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Fossil fuel divestment necessary in order to avoid “carbon bubble”: study

OTTAWA—Canada’s economy is experiencing a “carbon bubble” that could have significant consequences for Canada’s financial markets and pension funds, according to a new study released today by the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives.

Between two-thirds and four-fifths of known fossil fuel reserves have been deemed to be "unburnable carbon" that cannot safely be combusted without leading to catastrophic climate change.

“Business-as-usual for the fossil fuel industry is incompatible with the need to keep the global temperature increase to 2°C or less,” says CCPA Senior Economist Marc Lee. “The recent experience of high-tech and housing bubbles should serve as a stern warning to investors and policy makers.”

The study, by Lee and SFU graduate student Brock Ellis, estimates Canada's share of a global carbon budget and finds that, at least 78% of Canada’s proven oil, bitumen, gas, and coal reserves, and 89% of proven-plus-probable reserves would need to remain underground.

This unburnable carbon has implications for the Canadian fossil fuel industry, but also for financial markets, in particular pension funds who have invested in fossil fuel industries as part of their portfolios. The Toronto Stock Exchange is highly weighted towards the fossil fuel sector. At the end of 2011, the TSX had 405 listed oil and gas companies with a total market capitalization of over $379 billion.

The study compares assets and liabilities for more than 100 top fossil fuel companies in Canada to estimates of their "carbon liabilities"—the estimated damages from emitting a tonne of carbon. For Canadian-listed companies the low estimate amounts to $844 billion in carbon liabilities—more than two and a half times the market capitalization and nearly double the assets of those companies. The high estimate yields a figure just under $5.7 trillion, an amount 17 times larger than market capitalization and 13 times assets.

 “There has been a general failure among pension funds to account for climate risk, and a tendency to view any screening for environmental purposes to be detrimental to financial performance," says Lee. "Our analysis turns this on its head: by not accounting for climate risk, large amounts of invested capital are vulnerable to the carbon bubble.”

Pension fund managers must take inter-generational equity into account. While pension funds have to generate maximum current return value for existing (and soon-to-be) pensioners, at the same time they must equally represent the interest of young workers for their eventual retirements.

Pension funds and other institutional investors need to be part of the solution, according to the study, which makes several recommendations to green Canada’s financial markets, including: establishing a national carbon budget; developing green bonds; and mandating carbon stress tests for financing commitments and portfolios.

"We are in need of a ‘managed retreat’ from fossil fuel investments," says Lee.

–30–

Canada's Carbon Liabilities: The Implications of Stranded Fossil Fuel Assets for Financial Markets and Pension Funds is available on the CCPA website: http://policyalternatives.ca

For more information contact Kerri-Anne Finn, CCPA Senior Communications Officer, at 613-563-1341 x306.

Canada's Carbon Liabilities

The Implications of Stranded Fossil Fuel Assets for Financial Markets and Pension Funds

Reports & Studies
Projects & Initiatives: Climate Justice Project

Talking Taxes: What BC Really Needs in Tough Economic Times

Wednesday, Mar 27, 2013, 7:00pm - 9:00pm

Room IB1015 – International Building
Thompson Rivers University, Kamloops
All welcome and admission is FREE
Iglika Ivanova at TRU Kamloops
The 2013 BC Budget focused on balancing the books above all else, but is fiscal restraint what BC really needs? Research we've done at the CCPA shows that the BC government has a revenue problem, not a spending one. 12 years of corporate and personal income tax cuts have starved BC of the public revenues we badly need to maintain and enhance public services, and to meaningfully tackle the key issues of our time: climate change and income inequality. This lecture will make the case for tax reform in BC, present a range of reform options and explore the shifting public conversation about taxes in the wake of tax increases announced in the BC Budget. Find out how we can pay for the public investments we need (including a high quality, accessible education system) and improve the quality of life for British Columbians from all generations.
 
This event is sponsored by the TRU Faculty Association and the TRU Students’ Union.

All Candidates Election Forum: Real Talk on Climate Change

Wednesday, Apr 3, 2013, 7:00pm - 9:30pm

Part of Gen Why Media's ongoing inter-generational dialogue series, Bring Your Boomers.

VENUE: The Rio Theatre - 1660 East Broadway (and Commercial Drive)
SPONSORS: Vancity, CCPA-BC, Leadnow.ca, Get Your Vote On
INFO: http://bringyourboomers.com/
TICKETS (by donation): http://bringyourboomers4.eventbrite.com/

Bring Your Boomers Election Forum: Real Talk on Climate Change will bring together young voters with political candidates for a frank conversation about an issue of overriding concern to young people: namely, how to address the challenge of climate change in BC.
BYB4 poster
Bring Your Boomers events go beyond traditional panels or debates by presenting an engaging mix of intelligent conversation, media, storytelling and music to provide a culturally-driven entry point to discuss social transformation.

The event will include:

  • Opening and closing performances by musical guest Au4
  • Remarks from CCPA's Marc Lee about about the state of climate change legislation in BC
  • An on-stage intergenerational dialogue about how to improve climate change legislation in BC with candidates David Eby (NDP), Jane Sterk (Green Party), Gabby Kalaw (Liberals), Duane Nickull (BC Conservatives) and Bob Simpson (Independent) and 3 young voters: Caleb Behn (from the documentary Fractured Land), Andrea Curtis (from Transformation Project and Get Your Vote On) and Sam Harrison (from Kids for Climate Action)
  • Q&A and audience discussion

Seniors Fact Sheet: Health Care

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Projects & Initiatives: Seniors' Care

BC forest bill urgently in need of a rewrite

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Projects & Initiatives: Resource Economics Project (BC)
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