Saturday, 30 July, 2011

Atlantic Friends Gathering May 2011 -- Keith Helmuth

See Windhorse Farm website - more pictures
Over 60 Friends from the Atlantic region of Canada came together for their annual gathering at Windhorse Farm near Bridgewater Nova Scotia. Both the setting and the gathering theme focused our minds and spirits on the ever-present reality of the human-Earth relationship and the health of our social and economic relationship within this larger context.

Windhorse Farm combines a sustainably managed forestry operation with permaculture
gardening and natural building design projects. It is, in addition a Buddhist retreat centre. Our weekend theme was “ sustainability” with particular attention to food.

Geoff Tansey, a Friend from the UK and co-editor and primary author of the award winning book, QIAP's The Future Control of Food, provided a powerful view of what is happening with the world food situation. He outlined three potential futures which are yet to be determined: collapse and human catastrophe; corporate control aiming at the survival of the wealthy and write off of the poor; the development of a science led, community based, agro-ecological food system.

The five-acre garden of Windhorse Farm, which is a good example of what the third outcome looks like, was a five-minute walk from our meeting place, and we had an instructive tour. Likewise, our host provided a walking tour and a seminar on forest ecology and the woodlot management practices of the Farm. Additional seminars on building with material native to the environment and on how to grown shitake mushrooms were on the agenda. With time for small group discernment, worship sharing, and a generous helping of music-making and story-telling.

Tansey's co-author Tasmin Rajotte  in Jan 2011 attended the 13th Biennial Conference for the International Association for the Study of the Commons (IASC) in Hyderabad, India. See its Commons Digest online. Key themes of the conference were climate change; forests; the impacts of external global forces such as the increasing privatization of land and resources; better recognition of the commons; and new business models for financing work. She held a pre-conference workshop on “Changing perspectives within policy processes” with John Powell of the Countryside and Community Research Institute at the University of Gloucester (UK): dealing with top down policy imposition, violent conflict over forests in Kenya; corrupt deals in Indonesian coastal communities and in the Forest Rights Act of India. 

Friday, 29 July, 2011

Solving the food crisis -- Josette Sheeran

 
In this 20 minute TED video, Josette Sheeran, the head of the UN's World Food Program, explains why in a world with enough food for everyone, it is used as a weapon of war; and a billion people (1 out of 7) are starving. She proposes a total transformation of food aid -- into food sovereignty.

Nutrition is crucial in the first 1000 days of a child's life. It will never recover from the neural and physical damage due to lack of food. And breastfeeding (by properly fed mothers) could save a baby's  life every 22 seconds.

Sheeran talks about WFP's programs, shifting to improved local food supply rather than imported stocks. Food for Humanity: better nutrition can transform life chances and national earning. School feeding (less than 25 cents day) attracts girls, lowers birthrates and is the "poor man's safety net" -- with local foods. Warehouses for Hope are locally-provided storehouses, assuring food sovereignty and school meals: 500 in Cameroon alone. Digital Food solves the problem of famine amid plenty, by giving penniless people vouchers to buy local food. Purchasing for Progress creates a guaranteed market for small farmers and peasant women; one example, which she urges the G20 to adopt, is Brazil's Zero Hunger Program costing about 5% of GDP. The long term antipoverty benefits far exceed the costs. She hopes there we can soon say, "There was a time when 1/3 of the world's children grew up with brains and bodies stunted. No more. That's history."
***
See also her biography; Wikipedia on the World Food Program; UN ReliefWeb humanitarian news and needs, e.g. the current Horn of Africa famine; World Bank's Food Crisis Open Forum (Apr 2011) videos and transcripts; independent NGOs' IPC Food Sovereignty proposals. An analysis in plain language: ETCgroup, Who Will Feed Us? Questions for the Food and Climate Crises (free download, 2009) raises questions about the failure of MDGs, financial speculators, corperate agriculture and distribution, the impact of agrofuels and climate change, and technofixes proposed by Gates, Rockefeller, and Monsanto.

Youth and educational resources: download the videogame Food Force; WFP educational resources and UK youth We Feedback; Oxfam International Youth Partnership's CHANGE initiative; and Taking IT Global networks. See also Minneapolis thinktank IATP (Institute for Agriculture and Trade Policy); Food First factsheets and newsletters on the US and international food sovereignty movements; Food Secure Canada; for British sources, UKabc.

Thursday, 28 July, 2011

The steady-state economy -- Herman Daly

"The economy is a wholly owned subsidiary of the environment, not the reverse." For 30 years eco-economist Herman Daly has been asking how we can avoid unlimited "growth" with all its environmental impacts on a limited earth. How can we produce less stuff, and have a better quality of life? He founded CASSE: Center for the Advancement of a Steady State Economy with other eco-economists such as David Orr, Robert Costanza, Josh Farley, Lisa Krall, and Peter Victor. His books include Steady-State Economics, For the Common Good (with theologian John Cobb), Valuing the Earth, Beyond Growth, Ecological Economics (with Josh Farley), Ecological Economics and Sustainable Development.  Here are some key ideas from the CASSE website:
See also CASSE's impressive list of advisers, board and international staff; its blog newsletter; Daly's biography and publications. He has taught economics in the US and Brazil, founded the International Society for Ecological Economics (ISEE), now a discipline in its own right -- an alternative to the "market fundamentalism" of the Chicago School, and the "growth at any cost" of neoliberalism, which he calls the spreading of Western over-consumption worldwide. In 1996 he won the Right Livelihood Award.

Wednesday, 27 July, 2011

The World Future Council -- Jakob Von Uexkull

Visionary activist Jakob von Uexkull cofounded the World Future Council in 2006, with a global membership  of 100 wise elders, youth leaders, environmental activists, "servant leaders" from business and government advisers. Its activities include climate action, renewable energy and regenerative Cities, future justice, sustainable ecosystems, sustainable economies and Future Finance, Peace and Disarmament. Founder of the prestigious Right Livelihood Award  (the “alternative Nobel Prize”), he has spent the last twenty-five years building the European ecojustice movement. In this video, recorded at the June 20111 Zermatt Summit, he calls for world-scale transformation and citizen action.

Von Uexkull sold his million-dollar postage stamp collection to endow the Right Livelihood Award to "recognize the efforts of those who are tackling [the great challenges facing humanity] directly, coming up with practical answers to such challenges as the pollution of our air, soil, and water, the danger of nuclear war, the abuse of basic human rights, the destitution and misery of the poor, and the over-consumption and spiritual poverty of the wealthy."

The WFC's Intergenerational Justice Initiative (2010) insists on the welfare of future generations and green jobs as a guiding principle for government and business:

...in the long term, without natural resources there will be no wealth production, without education for innovation there will be no technological progress, without tackling unemployment there will be no sound public budgets, without a decent distribution of wealth there will be inequity in participation and social tension, without a flourishing real economy there will be more and more speculative financial bubbles.

The majority of European citizens have understood this: 71% agreed that reforms which benefit future generations should be pursued even if it means sacrifices for the present generation (Eurobarometer, Sept 2010). Some countries have understood this and created systemic future research Commissions (Finland, Netherlands) or even a Commissioner or Ombudsperson for Future Generations (Hungary, Israel). The EU has a chance to join these pioneers and develop its global leadership position in
sustainability concerns, especially in the run up to the Rio+20 Earth Summit in 2012.


Von Uexkull is also the cofounder of TOES The Other Economic Summit (1984) and founder of The Estonian Renaissance Award (1993). He is a former trustee of the New Economics Foundation (London), patron of Friends of the Earth International, and a member of the Global Commission to Fund the United Nations. He has served on the Board of Greenpeace, Germany. As a Green MEP and Minister of the European Parliament (1984-89), he served on the Political Affairs Committee and the Science and Technology Committee. He is currently on the Council of Governance of Transparency International. See his Wikipedia biography.

Tuesday, 26 July, 2011

Tracking transition towns -- by Ruah Swennerfelt

This is an excerpt from about in Ruah's new blog Transitionvision. Her latest post has reports from Rob Hopkins and others across the world at the Transition conference in the UK. See also the discussion site of her local group Transition Vermont and resources at Interfaith Power and Light.  For a book list see Visions of the future recommended by Friends.

I’m on a search for how our civilization will survive the current “perfect storm” of peak oil, climate disruption, and economic instability. We live in a time where our world economic system requires perpetual growth to survive. This is not sustainable since there is a limited supply of Earth’s resources available. My search will take me to Israel, the Palestinian Territories, Europe, Scandanavia, and North America. I want to help articulate the world vision that exists as a result of the wonderful efforts of Transition Town Initiatives, Sustainable Cities, and other municipal “green initiatives”. Like a quilt, each piece is unique and beautiful on its own, but the finished quilt is something greater than the parts. I hope that my research will reflect this whole as a blueprint for our necessary transition. I hope that you who follow my blog, will comment, suggest, argue, and support what I write. I’m depending on that interaction to enrich my research and the results of it.

How will the human race live as we enter the post-carbon world? What if people in towns or section of cities got together regularly for local foods potlucks, discussions about sharing resources and building resilience, listening to speakers and watching films, making music, and having fun? What if the place we each call home had really prepared for the end of cheap, abundant fossil fuels? What might that look like? Can one imagine bringing people together who are from different political viewpoints, different incomes, and different educational backgrounds? How can the obstacles to that vision be overcome? 

These are the goals of the Transition Town, Sustainable Cities, and other “green” movements. There are many fine grassroots movements around the globe that are individually working on community efforts to prepare for the impacts of climate change and peak oil. It will be a difficult transition—with fewer resources to help that happen. I have learned from previous journeys about the difficulties of improving the lives of people in developing countries and the hopes and fears of people in our own country.

Wednesday, 20 July, 2011

Oyster extinctions worldwide

Oyster bed, SC: courtesy Doug DuCap Food and Travel
Oysters grow best where fresh and salt water mix. Over centuries their shells form reefs, make key fish habitat, and protect shorelines against erosion. Their disappearance is an unmistakable sign of ecosystem stress.

85-90 percent of the world's oyster reefs have now been lost, in 144 bays and 44 ecoregions around the globe, according to an in-depth study by international scientists. (1)

People have forgotten how abundant oysters were," says lead author Dr Michael Beck. "In San Francisco in the 19th century, they fed workers building the transcontinental railroad. There were so many of them that the writer Jack London was both an oyster pirate and an oyster policeman. But today, there's not a single wild oyster bed in San Francisco Bay."

Chesapeake oysters once filtered the entire bay in a day, and gave work to 9000 skipjack fishermen. Over the last century, 99% of its wild oysters have disappeared. (2)

Now a murky green, the English Channel was kept crystal clear -- in Julius Caesar's time -- by masses of oysters. Up to a century ago they were a staple food of the British working class, giving jobs to 120,000 catchers. Oysters are now "functionally extinct" with fewer than 1 percent of former reefs surviving in the NW Europe coast (the Wadden Sea). Scientists blame over-harvesting, pollution, disease and non-native species.

Last summer, many important reefs in the Gulf of Mexico were destroyed by so-called "clean-up" workers' release of vast amounts of Mississippi freshwater to disperse BP oil spills. Changing salt concentrations killed off as much as half the living oysters. The Gulf was the last healthy survivor of the five great North American beds.

The Beck study urges worldwide efforts to save the oyster, wherever populations have fallen to 10% of their former abundance. Marine protected areas (MPA) have helped other species recover. But local fishing interests, under pressure from their financiers, block national and international action.
***
(1) Michael W. Beck of The Nature Conservancy and the University of California, Santa Cruz, et al., "Oyster Reefs at Risk and Recommendations for Conservation, Restoration, and Management" BioScience Feb 2011.

Tuesday, 19 July, 2011

Moral Ground -- a book review

Thanks to Lyn Adamson for suggesting this book, Moral Ground: Ethical Action for a Planet in Peril (Trinity University, 2010). 

It is a collection of reflections and eco-visions by over 100 thinkers. Since then, the Moral Ground website has added 14 bonus articles, as well as excerpts from the original book.

Like so many others in the ecojustice movement, the editors Kathleen Dean Moore and Michael P. Nelson feel that scientific data and government regulation are insufficient for the social and personal transformation that true earthcare requires. “What is missing is the moral imperative, the conviction that assuring our own comfort at terrible cost to the future is not worthy of us as moral beings.”

In a May 2011 survey, Climate Change in the American Mind, 82 out of 100 admitted they have made no changes in their lifestyle despite the gathering evidence of man-made pollution. Though climatologist James Hansen, biologist E.O Wilson,  preachers like Bill McKibben, University researchers and UN agencies report we are rapidly reaching climate chaos, with 300,000 human lives lost annually as a result of global change, species die-offs exceeding 100 times normal rates, planetary limits exceeded -- the majority of us do nothing.

How can we learn collective responsibility? How can we act out of concern for our grandchildren, and compassion for everything that lives, rather than individual greed, comfort, and convenience? That is the challenge of this book. MG's mission statement invites us to town hall meetings, study groups and actions, to start "a national conversation concerning our individual and collective responsibilities to the future."  
  • Yes, it’s wrong to leave behind a ransacked and dangerously unstable world.
  • Yes, our lives must be an expression of what we most deeply value.
  • Yes, we can and must make conscience-driven choices about how we spend our money and time.
  • Yes, we must provide a safe and thriving future for our children.
  • Yes, tending to the Earth and reversing climate destruction are a moral, spiritual and religious imperative.

Friday, 8 July, 2011

Do your investments destroy or care for the planet? -- by Robert Howell

Robert Howell of Auckland NZ is a Quaker eco-economist, a co-author of Right Relationship, Chair of CSRI (Council for Socially Responsible Investment), and board member of SANZ (Sustainable Aotearoa New Zealand). 

This article, first published in Friends Quarterly May 2011, is reprinted with permission. 
*** 
As an individual, a member of a pension fund, or as a member of an organisation that has investments, do your investments destroy or care for the Earth? Is the present financial system so corrupted that there can be no moral investments? What are the ethical and strategic criteria that you or your organisation should use to select investments? What is wrong with the large majority of socially responsible investments’? What investments are sustainable? Which bank should you use? How can you support reform? Why should you care? Do the investments of Quaker and Quaker related funds care for or destroy the planet, and do they when distributing their funds require recipients to care for the planet? This article addresses these questions, and the criteria that you should adopt if you want your investments to protect and nurture the Earth’s ecosystems.

Why you should care about investment?

There is considerable scientific evidence of ecological degradation. A wide range of academic and other evidence indicates that there are significant threats to human life, with a likely future of widespread loss of life and a hostile environment for those who survive. There is no consensus among scientists as to when this bleak future may arrive, or whether we have passed a point of no return. However, many leading climate scientists see a 2°C limit as unrealistic: 3-4°C is now a likely minimum. To stay within acceptable limits involves peaking in the very near future, with severe declines in emissions beyond then. Humankind faces a very difficult transition to a healthy and safe future, and any transition will involve major challenges to the financial sector.
Any move away from the goods and services that destroy the Earth, to those activities and products that save it, will require investment. If you care about the future choices for your children and their children and all children, then you will be concerned about whether investment destroys the ecosystems on which human life depends.
Why is strong sustainability important?

The terms ‘sustainability’ and ‘sustainable development’ are used in many ways. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) discusses a number of difficulties with the term ‛sustainable development’ Unfortunately the IPCC adopts a model of weak sustainability, where the three dimensions of economic, social and ecological are seen as independent but linked pillars of sustainable development. The UN principles for climate change, and the UN principles for responsible investment, are based on this model. Unfortunately these do not recognise the planet’s boundaries and limits.

The mainstream neoclassical economic reasoning is based on perpetual economic growth, and the continuing availability of resources for exploitation. This is actually impossible because the biosphere has finite limits, some of which have already been reached. By promising outcomes such as continuous growth and infinite substitutability of scarce resources, economists have influenced the political and economic processes of humanity in ways that are completely at odds to the idea of a resilient and sustainable relationship between humanity and the rest of nature.
The scientifically correct view of the place of human affairs in planetary systems leads inevitably to the need for an economy based on living within the planet’s boundaries. Such strong sustainability is the prerequisite and foundation of any human development, whether social, economic or technological. Strong sustainability means the preservation of the integrity of all ecological systems in the biosphere. Ecological integrity means the ability of an ecosystem to recover from disturbance and re-establish its stability, diversity and resilience. A strongly sustainable human society lives and develops as an integral part of ecosystems that have ecological integrity (Sustainable Aotearoa New Zealand, 2009). Any investment that is directed to caring for the Earth needs to be based on a strong sustainable model.

What is wrong with the large majority of Socially Responsible Investments (SRI)?

The traditional SRI approach is for the investor to select key values they want to be considered. Certain types of investment can then be excluded. An engagement process can be taken to try to persuade the company to change its behaviour. The investor can also ask for certain positive investments to be made.

For the establishment of sustainable investment, there are problems with the tradition SRI model. EuroSIF estimates that 17.6 per cent (2.665 trillion) of the European asset management industry can be classified as SRI. However, 14.2 per cent (2.154 trillion) is reached when there is a single screen, such as weapons, norms-based, or tobacco. The Social Investment Forum USA estimates that 12.2 percent of the $25.2 trillion in total assets under professional management is SRI (Social Investment Forum, 2010). Of this 82 per cent incorporates environmental, social and governance factors. It is not easy to find out what percentage actually cares for, rather than destroys the planet. A 2005 analysis found that the bulk of USA SRI investment (77 per cent) was simple screening, mainly tobacco, followed by alcohol and gambling. It is likely that less than 5 per cent can be estimated to be ethical, and most probably less than 1 per cent is strongly sustainable.

Many principles and standards established for ethical investment use a weak (if any) definition of sustainability. Many have no adequate content and construct validation processes to show that the standards measure the essential components of what they claim to measure. Many have ranking and scaling processes that give methodologically unjustified weights or values. Most SRI funds allow practically any publicly held corporation to be considered as an SRI company. The environmental screens used by most portfolio managers are loose and do little to help the environment..

What is wrong with the majority of Sovereign Wealth Fund (SWF)s?

The largest 50 SWF have $3891 billion under investment. Just under 60 per cent is oil and gas related. Norway is currently the second largest investor, with $443 billion or 11 per cent, and is the leader in setting ethical requirements. One of the ethical standards it is required to meet is the avoidance of investment in companies that cause severe environmental damage. The Norwegian Fund has invested in Shell, which is involved in Canadian tar sands extraction. Tar sands extraction is a major contributor to Canadian greenhouse gas emissions, yet no companies have been excluded by the Council of Ethics on the basis of extraction of tar sands. Because the Norwegian Fund excludes only companies causing severe environmental damage, rather than companies that have a high carbon impact and are ecologically unsustainable, investment of SWFs that are strongly sustainable is likely to be less than 5 per cent and closer to less than 1 per cent.

Is it possible to invest sustainably using a failed financial system?

During the last few years the international financial system has demonstrated its inability to carry out one of its basic functions, namely, to receive deposits from investors and channel those safely and efficiently to organisations that provide goods and services for the benefit of society at large. This failure is due to the support by significant sectors of the economic academic community, the managers of the financial sector, and the international business and political community, of a model (the general equilibrium theory, the formal theory of the free market) that was shown in the 1950’s to be conceptually inadequate. In supporting a failed economic model humanity has lost 30-40 years in planning and executing a transition to a sustainable Earth that will support human life on it as we know it.
However, regulation proposed by many reformers is not sufficient for an adequate transition to a sustainable world or sustainable investment. Regulation which is aimed at only correcting market weaknesses within the existing Business As Usual (BAU) model will not be effective in dealing with the ecological degradation that the Earth is undergoing. A regulated economy still rests upon certain assumptions about the availability and use of resources for human utility, and that economic model is still detrimental to the life systems upon which human life on Earth depends. What is required is the shift from an unlimited growth, to an economy that operates within the planet’s boundaries. With this a change in ethics is needed from a utilitarian and a version of Locke’s philosophy (with property rights to ownership of resources and exploitation for human utility), to where human-human and human-Earth relationships are based on notions such as respect, integrity, or intrinsic value, and equity.
If the current financial system is based on economic and investment models that are in conflict with modern science, is there any point in investment through the current financial organisations and systems? There is if investments can be made in companies that are part of the solution. If we examine two funds and a bank that take these matters seriously we may start to establish those criteria which are necessary not only for mainstream financial systems, but private, government and alternative investment options.

Case Study: Portfolio21

Portfolio21, based in Oregon, USA, has $322 million in assets in 105 companies. Its investment philosophy is that the greatest risks are the ecological challenges caused by humans consuming beyond the limits of what our natural systems can support. It states that the best long-term investment opportunities are found in companies using environmental frameworks to make business decisions. These companies understand that the Earth's ability to provide natural resources, such as oil, or clean air and water is finite and that BAU is an inadequate response to a likely ecological crisis. The understanding of sustainability principles demonstrates the qualities of innovation and leadership that create a distinct competitive advantage and builds long-term value. Portfolio 21 invests only in companies that are integrating environmental strategies into their overall business planning.

Portfolio21 chooses companies that meet their environmental selection criteria with respect to eight factors. First, does the company's business model plan to gain competitive advantages within ecological constraints? Second, does the company understand the ecological impact of its products and/or services and has taken significant steps to reduce those impacts? Third, has the company demonstrated an environmental commitment through its investments, such as significant investments in the research and development of ecologically superior products or technologies, or in new plants or equipment with advanced environmental performance? Fourth, does the company's management understand the magnitude of the ecological crisis and do they view environmental sustainability as a major business opportunity? Fifth, does the company's environmental management system identify and address environmental impacts and liabilities, develop action plans and procedures, and establish environmental accounting practices that are publicly reported and certified? Sixth, is the company concerned about resource efficiency? Seventh, does the company’s strategic plan include reducing direct and indirect greenhouse gas emissions, and decreasing exposure to other environmental liabilities? Eighth, does the company meet good standards in the areas of employee relations, human rights, community involvement, or product safety? Excluded on this latter criterion are nuclear energy, tobacco, gambling, or weapons companies.

Portfolio 21 asserts that there are no truly sustainable companies: therefore no companies excel in all of the areas listed below. They select companies with strengths in multiple areas that are well positioned to make further advancements in addressing sustainability challenges. They place the most emphasis on a company’s biggest impacts. 

Case Study: Highwater Global Fund

Paul Hawken has an international reputation as an environmental author and activist. His Natural Capitalism: Creating the Next Industrial Revolution, and The Ecology of Commerce: A Declaration of Sustainability illustrate his understanding of the threats to the health of the planet and the role of business. The establishment of Highwater Global Fund in 2005, with Michael Baldwin, is an extension of that understanding and action. The fund invests in companies to provide solutions for environmental and social challenges

Highwater Global Fund has a three-stage selection process. The first stage is to determine the intentionality of the candidate company. Does the company provide innovative services and products that address the current and future needs of people and the Earth? Does it address climate change and carbon emissions? Does it work proactively to minimise natural resource use through resource productivity? Does it facilitate a shift from an economy of consumption to an economy of well being? Does it integrate and demonstrate a social and environmental commitment in corporate values and stated objectives? The majority of companies are excluded because of unacceptable activities such as human rights violations; the production of hazardous waste; industrial agriculture; animal cruelty; and corruption. From a field of over 5000 global public equities, around 350 were selected for the next step.

The second stage is an assessment of whether the remaining candidates are innovators, shifters or neutrally good. Innovators are companies concerned with advanced research, technology and services.

The third stage is scoring the companies on a scale of 1 to 10 for 12 categories (leadership; employees; supply chain; community; diversity and women; intention; customers; materials; energy; water; climate; products and services) and over 200 factors, and making a final selection of 30-40 companies. The rating is not the only deciding factor, and some companies are chosen when their scores are less favorable than other candidates’.

Case Study: HSBC Holdings

HSBC is one of the largest banking and financial services organisations in the world. In 2005, HSBC became the first bank and FTSE100 company to become carbon neutral. It has four-year targets for energy use, water use, waste and carbon dioxide, and programmes in place to reduce the direct environmental impact. This includes the energy, water, waste and carbon emissions from their 10,000 buildings, IT infrastructure and business travel.
HSBC says tackling climate change will require a concerted effort between government, business and individuals. Innovation in renewable energy and clean technology is required to help reduce the world's dependence on carbon intensive fuels. Through lending, investment and insurance products and services, HSBC anticipates playing a leading role in the transition to a lower carbon economy over the long term. The impacts of climate change can already be seen and there will be a need to invest in adaptation, particularly in the developing world.

Key actions that HSBC has undertaken to prepare the business and their customers for the impacts of climate change include the HSBC Climate Change Centre of Excellence; adoption of the UN Climate Principles; five-year partnerships costing US$100 million with four leading climate NGOs; and the establishment of the HSBC Global Climate Change Benchmark Index.

In 2003, HSBC adopted the Equator Principles for large projects. HSBC voluntarily extended the Principles to export finance loans and other facilities where the use of proceeds is known to be directly related to a project. In addition, HSBC has developed a series of risk policies for sensitive sectors, including Chemicals, Defence, Energy, Forest Land and Forest Products, Freshwater Infrastructure and Mining and Metals. These policies cover a wider range of financial services than lending and are applied regardless of the value of the transaction or size of the business

HSBC has taken a number of initiatives that deserve support: setting up research teams; partnering with NGOs; committing to climate change principles based on a low carbon economy; and establishing a Climate Change Benchmark Index. These actions indicate that HSBC understands the real threat of ecological degradation, and is prepared to give major commitment to this concern, although I do not know where it stands on the weak/strong sustainability question. It is significant that HSBC felt it needed to adopt climate change principles based on a low carbon economy: the UN Principles for Responsible Investment were obviously not sufficient. It is also significant that it recognised that mitigation now is not sufficient, and that adaptation is also required, particularly for developing countries.

Its development of policy for Chemicals, Defence, Energy, Forest Land and Forest Products, Freshwater Infrastructure, and Mining and Metals, is to be encouraged. Some of these are very good: the Defence, and Forest Land and Forest Products, are examples. Others can be best described as a start.

What are the moral and strategic criteria that you or your organisation should use to select investments?

While it is possible to argue over some details of Portfolio21’s and Highwater Global Fund’s application of their principles, the broader picture is that their approaches provide useful insights for sustainable investment. Given Portfolio21’s assertion that there are no fully sustainable companies to invest in, it is therefore important to support and encourage those companies that aim to be sustainable, and engage with them to make the changes. Principles, standards, guidelines and benchmarks based on strong rather than weak sustainability are important in this respect. Many international standards are inadequate. Both funds can provide useful models for extending sustainable investment.

Banks provide important investment for the transition to sustainability. The case study of HSBC shows that there is much work to be done, particularly in regard to policies for energy, mining and forestry. HSBC had good policies for forestry, but not for mining and energy. There are other bank models that could be considered: see for example the Global Alliance for Banking on Values which is a group of ten banks with combined assets of $10 billion, operating in 20 countries.

However, the focus needs to be on the majority of banks that are not performing well. In a survey of 16 US and 24 non-US banks representing more than 60 per cent of the total market capitalisation of the global publicly traded banking sector, it was found that many of the 40 banks have done little or nothing to elevate climate change as a governance priority. Cogan has written that “while many banks have made improvements, the actions to date are the tip of the iceberg of what is needed to reduce greenhouse gas emissions consistent with targets scientists say are needed to avoid the dangerous impacts of climate change”. The example of HSBC identifies the policy changes that are needed.

The obstacles for a smooth transition to a sustainable financial sector are considerable. The changes involve foundational changes to the international political, economic and ethical decision-making structures and processes, and changes of this type occur infrequently and usually at times of major upheaval. Mitigation alone is no longer adequate: adaptation is required. The indications are that climate change and the trends in ecological degradation will bring widespread disorder and disruption. During the next few decades and beyond, large loss of human life and deterioration in living standards is likely. Many of the goods that currently make up international trade patterns will disappear, as floods and storms, rising seawater, lack of water, and pollution destroy factories or production sites.

Prudent investment will be in goods and services essential for simple and sustainable living, with a focus on local resources and production in the areas of food, housing, clothing, and water and energy systems. (This calls for simpler and less complicated low-carbon and clean-tech industries.) Production and distribution systems will need to be resilient, and able to cope with relatively rapid changes in temperature and weather. Transport and communication systems currently dependent on unsustainable energy and resource use will disappear. Investment needs to recognise the structural changes that will come through the global drivers associated with ecological degradation and resource limits, and that these will be more important than the usual business cycles.

What criteria should I use for investing to care for the planet?

Criteria should describe the type of investments that you want to exclude, where you want to engage with companies with the intention of bringing change, and the type of companies that you want to encourage. Negative screens will likely include organisations involved in industries like armaments and weapons systems; nuclear power; gambling; tobacco; animal exploitation and experimentation; irresponsible alcohol manufacture and distribution; significant human rights abuses; significant environment abuses, high carbon emissions. Engagement will involve selecting those companies which may be in your negative screen, but who you want to work with to change. Positive Screens will likely include organisations involved in industries like environmentally sustainable goods and services; clean technologies; renewable energies; green business; progressive employment practices; local community activities; public goods such as public transport; sustainable housing; companies with low carbon emissions.

In addition to the selection of screens, your criteria should include how companies have dealt with the strategic risk they face. A risk analysis is needed to take account of the factors that will significantly influence future conditions and events, both positive and negative, especially in the medium to longer term. The major global drivers will include population change; climate change; price increases for hydrocarbons; water; food; toxins; geopolitical shifts; wide swings in economic activity and technological advances. Ideally, companies have calculated their ecological impact, are living within it and have incorporated the major global drivers into their strategic planning. There will be complex interactions amongst all of these drivers that will cause abrupt and radical shifts in human living and work, creating risks and opportunities.

Strategies to cope with this turbulence and volatility of returns will include investing in a smaller number of companies, taking a larger weighting, and/or engagement where management is encouraged to take a longer-term perspective rather than a short term requirement to pay out regular or high dividends. The choice of company or fund will include how aware its management is of the major global drivers and how they are incorporating these into their strategic plans. When reporting, there will be an account of how each investment deals with strategic risk.

The principles of environmental sustainability will favour investment in goods and services essential for simple and sustainable living with a focus on local resources and production regarding factors as food, housing, water and energy systems and clothing. Investment will favour production and distribution systems that are resilient and able to cope with relatively rapid changes in temperature and weather. Also favoured will be transport and communication systems that are not dependent on unsustainable energy and resource use.

Working together for change

The Earth’s systems are not resilient enough to cope with the damage that humans have done to them. Currently, investment funds and banks, including SRI funds and sovereign wealth funds, are part of the problem. Consideration of Highwater Global Fund, Portfolio21, and HSBC Holdings illustrates these problems, and points to some solutions. Adoption of principles, standards, benchmarks and guidelines needs to include strong sustainability as an essential component. Criteria for the selection of companies that aim to be strongly sustainable are necessary, but it is just as important that the operationalisation, engagement, monitoring and reporting be carried out properly. There is considerable room for improvement, particularly in the development of energy (including transportation), mining, forestry, and agribusiness policies and investment. Unfortunately a rapid shift to sustainable investment is unlikely until the impacts of ecological degradation are severe enough to confront the world’s political leaders and their constituencies. Mitigation is not sufficient: adaptation is needed as well. Investment strategies therefore need to take account of the risks that a deteriorating Earth will bring to continued human life.

The future that we as humans face is a daunting one. The Religious Society of Friends has historically taken the lead in such matters as slavery and investment, but have been slower to focus on threats to our environment and whether investments care for the planet. A preliminary review of the investment criteria of some Quaker and Quaker related funds indicates that if they include sustainability, the definition of sustainability does not make earthcare a necessary condition. It appears at an initial viewing that not many report on their ecological footprint, or how their distribution of funds contain requirements for the receiving organization or persons to measure their footprint and try and live sustainably. Moreover, there is little coordination at an international level. If Friends worldwide are to use their money and investments, individually and collectively, in right ordering, we need to review and change where necessary the criteria for the investment and distribution of our funds. We need to work with Friends, other faith communities and other colleagues and organisations and encourage them to change their criteria also. There is much to be done, and very little time. To quote and add some questions to the Advices and Queries in the British Faith & Practice (1.02, 41 and 42)

Try to live simply. A simple lifestyle freely chosen is a source of strength. Do not be persuaded into buying what you do not need or cannot afford. Do you keep yourself informed about the effects your style of living is having on the global economy and environment?

We do not own the world, and its riches are not ours to dispose of at will. Show a loving consideration for all creatures, and seek to maintain the beauty and variety of the world. Work to ensure that our increasing power over nature is used responsibly, with reverence for life. Rejoice in the splendour of God's continuing creation.   How aware are you of the threats to our planet by our current economic system, and the organisations that we are dependent on for our goods and services?   Are you working to change the values of human dominance, greed and arrogance that drive our exploitation and destruction of the earth?  Do you search out whatever in your use of money, investments and resources that contain the seeds for destroying the planet?

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