1 00:00:01,360 --> 00:00:06,680 Speaker 1: Wildfires have been sweeping through California, causing untold damage and destruction. 2 00:00:07,160 --> 00:00:11,040 Speaker 1: Hurricanes seem to get stronger and stronger every year. Rising 3 00:00:11,119 --> 00:00:13,680 Speaker 1: sea levels our forecast to make much of the coastline 4 00:00:13,800 --> 00:00:17,880 Speaker 1: uninhabitable in the coming decades. This week on Benchmark, we'll 5 00:00:17,920 --> 00:00:21,759 Speaker 1: talk about how climate change is reshaping economies around the world, 6 00:00:22,160 --> 00:00:25,000 Speaker 1: and we'll look beyond all the destruction and doom to 7 00:00:25,160 --> 00:00:38,159 Speaker 1: what business and investors can do to help. Welcome to Benchmark. 8 00:00:38,240 --> 00:00:42,640 Speaker 1: I'm Scott Lanman, economics editor with Bloomberg News Washington, and 9 00:00:42,840 --> 00:00:48,560 Speaker 1: I'm Daniel Moss, columnist at Bloombergan in New York. Joining 10 00:00:48,640 --> 00:00:50,800 Speaker 1: us this week in our New York studio are two 11 00:00:50,800 --> 00:00:55,720 Speaker 1: colleagues who are particularly knowledgeable on the topics of climate change, economics, 12 00:00:55,800 --> 00:00:59,520 Speaker 1: and business. First, we have Dan Shurry. He's the head 13 00:00:59,520 --> 00:01:03,320 Speaker 1: of Green and Sustainable Finance at Bloomberg New Energy Finance, 14 00:01:03,560 --> 00:01:08,200 Speaker 1: our company's division that researches clean energy, advanced transport, and 15 00:01:08,360 --> 00:01:11,720 Speaker 1: other key topics on the future of energy. Dan, thanks 16 00:01:11,720 --> 00:01:14,160 Speaker 1: for coming on Benchmark. Absolutely the pleasure to be here. 17 00:01:14,760 --> 00:01:18,600 Speaker 1: And Next, we also have Emily Chasen. She's the Sustainable 18 00:01:18,640 --> 00:01:22,840 Speaker 1: Finance editor at Bloomberg News and edits Good Business Bloomberg's 19 00:01:22,880 --> 00:01:26,800 Speaker 1: free weekly newsletter on sustainable finance. Emily, thanks for being 20 00:01:26,800 --> 00:01:29,959 Speaker 1: with us, Thanks for having me. All Right, Well, before 21 00:01:29,959 --> 00:01:32,880 Speaker 1: we talk about all the disasters happening in the world, 22 00:01:33,319 --> 00:01:36,840 Speaker 1: let's talk a little bit about green and sustainable finance. 23 00:01:37,280 --> 00:01:40,440 Speaker 1: It's a topic that we haven't really covered on Benchmark before. 24 00:01:41,000 --> 00:01:44,720 Speaker 1: What is green and sustainable finance? How big is it? 25 00:01:44,800 --> 00:01:48,040 Speaker 1: And where is it going? Yeah, I actually get this 26 00:01:48,120 --> 00:01:51,960 Speaker 1: question a lot people who cover finance particularly haven't always 27 00:01:52,680 --> 00:01:56,640 Speaker 1: understood whether what's sustainable, what makes that different? So it's 28 00:01:56,640 --> 00:01:59,880 Speaker 1: actually a huge area. Um Sustainable investors just hit twelve 29 00:02:00,000 --> 00:02:03,080 Speaker 1: billion in US assets this year. That's one in every 30 00:02:03,120 --> 00:02:05,600 Speaker 1: four U s dollar invested is invested with some sort 31 00:02:05,640 --> 00:02:09,680 Speaker 1: of sustainable or responsible criteria. So that's actually been growing 32 00:02:09,720 --> 00:02:12,959 Speaker 1: about thirty a year for the past five years. So 33 00:02:13,040 --> 00:02:16,000 Speaker 1: it's really a rapid increase in this area. And there 34 00:02:16,040 --> 00:02:18,480 Speaker 1: are three major groups of investors that focus on this stuff. 35 00:02:18,800 --> 00:02:21,640 Speaker 1: There's a group that just invoids investing in controversial products 36 00:02:21,639 --> 00:02:25,359 Speaker 1: like weapons and tobacco or fossil fuels. Increasingly, there's other 37 00:02:25,400 --> 00:02:29,400 Speaker 1: investors that incorporate environmental, social governance risk and they just 38 00:02:29,440 --> 00:02:31,520 Speaker 1: sort of try and quantify the risk of climate change 39 00:02:31,560 --> 00:02:35,119 Speaker 1: or increasing inequality or bad corporate governance on their portfolios, 40 00:02:35,120 --> 00:02:37,600 Speaker 1: and they try to invest accordingly. And then there are 41 00:02:37,600 --> 00:02:39,720 Speaker 1: some investors that have gone so far even in this group, 42 00:02:39,760 --> 00:02:43,520 Speaker 1: to map companies pie locations and where their key suppliers 43 00:02:43,520 --> 00:02:45,840 Speaker 1: are and see if they have facilities in areas vulnerable 44 00:02:45,840 --> 00:02:48,600 Speaker 1: the storms or floods. And then the third group is 45 00:02:48,600 --> 00:02:51,120 Speaker 1: this group of impact investors, and those are investors that 46 00:02:51,160 --> 00:02:53,000 Speaker 1: hope to invest in products or services that have a 47 00:02:53,000 --> 00:02:55,520 Speaker 1: positive impact, like investing in lab grown meat or renewable 48 00:02:55,560 --> 00:03:00,000 Speaker 1: energy or sustainable agriculture. It's really just long term investors 49 00:03:00,120 --> 00:03:02,200 Speaker 1: and they're trying to map the future and figure out 50 00:03:02,240 --> 00:03:03,840 Speaker 1: what the cost of all these externalities are going to 51 00:03:03,880 --> 00:03:05,520 Speaker 1: be on portfolios. So many of them are sort of 52 00:03:05,520 --> 00:03:09,600 Speaker 1: long by and hold type people. And Dan, sure, how 53 00:03:09,680 --> 00:03:13,760 Speaker 1: how does this play into the topic of climate change 54 00:03:13,800 --> 00:03:17,800 Speaker 1: and you know other sort of big sweeping things that 55 00:03:17,840 --> 00:03:21,840 Speaker 1: are you know, really beyond the scope of economies or 56 00:03:21,880 --> 00:03:24,360 Speaker 1: countries and really go to, you know, how the human 57 00:03:24,440 --> 00:03:27,440 Speaker 1: race survives on this planet. So I think it boils 58 00:03:27,480 --> 00:03:31,120 Speaker 1: down to two key questions that investors are asking, especially 59 00:03:31,160 --> 00:03:33,079 Speaker 1: when you look at a topic like climate change, which 60 00:03:33,120 --> 00:03:36,440 Speaker 1: is very large and very nebulous, And the first question 61 00:03:36,560 --> 00:03:40,880 Speaker 1: is how how do my investments impact the environment around 62 00:03:40,920 --> 00:03:43,480 Speaker 1: me in the society around me? And the second question 63 00:03:43,520 --> 00:03:46,080 Speaker 1: is how does the society around me and the changing 64 00:03:46,080 --> 00:03:49,320 Speaker 1: climate impact my investments? And those two a very different 65 00:03:49,320 --> 00:03:52,560 Speaker 1: ways of approaching the same topic, and they result in 66 00:03:52,640 --> 00:03:55,960 Speaker 1: very different outcomes and very different ways of investing. And 67 00:03:56,120 --> 00:03:59,280 Speaker 1: green and sustainable finance really encompasses both of them. So 68 00:03:59,280 --> 00:04:01,400 Speaker 1: it's looking at both sides of the coin, both how 69 00:04:01,480 --> 00:04:03,600 Speaker 1: you impact the climate and how the climate impacts you. 70 00:04:04,480 --> 00:04:07,520 Speaker 1: All right, well, let's let's move to the wildfires in California. 71 00:04:07,560 --> 00:04:10,400 Speaker 1: They've been called some of the worst in history. Can 72 00:04:10,400 --> 00:04:14,760 Speaker 1: you just catch us up on what's happening, Why they're 73 00:04:15,040 --> 00:04:18,480 Speaker 1: so bad, Why these this particular run of fires has 74 00:04:18,520 --> 00:04:22,680 Speaker 1: been so destructive. Absolutely. So. I've been looking at some 75 00:04:22,720 --> 00:04:26,240 Speaker 1: statistics actually from from cal Fire, and it looks like 76 00:04:26,720 --> 00:04:29,160 Speaker 1: fourteen of the twenty largest wildfires have happened in the 77 00:04:29,240 --> 00:04:32,600 Speaker 1: last fifteen years in California, And in line with that, 78 00:04:33,320 --> 00:04:35,400 Speaker 1: ten of the last fifteen years have been the hottest 79 00:04:35,440 --> 00:04:37,680 Speaker 1: on record on the West Coast. So what we're seeing 80 00:04:37,680 --> 00:04:43,279 Speaker 1: here is the effects of climate change really impacting the wildfires, 81 00:04:43,839 --> 00:04:46,200 Speaker 1: so that the fire that we're seeing right now, the 82 00:04:46,279 --> 00:04:49,200 Speaker 1: camp fires the deadliest in history. There have been over 83 00:04:49,240 --> 00:04:52,400 Speaker 1: eighty recorded deaths so far. There's still over nine people 84 00:04:52,440 --> 00:04:55,400 Speaker 1: who are unaccounted for. So there's a company of utility 85 00:04:55,440 --> 00:04:58,640 Speaker 1: company the spotlight of this this crisis right now that 86 00:04:58,800 --> 00:05:01,200 Speaker 1: may or may not be culpable, may may not have 87 00:05:01,240 --> 00:05:04,480 Speaker 1: started the wildfires in California that we're seeing this campfire 88 00:05:04,760 --> 00:05:07,320 Speaker 1: and it's really being being impacted, and it's impact in 89 00:05:07,360 --> 00:05:09,560 Speaker 1: the stock price as well. What we've seen is up 90 00:05:09,560 --> 00:05:12,240 Speaker 1: to fifty reduction in the share price or the share 91 00:05:12,320 --> 00:05:15,000 Speaker 1: value of pg n E in the days after the 92 00:05:15,000 --> 00:05:19,520 Speaker 1: campfire broke out. It's often said that if California were 93 00:05:19,720 --> 00:05:23,160 Speaker 1: a separate country, it would be part of the G 94 00:05:23,440 --> 00:05:27,800 Speaker 1: seven or the G eight. That's how large it's economic 95 00:05:27,880 --> 00:05:32,520 Speaker 1: footprint is. Do these fires change any of that or 96 00:05:32,600 --> 00:05:36,680 Speaker 1: have the potential to alter that in any way? Well, 97 00:05:36,800 --> 00:05:40,560 Speaker 1: California actually has really strong climate ambitions. The legislature this 98 00:05:40,640 --> 00:05:42,440 Speaker 1: year passed a bill that would require all of its 99 00:05:42,440 --> 00:05:46,360 Speaker 1: electricity to come from carbon free sources, and it also 100 00:05:46,400 --> 00:05:48,799 Speaker 1: became the first state to require solar panels in almost 101 00:05:48,839 --> 00:05:52,479 Speaker 1: all new homes. So those are actually really aggressive things. 102 00:05:52,480 --> 00:05:54,240 Speaker 1: In California sort of sees itself as on the front 103 00:05:54,279 --> 00:05:57,520 Speaker 1: lines of climate change. It's really worried about its beaches 104 00:05:57,520 --> 00:05:59,640 Speaker 1: eroding and that being a huge part of the economy. 105 00:05:59,680 --> 00:06:02,919 Speaker 1: There's tourism, and the wildfires are really damaging this infrastructure 106 00:06:02,960 --> 00:06:05,880 Speaker 1: like pg n E that Dan talked about. PGNI has 107 00:06:05,920 --> 00:06:07,960 Speaker 1: like at one point four billion and wildfire insurance and 108 00:06:08,000 --> 00:06:10,400 Speaker 1: that's definitely not enough given the fires last year and 109 00:06:10,480 --> 00:06:13,120 Speaker 1: this year. So and that infrastructure is what you need 110 00:06:13,120 --> 00:06:15,920 Speaker 1: to do more renewable energy and there I mean, California 111 00:06:15,960 --> 00:06:19,160 Speaker 1: is launching its own satellite to detect methane. But these 112 00:06:19,160 --> 00:06:23,040 Speaker 1: wildfires released obviously a lot of carbon emissions into the atmosphere. Um, 113 00:06:23,080 --> 00:06:25,680 Speaker 1: they do set the state back, and it's um, it's 114 00:06:25,720 --> 00:06:27,680 Speaker 1: really the I know Donald Trump was saying it was 115 00:06:27,720 --> 00:06:32,200 Speaker 1: forest management um that caused the wildfires, but California is 116 00:06:32,200 --> 00:06:34,200 Speaker 1: actually a tinder box for a totally different reason. That 117 00:06:34,760 --> 00:06:37,400 Speaker 1: just had very scant rainfall and hot, dry winds and 118 00:06:37,720 --> 00:06:40,560 Speaker 1: just been bone dry. About eighty eight percent of California 119 00:06:40,600 --> 00:06:43,560 Speaker 1: was abnormally dry as of October two, and there are 120 00:06:43,560 --> 00:06:46,039 Speaker 1: wildfires like this all over the world. There's Scandinavia, Greece, 121 00:06:46,520 --> 00:06:49,520 Speaker 1: there's record heat in Texas, Japan, Africa over the past 122 00:06:49,600 --> 00:06:53,120 Speaker 1: year UM and it's just the droughts and the wildfires 123 00:06:53,120 --> 00:06:55,240 Speaker 1: are all very interrelated. And the droughts are also a 124 00:06:55,320 --> 00:06:58,800 Speaker 1: huge um source of an issue for agricultural jobs or 125 00:06:58,839 --> 00:07:03,120 Speaker 1: food supply. The the economic initiatives that the finance initiatives 126 00:07:03,160 --> 00:07:05,919 Speaker 1: that you're just talking about, you know, not just in 127 00:07:06,000 --> 00:07:09,080 Speaker 1: California but around the world. How long will it take 128 00:07:09,200 --> 00:07:12,560 Speaker 1: for these industries. Are these initiatives to sort of make 129 00:07:12,640 --> 00:07:15,360 Speaker 1: up for the kind of damage that's being done in 130 00:07:15,520 --> 00:07:19,600 Speaker 1: the various fires that you also cited. So when we 131 00:07:19,600 --> 00:07:21,760 Speaker 1: look at California, for example, I think there's going to 132 00:07:21,840 --> 00:07:23,960 Speaker 1: be more damage for a while before we start to 133 00:07:24,000 --> 00:07:27,120 Speaker 1: see any sort of improvement. If you look at the 134 00:07:27,160 --> 00:07:30,720 Speaker 1: potential liability that the PGNI might incur, the cost that 135 00:07:30,720 --> 00:07:32,920 Speaker 1: they might incur if they are proven to be the 136 00:07:33,000 --> 00:07:35,800 Speaker 1: cause of these fires, it could well cause a bankruptcy 137 00:07:35,880 --> 00:07:37,880 Speaker 1: and that would have a knock on impact for the 138 00:07:37,960 --> 00:07:40,840 Speaker 1: end consumer. You know, we talk about pgn E being 139 00:07:40,880 --> 00:07:43,800 Speaker 1: being a victim of climate change, but really it will 140 00:07:43,840 --> 00:07:46,520 Speaker 1: be passed onto the rate pair, the electricity pair that 141 00:07:46,520 --> 00:07:48,920 Speaker 1: will have a few huge knock on impact on the 142 00:07:48,960 --> 00:07:51,400 Speaker 1: cost of power for residents, the cost of power for 143 00:07:51,520 --> 00:07:55,040 Speaker 1: industries in California, which might well impact the the the 144 00:07:55,200 --> 00:07:58,280 Speaker 1: entire face of industry in California. If power becomes too expensive, 145 00:07:58,640 --> 00:08:02,680 Speaker 1: then that might cause a corporations to move elsewhere. Yeah, 146 00:08:02,720 --> 00:08:06,920 Speaker 1: in the US, we have a very centralized electricity system 147 00:08:07,200 --> 00:08:10,720 Speaker 1: and UM electricity empower utilities are actually really it's moving 148 00:08:10,760 --> 00:08:13,160 Speaker 1: from fossil fuels to electricity empower utility sort of being 149 00:08:13,200 --> 00:08:16,200 Speaker 1: on the front line of climate change here, and investors 150 00:08:16,240 --> 00:08:19,760 Speaker 1: concerns about what kind of fuel they're using, and UM 151 00:08:19,840 --> 00:08:23,560 Speaker 1: using natural gas and fossil fuels increasingly people are worried 152 00:08:23,560 --> 00:08:27,640 Speaker 1: about that. So, but to decentralize the climate system and 153 00:08:27,680 --> 00:08:30,320 Speaker 1: to have more wind and solar, those windy and solar 154 00:08:30,320 --> 00:08:32,960 Speaker 1: places are like different places in the in the country, 155 00:08:32,960 --> 00:08:35,160 Speaker 1: so you have to rebuild the whole electric grid and 156 00:08:35,160 --> 00:08:37,440 Speaker 1: that people say that could take like thirty years. So 157 00:08:37,600 --> 00:08:39,360 Speaker 1: we have a long road ahead of us. So are 158 00:08:39,400 --> 00:08:42,280 Speaker 1: people trying to actually fund that for thirty years? Are 159 00:08:42,320 --> 00:08:46,080 Speaker 1: people that forward looking, our investors that forward looking, or 160 00:08:46,280 --> 00:08:49,079 Speaker 1: or do things tend to be more shortsighted? For sure? 161 00:08:49,200 --> 00:08:51,000 Speaker 1: Some investors have told me that they wish the government 162 00:08:51,040 --> 00:08:53,120 Speaker 1: would fund the upgrades to the electrical grid, and they'll 163 00:08:53,120 --> 00:08:54,880 Speaker 1: invest in the wind and the solar projects because they 164 00:08:54,920 --> 00:08:56,880 Speaker 1: know how to do that. It's really hard to do that, 165 00:08:56,920 --> 00:09:00,280 Speaker 1: but there's increasingly transmission lines and electricity trading so and 166 00:09:00,280 --> 00:09:02,160 Speaker 1: stuff like that. But the government really controls a lot 167 00:09:02,160 --> 00:09:04,920 Speaker 1: of the infrastructure there. So that is definitely a project 168 00:09:04,960 --> 00:09:07,760 Speaker 1: that should happen. And is this likely to be a 169 00:09:07,800 --> 00:09:10,920 Speaker 1: federal initiative should it come to pass, or is it 170 00:09:10,960 --> 00:09:16,600 Speaker 1: going to be a patchwork of individual state programs. I'd 171 00:09:16,640 --> 00:09:19,079 Speaker 1: say as long as the federal government isn't that interested 172 00:09:19,120 --> 00:09:22,000 Speaker 1: in climate change, and then it'll probably be a patchwork 173 00:09:22,000 --> 00:09:24,679 Speaker 1: of states. What we see now is as a complete 174 00:09:24,679 --> 00:09:28,080 Speaker 1: fragmentation in different states taking different stances on climate change 175 00:09:28,080 --> 00:09:30,440 Speaker 1: and what their role should be. California happens to have 176 00:09:30,440 --> 00:09:33,000 Speaker 1: a very very very strong stance on climate change with 177 00:09:33,040 --> 00:09:36,480 Speaker 1: a very very very high target for the issue. Here 178 00:09:36,559 --> 00:09:39,280 Speaker 1: is that PG and E is a very key player 179 00:09:39,360 --> 00:09:41,440 Speaker 1: in reaching those targets. So if they were to be 180 00:09:41,480 --> 00:09:45,640 Speaker 1: wiped out by bankruptcy proceedings following this fire, rather ironically, 181 00:09:45,880 --> 00:09:47,679 Speaker 1: they're actually going to be needed to help meet these 182 00:09:47,679 --> 00:09:50,360 Speaker 1: targets in the first place, and the stack is actually 183 00:09:50,440 --> 00:09:52,679 Speaker 1: up today because investors are betting that California will back 184 00:09:52,720 --> 00:10:11,240 Speaker 1: them because they need them. All Right, Well, let's move 185 00:10:11,320 --> 00:10:15,640 Speaker 1: on to hurricanes and other major storms like typhoons. We've 186 00:10:15,640 --> 00:10:18,559 Speaker 1: seen plenty of that. This year, we had the second 187 00:10:18,600 --> 00:10:20,080 Speaker 1: year in a row at least in the US with 188 00:10:20,160 --> 00:10:23,400 Speaker 1: multiple storms that have caused wide scale destruction. It might 189 00:10:23,440 --> 00:10:27,120 Speaker 1: even be more than two years. Uh. Hurricanes getting more 190 00:10:27,200 --> 00:10:31,720 Speaker 1: frequent and stronger. So when you look at hurricanes, it's 191 00:10:31,720 --> 00:10:34,000 Speaker 1: not so much the frequency the matters. It's the strength 192 00:10:34,040 --> 00:10:36,600 Speaker 1: that matters, because that's where the damage comes from, and 193 00:10:36,640 --> 00:10:39,800 Speaker 1: that's ultimately where the cost is incurred. And they're getting stronger. 194 00:10:40,080 --> 00:10:42,120 Speaker 1: If you look at the damage that's that's been incurred 195 00:10:42,120 --> 00:10:45,600 Speaker 1: in the US since the nineties, we've seen that actually, 196 00:10:45,600 --> 00:10:48,960 Speaker 1: what thirty of total damage costs from hurricanes happened in 197 00:10:49,400 --> 00:10:53,440 Speaker 1: seventeen alone from three hurricanes, Hurricane Harvey, Maria, and Erma. 198 00:10:53,800 --> 00:10:57,360 Speaker 1: So they're getting more powerful. That's because sea levels, sorry, 199 00:10:57,760 --> 00:11:00,560 Speaker 1: sea levels are rising, but also the temperature of waters 200 00:11:00,760 --> 00:11:03,959 Speaker 1: is increasing, which makes them more intense. When they're more powerful, 201 00:11:04,040 --> 00:11:07,160 Speaker 1: we get category five hurricanes for example, making landfall. That's 202 00:11:07,160 --> 00:11:09,880 Speaker 1: what the damage happens. Last year, there are a lot 203 00:11:09,920 --> 00:11:13,040 Speaker 1: of billion dollar storms, so the damage is definitely increasing 204 00:11:13,080 --> 00:11:16,480 Speaker 1: from these hurricanes when they make landfall and then and 205 00:11:16,520 --> 00:11:20,680 Speaker 1: I have both lift overseas in Asia, which is also uh, 206 00:11:20,720 --> 00:11:25,360 Speaker 1: you know, suffering from typhoons that we read about. Can 207 00:11:25,400 --> 00:11:27,719 Speaker 1: you tell us how how these kinds of storms are 208 00:11:27,760 --> 00:11:30,200 Speaker 1: wreaking havoc in Asia as well or other places around 209 00:11:30,200 --> 00:11:32,640 Speaker 1: the world. Yeah, So the typhoon that we saw in 210 00:11:32,920 --> 00:11:35,880 Speaker 1: Asia this year was the most powerful on record, I believe, 211 00:11:36,520 --> 00:11:38,800 Speaker 1: and the fact that it happened to hit some major 212 00:11:38,840 --> 00:11:41,439 Speaker 1: cities and we're seeing huge over not overpopulation, but we're 213 00:11:41,440 --> 00:11:45,079 Speaker 1: seeing huge population rises in coastal areas around Asia, Hong 214 00:11:45,120 --> 00:11:48,200 Speaker 1: Kong for example. That the damage is tangible and you 215 00:11:48,240 --> 00:11:50,520 Speaker 1: can really see it in the cities there. So cities 216 00:11:50,559 --> 00:11:52,280 Speaker 1: happened to make two options. The first one is to 217 00:11:52,360 --> 00:11:57,479 Speaker 1: either make themselves more resilient with flooding defenses and storm defenses, 218 00:11:57,880 --> 00:12:00,240 Speaker 1: or it's a case of you know, essentially giving up 219 00:12:00,240 --> 00:12:02,640 Speaker 1: and moving inland. And that hasn't happened yet, but that's 220 00:12:02,679 --> 00:12:05,200 Speaker 1: something that you know, the frequencies, if the frequency of 221 00:12:05,400 --> 00:12:08,640 Speaker 1: large scale and strong storms happens to go up, then 222 00:12:08,640 --> 00:12:10,840 Speaker 1: that might be the only option in the future. That 223 00:12:10,960 --> 00:12:14,720 Speaker 1: is already happening in New Orleans in the US. And 224 00:12:15,040 --> 00:12:18,319 Speaker 1: home prices in the US have actually fallen around the 225 00:12:18,440 --> 00:12:21,840 Speaker 1: hurricanes and wildfires and um, I think Bloomberg found that 226 00:12:22,360 --> 00:12:25,920 Speaker 1: homes in areas exposed to fires and hurricanes were worth 227 00:12:26,000 --> 00:12:28,440 Speaker 1: less last year on average than a decade earlier. So 228 00:12:28,760 --> 00:12:31,480 Speaker 1: you are starting to see this risk get incorporated in that. 229 00:12:31,600 --> 00:12:34,000 Speaker 1: And you know, people buying flood insurance are being able 230 00:12:34,000 --> 00:12:37,080 Speaker 1: to obtain flood insurance exactly. And even in Puerto Rico 231 00:12:37,160 --> 00:12:40,320 Speaker 1: we saw a fifteen percent reduction house prices following Hurricane 232 00:12:40,320 --> 00:12:42,760 Speaker 1: Maria last year in the most affected areas that was 233 00:12:42,800 --> 00:12:50,240 Speaker 1: over is economics treated as something distinct from climate change? 234 00:12:50,920 --> 00:12:55,040 Speaker 1: And do you see this year or perhaps the past 235 00:12:55,120 --> 00:13:00,599 Speaker 1: two years, as being a watershed in how people view economics. 236 00:13:00,600 --> 00:13:03,960 Speaker 1: In other words, it's not just how much do I 237 00:13:04,040 --> 00:13:08,200 Speaker 1: get and am I working? It's all of these things 238 00:13:08,240 --> 00:13:14,000 Speaker 1: that can contribute to the economic well being of one's country. Yeah, 239 00:13:14,000 --> 00:13:17,000 Speaker 1: I'd say that wildfires, droughts, storms, and floods are sort 240 00:13:17,000 --> 00:13:18,960 Speaker 1: of the most tangible impacts on climate change that we 241 00:13:19,000 --> 00:13:22,240 Speaker 1: see today and seeing them reak such havoc um is 242 00:13:22,280 --> 00:13:26,240 Speaker 1: sort of elevating the issue for people into the present day. Um. 243 00:13:26,280 --> 00:13:28,319 Speaker 1: It seemed like a thing that was really far off, 244 00:13:28,400 --> 00:13:30,200 Speaker 1: but the u N just a few weeks ago came 245 00:13:30,200 --> 00:13:32,360 Speaker 1: out with this report that said, we're really going to 246 00:13:32,400 --> 00:13:34,160 Speaker 1: start to see effects of one point five degrees of 247 00:13:34,160 --> 00:13:36,880 Speaker 1: global warming by and that's something a lot of people 248 00:13:36,880 --> 00:13:39,920 Speaker 1: who are here today will still be around to see. UM. 249 00:13:39,960 --> 00:13:42,520 Speaker 1: So the investors that I talked to are usually long 250 00:13:42,600 --> 00:13:46,480 Speaker 1: term investors. Maybe they'll hold stocks for thirty years, they 251 00:13:46,480 --> 00:13:47,880 Speaker 1: want to hold them for a really long time. So 252 00:13:47,960 --> 00:13:51,480 Speaker 1: for them is actually just around the corner. And if 253 00:13:51,480 --> 00:13:53,560 Speaker 1: they're going to hold forever and not sell, they really 254 00:13:53,559 --> 00:13:57,120 Speaker 1: want to make sure that their companies are incorporating this 255 00:13:57,280 --> 00:14:00,199 Speaker 1: risk because it really changes the basis of operations. And 256 00:14:00,559 --> 00:14:02,160 Speaker 1: it's not even just the risk of the storms and 257 00:14:02,200 --> 00:14:04,920 Speaker 1: the floods, but the risk that the governments will start 258 00:14:04,960 --> 00:14:07,720 Speaker 1: to get involved and change all the structures and costs 259 00:14:07,720 --> 00:14:10,040 Speaker 1: that people are used to and change their business model 260 00:14:10,120 --> 00:14:12,600 Speaker 1: overnight to sort of combat this effect because it's really 261 00:14:12,600 --> 00:14:15,760 Speaker 1: going to affect human life. And this is called the 262 00:14:15,800 --> 00:14:20,120 Speaker 1: tragedy of the horizons, which essentially this concept that the cycles, 263 00:14:20,160 --> 00:14:22,640 Speaker 1: economic cycles and what we look for in in the 264 00:14:22,640 --> 00:14:25,440 Speaker 1: finance community happens on a much shorter scale than the 265 00:14:25,840 --> 00:14:28,240 Speaker 1: true impacts of things like climate change. I think you're 266 00:14:28,240 --> 00:14:30,680 Speaker 1: absolutely right in that we're starting to see a shift 267 00:14:30,720 --> 00:14:33,320 Speaker 1: away from that mentality. We're starting to see you know, 268 00:14:33,400 --> 00:14:38,160 Speaker 1: dots connecting between various climate incidences and you know, various 269 00:14:38,560 --> 00:14:42,360 Speaker 1: catastrophes and rising costs of of things like living living 270 00:14:42,400 --> 00:14:44,200 Speaker 1: near the coast. And I think people are starting to 271 00:14:44,240 --> 00:14:46,200 Speaker 1: put the dots together on these things. But what we 272 00:14:46,240 --> 00:14:49,880 Speaker 1: really need more is is kind of awareness and education 273 00:14:49,920 --> 00:14:51,720 Speaker 1: in the market to show that there are short term 274 00:14:51,720 --> 00:14:54,240 Speaker 1: implications as well as long term implications for things like 275 00:14:54,240 --> 00:14:57,120 Speaker 1: climate change. And that's where initiatives like the Task Force 276 00:14:57,120 --> 00:15:01,840 Speaker 1: and CLIMB related financial Disclosures of the TCFD are extremely useful. 277 00:15:02,240 --> 00:15:05,880 Speaker 1: They provide a framework for companies to disclose the risks 278 00:15:05,920 --> 00:15:09,080 Speaker 1: that they envisioned for that corporation, the long term and 279 00:15:09,160 --> 00:15:12,440 Speaker 1: the short term operational risks of their businesses, and what 280 00:15:12,480 --> 00:15:15,720 Speaker 1: the financial implications of that might be. And that's that's 281 00:15:15,760 --> 00:15:18,840 Speaker 1: crucial for investors. So there is a little bit of 282 00:15:18,840 --> 00:15:20,880 Speaker 1: a silver lining and all this doom and gloom that 283 00:15:20,880 --> 00:15:24,200 Speaker 1: we've been talking about today. Can you talk a little 284 00:15:24,200 --> 00:15:28,120 Speaker 1: bit more about some of the initiatives or or um 285 00:15:28,240 --> 00:15:33,080 Speaker 1: ways that investors can make a difference or or or 286 00:15:33,200 --> 00:15:35,920 Speaker 1: business can make a difference in in dealing with the 287 00:15:35,920 --> 00:15:38,560 Speaker 1: effects of climate change with respect to hurricanes, or maybe 288 00:15:38,560 --> 00:15:42,280 Speaker 1: even some other issues like agriculture or other things that 289 00:15:42,320 --> 00:15:46,040 Speaker 1: we haven't discussed. Yeah, I mean the TCFD which Dan 290 00:15:46,040 --> 00:15:47,960 Speaker 1: brought up. They talk about the rest of climate change, 291 00:15:47,960 --> 00:15:49,360 Speaker 1: but they also want businesses to spell out what their 292 00:15:49,400 --> 00:15:52,080 Speaker 1: opportunities are in climate change, right, because when there's change, 293 00:15:52,120 --> 00:15:55,600 Speaker 1: there's opportunity on both sides. So we definitely need some 294 00:15:55,640 --> 00:15:58,560 Speaker 1: sea walls probably you know, like we're abandoning areas of 295 00:15:58,560 --> 00:16:01,120 Speaker 1: New Orleans or something. But you know, the Netherlands has 296 00:16:01,280 --> 00:16:03,280 Speaker 1: been under sea level for quite a long time, so 297 00:16:03,680 --> 00:16:05,920 Speaker 1: that's an area where some people are really looking for investment. 298 00:16:06,440 --> 00:16:08,240 Speaker 1: How do you make money off of a sea wall? 299 00:16:08,320 --> 00:16:09,920 Speaker 1: I mean, isn't that kind of a more of a 300 00:16:10,000 --> 00:16:15,080 Speaker 1: government project? But somebody has to supply the concrete. So yeah, 301 00:16:15,080 --> 00:16:17,760 Speaker 1: I hear a lot of investors talking about concrete. That's 302 00:16:17,760 --> 00:16:20,040 Speaker 1: a very interesting area. And also there's some swipes of 303 00:16:20,080 --> 00:16:22,480 Speaker 1: cement and concrete that can be used to store carbon 304 00:16:22,920 --> 00:16:25,600 Speaker 1: and become a carbon sink that they actually pull carbon 305 00:16:25,600 --> 00:16:28,640 Speaker 1: out of the atmosphere to create the cement. So people 306 00:16:28,680 --> 00:16:30,880 Speaker 1: are trying to make even that really good. UM. There's 307 00:16:30,880 --> 00:16:34,200 Speaker 1: a lot of stuff in electric vehicles, UM, hydrogen fuel 308 00:16:34,240 --> 00:16:38,280 Speaker 1: cell vehicles, the automakers are really probably the next area 309 00:16:38,360 --> 00:16:43,360 Speaker 1: that people are looking at after UM energy production. And 310 00:16:43,400 --> 00:16:46,680 Speaker 1: then there's also in the drought areas, desalination plants so 311 00:16:46,720 --> 00:16:49,480 Speaker 1: that people can make more water and have water for 312 00:16:49,520 --> 00:16:53,120 Speaker 1: agriculture and all these areas where there are wre strouts, yeah, 313 00:16:53,160 --> 00:16:55,880 Speaker 1: and and definitely sustainable agriculture. People are looking at things 314 00:16:55,880 --> 00:16:59,720 Speaker 1: that do function to cerbant carbon sinks, like the oceans 315 00:16:59,760 --> 00:17:04,200 Speaker 1: and UM coastal wetlands and forests and trying to see 316 00:17:04,240 --> 00:17:06,679 Speaker 1: if they can invest more in those areas and make 317 00:17:06,760 --> 00:17:09,880 Speaker 1: them tangible. But that's something that really hasn't been done 318 00:17:09,920 --> 00:17:14,000 Speaker 1: that much before. And what we're seeing in the financial 319 00:17:14,040 --> 00:17:16,400 Speaker 1: community of brand new products and innovations that have been 320 00:17:16,840 --> 00:17:20,199 Speaker 1: really interesting in raising awareness of both the impacts and 321 00:17:20,240 --> 00:17:23,360 Speaker 1: the risks associated with things like climate change. Take for example, 322 00:17:23,560 --> 00:17:26,280 Speaker 1: a brand new concept you know it only earlier, really 323 00:17:26,280 --> 00:17:29,040 Speaker 1: grew in the last couple of years or so green bonds. 324 00:17:29,440 --> 00:17:33,080 Speaker 1: Green bonds are essentially normal corporate bonds, but the the 325 00:17:33,160 --> 00:17:37,160 Speaker 1: issuer has committed to disclosing around the environmental impacts of 326 00:17:37,160 --> 00:17:39,879 Speaker 1: of the proceeds that have been raised by that bond, 327 00:17:40,240 --> 00:17:43,920 Speaker 1: and green bones have grown phenomenally. We've seen upwards of 328 00:17:44,280 --> 00:17:46,520 Speaker 1: five billion dollars worth of green bonds issued in the 329 00:17:46,600 --> 00:17:49,920 Speaker 1: last three years alone, and those can be financing anything 330 00:17:49,960 --> 00:17:54,680 Speaker 1: from renewable energy to sustainable agriculture to biodiversity. So we're 331 00:17:54,680 --> 00:17:57,359 Speaker 1: seeing a real uptick in financial instruments that are helping 332 00:17:57,400 --> 00:18:00,080 Speaker 1: to convey the message and the importance of of of 333 00:18:00,119 --> 00:18:03,600 Speaker 1: climate change and environmental degradation, but also showing you the 334 00:18:03,880 --> 00:18:08,480 Speaker 1: benefits of doing so. All right, last question, Dan and Emily, 335 00:18:09,160 --> 00:18:12,879 Speaker 1: China or the United States? Which one is going to 336 00:18:13,000 --> 00:18:17,920 Speaker 1: be bigger in the world of green investment, sustainable finance, 337 00:18:17,960 --> 00:18:20,080 Speaker 1: whatever you want to call it. Which one is going 338 00:18:20,119 --> 00:18:23,000 Speaker 1: to be bigger, say twenty years from now. I know, 339 00:18:23,080 --> 00:18:26,159 Speaker 1: when I was an editor for Bloomberg in China, I 340 00:18:26,200 --> 00:18:28,840 Speaker 1: was starting to hear a lot about green bonds and 341 00:18:28,880 --> 00:18:30,560 Speaker 1: that sort of thing. And China likes to make a 342 00:18:30,560 --> 00:18:33,480 Speaker 1: lot of noise about how it's uh, you know, going 343 00:18:33,520 --> 00:18:36,520 Speaker 1: to be big on these kinds of issues. What's your 344 00:18:36,560 --> 00:18:39,879 Speaker 1: take on it. Well, I think China is going to 345 00:18:39,920 --> 00:18:42,280 Speaker 1: be the market leader in this space, but that comes 346 00:18:42,280 --> 00:18:44,800 Speaker 1: at a caveat. So when we look at the future, 347 00:18:44,880 --> 00:18:48,120 Speaker 1: we look at say to fifty, we expect around nine 348 00:18:48,119 --> 00:18:51,119 Speaker 1: point three trillion dollars worth of investments into renewable energy 349 00:18:51,160 --> 00:18:54,960 Speaker 1: new renewable energy build globally. Five point five trillion of 350 00:18:55,000 --> 00:18:57,200 Speaker 1: that will be in in the Asia region and the 351 00:18:57,240 --> 00:18:59,480 Speaker 1: majority of that will be in China. So in terms 352 00:18:59,520 --> 00:19:03,600 Speaker 1: of absolute numbers, China will certain lead, but the caveat 353 00:19:03,600 --> 00:19:05,240 Speaker 1: being when you look at things like green bonds and 354 00:19:05,240 --> 00:19:07,959 Speaker 1: green finance, China's view of what green is is very 355 00:19:07,960 --> 00:19:10,000 Speaker 1: different to the rest of the world. When we look 356 00:19:10,040 --> 00:19:13,040 Speaker 1: at green bonds specifically, China believe is that clean coal 357 00:19:13,880 --> 00:19:17,600 Speaker 1: is actually a category of financing that that is sustainable 358 00:19:17,640 --> 00:19:20,320 Speaker 1: and that is green that doesn't fly anywhere else. So 359 00:19:20,480 --> 00:19:22,440 Speaker 1: they will be the market leader, but they have a 360 00:19:22,440 --> 00:19:25,800 Speaker 1: slightly different definition of what green is. Yeah, and a 361 00:19:25,800 --> 00:19:27,320 Speaker 1: lot of the investors I talked to you, they say 362 00:19:27,400 --> 00:19:30,440 Speaker 1: China is already winning a little bit. They've definitely invested 363 00:19:31,320 --> 00:19:34,000 Speaker 1: a lot the past few years. Um just put billions 364 00:19:34,040 --> 00:19:37,840 Speaker 1: into green band issuance into building solar um You know 365 00:19:37,880 --> 00:19:39,600 Speaker 1: so much that the US did the tariffs on their 366 00:19:39,640 --> 00:19:42,679 Speaker 1: solar panels this year. They're really the capital for a 367 00:19:42,720 --> 00:19:46,439 Speaker 1: lot of this renewable energy infrastructure and technology coming out 368 00:19:46,440 --> 00:19:48,520 Speaker 1: of there, and the US like hasn't really gotten its 369 00:19:48,760 --> 00:19:50,280 Speaker 1: act together as a government to know that's a lot 370 00:19:50,320 --> 00:19:52,480 Speaker 1: of investors are worried. It's kind of a missed opportunity here. 371 00:19:53,119 --> 00:19:55,439 Speaker 1: All right, Well let's leave it there. Dan Shurry of 372 00:19:55,440 --> 00:19:58,880 Speaker 1: Bloomberg New Energy Finance and Emily Chason of Bloomberg News 373 00:19:58,880 --> 00:20:01,639 Speaker 1: and the Good Business new Letter at Bloomberg. Thanks so 374 00:20:01,720 --> 00:20:03,720 Speaker 1: much for taking the time to be with us today. 375 00:20:04,440 --> 00:20:07,880 Speaker 1: Thanks for having us. Thank you. Benchmark will be back 376 00:20:07,920 --> 00:20:09,879 Speaker 1: next week. Until then, you can find us on the 377 00:20:09,920 --> 00:20:13,239 Speaker 1: Bloomberg Terminal, Bloomberg dot Com, or Bloomberg app, as well 378 00:20:13,280 --> 00:20:17,639 Speaker 1: as podcast destinations such as Apple Podcasts, Spotify or wherever 379 00:20:17,680 --> 00:20:19,800 Speaker 1: you listen. We'd love it if you took the time 380 00:20:19,840 --> 00:20:22,400 Speaker 1: to rate and review the show so more listeners can 381 00:20:22,400 --> 00:20:25,439 Speaker 1: find us. And you can find us on Twitter. Follow 382 00:20:25,480 --> 00:20:29,800 Speaker 1: me at Scott Landman. Dan Moss, You're at Moss on 383 00:20:30,000 --> 00:20:36,080 Speaker 1: the School Pico. Dan Shurry, you are at Daniel S 384 00:20:36,160 --> 00:20:40,480 Speaker 1: Page You are You and Emily you are at e 385 00:20:40,880 --> 00:20:44,600 Speaker 1: chasen ch a s A. M all Right. Benchmark is 386 00:20:44,640 --> 00:20:47,639 Speaker 1: produced by Toper Foreheads. Francesca Levy is the heat of 387 00:20:47,640 --> 00:20:50,800 Speaker 1: Bloomberg Podcasts. Thanks for listening and wish all of our 388 00:20:50,840 --> 00:20:53,640 Speaker 1: American listeners are happy Thanksgiving. See you next time.