We need to get real on climate change. The world is now awash in grand promises and ambitions to deliver net zero carbon emissions by 2050, in line with a 1.5C global warming cap; but these promises are not being backed by hard capital commitments. Turning the spotlight on the hidden world of accounting can help.
Read moreHow Big Banks Put Climate and Investors at Risk
To avoid impending climate catastrophe, vast investment must be diverted from fossil fuel-based power generation, industrial processes, transport, and land use to carbon-free alternatives.
Read moreReducing Chemical Footprint Lessens Legal and Regulatory Risk
Investors have filed resolutions with Five Below, Dollar General, Bed Bath & Beyond, and Kroger to expand and improve chemical safety programs. This comes at a time when regulatory risk and consumer concern is rising.
Read moreInsuring Net-Zero Progress
Climate change is referred to by leading economists as the greatest market failure in human history, with potentially disruptive implications on the social well-being, economic development, and financial stability of current and future generations: conservative estimates see unabated climate change leading to global costs equivalent to losing in-between 5 to 20% of global gross domestic product (GDP) each year, now and forever.
Read moreShareholders Help Big-AG Build a Resilient Supply Chain
As food manufacturers begin to more widely acknowledge and address the material risk of climate change and biodiversity loss, they must also acknowledge the role pesticides play.
Read moreSay on Climate Global Shareholder Coalition
The Say on Climate global shareholder initiative aims to move companies to develop net zero transition plans, adopt annual 5 percent GHG emissions reduction targets (aligned with Climate Action 100+ benchmarks), provide annual emissions disclosure, and give shareholders an annual vote. The annual advisory vote would be similar to votes on executive compensation, but it would be about implementation of a company’s climate transition plan.
Read moreScope 3 Climate Impacts Missing from Utility Net Zero Targets
Most utility companies are not including Scope 3 emissions from the corporate value chain in their net zero climate targets. Yet, emissions from customers’ use of natural gas for heat and other applications, purchased power emissions, and methane leakage from the production and distribution of natural gas can amount to as much as half of a utility’s total emissions.
Read moreBoards Face "NO" Votes Due to Lack of Climate Governance Practices
Investors increasingly are ready to hold board members of U.S. public companies accountable for failing to appropriately oversee their companies’ climate-related risks and opportunities.
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