased acts of environmental deregulation under President Donald Trump.

But a new rule -- in the process of being finalized -- would have an even more significant effect by restricting which studies EPA employees could use when drafting new regulations.

The rule would require EPA rule-makers to use only studies based on public data, in the name of transparency.

Such a requirement would make it impossible, for example, to use the countless studies that were based on individuals' medical data.

This type of analysis -- showing the effects of air pollution on quality of life -- is the foundation of a large number of environmental regulations.

The EPA also intends to make the transparency rule retroactive, according to The New York Times, which could call into question decades of regulations on air quality, water mercury levels or lead levels in paint.

"As leaders of peer-reviewed journals, we support open sharing of research data, but we also recognize the validity of scientific studies that, for confidentiality reasons, cannot indiscriminately share absolutely all data," wrote the editors-in-chief of Science, Nature, PLOS, PNAS, Cell Press and The Lancet.

They pointed to genetic studies that allowed researchers to find mutations that caused certain diseases.

Their main concern is that the new rule, even if not retroactive, would weaken regulations when they need to be updated.

"That would be a catastrophe," they wrote.

The EPA has not yet announced the date for the new regulation's finalization.

The world's largest investment funds -- controling a mammoth $37 trillion in assets -- are failing to bring their portfolios in line with the Paris climate goals, new analysis showed Wednesday.

The funds control portfolios containing a fifth of the total value of world capital markets, yet their investments in sectors such as automobiles and coal puts them "significantly at odds" with the Paris aim of limiting global warming to well below two degrees Celsius (3.6 Farenheit), the Britain-based think tank InfluenceMap said.

Experts analysed 50,000 listed funds controlled by 150 finance giants and found $8.2 trillion of holdings in oil and gas, coal mining, car manufacturing and electric power.

InfluenceMap found that within those sectors the funds were still tending towards investing in companies deploying so-called "brown technologies", and that they were under investing in renewables and other green tech.

"The majority of companies in these sectors are very far from aligning their business models to meet the goals of Paris," it said.

Recent years have seen a global movement calling on shareholders to stop their institutions investing in fossil fuel use and exploration.

According to the climate campaign group 350.org, $11 trillion has already been committed to be divested.

But the industry pushback has been hard, with pension and sovereign wealth funds seeking to draw down their fossil investments challenged by shareholders in companies belonging to their portfolios.

"There's been this big movement in the last decade about sustainable finance being a driver for improving things in the real economy in the absence of strong government action," said InfluenceMap's executive director Dylan Tanner.

"If the finance sector is making broad statements about being in line with the Paris agreements, that would suggest their portfolios should aim for that alignment," he told AFP.

"It's clear that they do not."

This was clearest in the automotive sector, where institutional reluctance to green production lines and sophisticated lobbying techniques are holding back progress, the report said.

In 2018, carmakers produced 96 million vehicles worldwide, but only 1.4 percent of them were electric (EVs).

"The sector is not investing in EVs at anywhere near enough pace, and the fleet volumes are growing so much that the internal combustion engine will overwhelm any benefits from EVs," Tanner said.

- Power in investors' hands -

Last year the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), in its assessment on the difference between 1.5C and 2C of warming, laid out a timeline for phasing out coal by 2030.

The funds analysed by InfluenceMap currently manage at least 30 percent more coal production than would be consistent with the Paris goals.

"It should also be noted that coal industry interests continue to lobby aggressively to delay policy which may realise the IPCC's 2030 phaseout timeline," it said.

The protect value, the analysis recommended that shareholders pressure corporations to bring their business plans in line with Paris climate goals, largely through investment in greener technology.

"The assess management industry is only starting to be aligned with the Paris Agreement," said Christiana Figueres, a former UN climate change secretary and founding partner of the Global Optimism consultancy.

"In the face of the climate emergency, it is critical for investors to show companies the path to follow."


Related Links
Climate Science News - Modeling, Mitigation Adaptation


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CLIMATE SCIENCE
'All guns blazing' as Madrid races to host climate summit
Madrid (AFP) Nov 22, 2019
With 10 days left until the COP25, Spain is working at breakneck speed to pull off the logistical "miracle" of organising the world's top climate summit in just a few short weeks. A vast event which runs from December 2-13, the UN climate summit had been due to take place in Chile until its crisis-hit government pulled out on October 30 following a wave of deadly civil unrest. Within days, the venue was switched to Madrid after Spain's Socialist Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez offered to play host ... read more

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