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Climate change is a financial risk, according to a lawsuit against the CBA

The Conversation - Wed, 2017-08-16 06:14

The Commonwealth Bank of Australia has been in the headlines lately for all the wrong reasons. Beyond money-laundering allegations and the announcement that CEO Ian Narev will retire early, the CBA is now also being sued in the Australian Federal Court for misleading shareholders over the risks climate change poses to their business interests.

This case is the first in the world to pursue a bank over failing to report climate change risks. However, it’s building on a trend of similar actions against energy companies in the United States and United Kingdom.

Read more: Why badly behaving bankers will never fear jail time

The CBA case was filed on August 8, 2017 by advocacy group Environmental Justice Australia on behalf of two longstanding Commonwealth Bank shareholders. The case argues that climate change creates material financial risks to the bank, its business and customers, and they failed in their duty to disclose those risks to investors.

This represents an important shift. Conventionally, climate change has been treated by reporting companies merely as a matter of corporate social responsibility; now it’s affecting the financial bottom line.

What do banks need to disclose?

When banks invest in projects or lend money to businesses, they have an obligation to investigate and report to shareholders potential problems that may prevent financial success. (Opening a resort in a war zone, for example, is not an attractive proposition.)

However, banks may now have to take into account the risks posed by climate change. Australia’s top four banks are heavily involved in fossil-fuel intensive projects, but as the world moves towards renewable energy those projects may begin to look dubious.

Read more: How companies are getting smart about climate change

As the G20’s Taskforce on Climate-Related Financial Disclosures recently reported, climate risks can be physical (for instance, when extreme weather events affect property or business operations) or transition risks (the effect of new laws and policies designed to mitigate climate change, or market changes as economies transition to renewable and low-emission technology).

For example, restrictions on coal mining may result in these assets being “stranded,” meaning they become liabilities rather than assets on company balance sheets. Similarly, the rise of renewable energy may reduce the life span, and consequently the value, of conventional power generation assets.

Companies who rely on the exploitation of fossil fuels face increasing transition risks. So too do the banks that lend money to, and invest in, these projects. It is these types of risks that are at issue in the case against CBA.

What did the CBA know about climate risk?

The claim filed by the CBA shareholders alleges the bank has contravened two central provisions of the Corporations Act 2001:

  • companies must include a financial report within the annual report which gives a “true and fair” view of its financial position and performance, and

  • companies must include a director’s report that allows shareholders to make an “informed assessment” of the company’s operations, financial position, business strategies and prospects.

The shareholders argue that the CBA knew – or ought to have known – that climate-related risks could seriously disrupt the bank’s performance. Therefore, investors should have been told the CBA’s strategies for managing those risks so they could make an informed decision about their investment.

Read more: We need a Royal Commission into the banks

The claim also zeros in on the lengthy speculation over whether the CBA would finance the controversial Adani Carmichael coal mine in Queensland. (The bank has since ruled out financing the mine.) The shareholders assert that the resulting “controversy and concern” was a major risk to the CBA’s business.

Global litigation trends

While the CBA case represents the first time worldwide that a financial institution has been sued for misleading disclosure of climate risk, the litigation builds on a broader global trend. There have been a number of recent legal actions in the United States, seeking to enforce corporate risk disclosure obligations in relation to climate change:

Energy giant Exxon Mobile is currently under investigation by the Attorneys General of New York and California over the company’s disclosure practices. At the same time, an ongoing shareholder class action alleges that Exxon Mobile failed to disclose internal reports about the risks climate change posed to their oil and gas reserves, and valued those assets artificially high.

Similar pathways are being pursued in the UK, where regulatory complaints have been made about the failure of major oil and gas companies SOCO International and Cairn Energy to disclose climate-related risks, as required by law.

In this context, the CBA case represents a widening of litigation options to include banks, as well as energy companies. It is also the first attempt in Australia to use the courts to clarify how public listed companies should disclose climate risks in their annual reports.

Potential for more litigation

This global trend suggests more companies are likely to face these kinds of lawsuits in the future. Eminent barrister Noel Hutley noted in October 2016 that many prominent Australian companies, including banks that lend to major fossil fuel businesses, are not adequately disclosing climate change risks.

Hutley predicted that it’s likely only a matter of time before we see a company director sued for failing to perceive or react to a forseeable climate-related risk. The CBA case is the first step towards such litigation.

The Conversation

Anita Foerster receives support from Australian Research Council Discovery Project – DP 160100225, ‘Developing a Legal Blueprint for Corporate Energy Transition’.

Jacqueline Peel receives support from Australian Research Council Discovery Project – DP 160100225, ‘Developing a Legal Blueprint for Corporate Energy Transition’.

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Pen Hadow sets sail for North Pole as Arctic ice melts

BBC - Wed, 2017-08-16 01:28
Can 10 men and a dog, led by British explorer Pen Hadow, become the first to sail to the North Pole?
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Hundreds feared dead in Sierra Leone after mudslides – video report

The Guardian - Wed, 2017-08-16 00:02

Sierra Leonean emergency services and aid agencies are working to find victims of the heavy mudslides and flooding which devastated areas around the country’s capital Freetown on Monday. Thousands of people are still missing

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Bolivia approves controversial highway in Amazon biodiversity hotspot

The Guardian - Tue, 2017-08-15 22:26

Major 190-mile road will strip national park and home to thousands of indigenous people of its protected status, making it vulnerable to deforestation

Bolivia has given the go ahead to a controversial highway which would cut through an Amazon biodiversity hotspot almost the size of Jamaica and home to 14,000 mostly indigenous people.

President Evo Morales enacted the new law opening the way for the 190-mile (300km) road through the Isiboro Sécure Indigenous Territory and National Park, known as Tipnis, its Spanish acronym. The road will divide the park in two and strip it of the protections won in 2011 when a national march by thousands of protesters ended in clashes with the police and forced the government to change its position.

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Brass band on train demonstrates Doppler effect

BBC - Tue, 2017-08-15 21:31
How can a brass band and a steam train help you understand the universe?
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'Donald Trump forest' climate change project gains momentum

BBC - Tue, 2017-08-15 20:57
Campaigners plan to plant enough trees to counteract the climate impact of the US President.
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Plants 'hijacked' to make polio vaccine

BBC - Tue, 2017-08-15 19:14
A breakthrough could lead to easier, faster and cheaper vaccines.
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Wildfires across southern European amid scorching heatwave – in pictures

The Guardian - Tue, 2017-08-15 17:05

Extreme weather across southern Europe has spawned and fanned numerous wildfires, including at the beach resort of Kalamos near Athens and in central Portugal

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Coal communities lead march to clean energy

RenewEconomy - Tue, 2017-08-15 15:10
Port Augusta becomes latest Australian coal hub to embrace renewables – and just as well, considering new data on coal plant pollution.
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Sci-fi nightmares play out beneath the flowers

The Guardian - Tue, 2017-08-15 14:30

Dunwich Heath, Suffolk Brilliantly coloured jewel wasps use the living bodies of other insects to nourish their larvae

Much of the basic storybook that supplies the raw materials for horror films and novels seems to me to be derived from entomology. And here, at this place of autumn purple and gold, scattered thinly all along the sandy paths that bisect the billowing tides of flowering heather, was a particular inspiration.

It was a tiny 1cm-long creature that looked as brilliant an insect as I have seen in this country. The mid-thorax, hind legs and head were all glittering turquoise, while the abdomen and front thorax were shining burgundy. The unmistakable colours distinguish a small group that are known as jewel or ruby-tailed wasps (in German they are called Goldwespen, gold wasps), of which there are about 30 species in Britain. The commonest is one I see regularly even about our house, where they burrow into crevices among the loose masonry.

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David Whaley - University of South Australia

David Whaley - University of South Australia

Dr David Whaley is an Electrical and Electronic Engineer who works as a teaching and Research academic within the Barbara Hardy Institute / School of Engineering, at the University of South Australia. He is part of a small team that work in the Sustainable Energy Centre, which currently conducts research on low-energy housing and technologies. He has authored or co-authored 9 journal papers and 27 conference papers in these areas over the past 8 years. David also currently teaches a course regarding renewable energy technologies, the current Power Systems, and the integration of both. Finally,David is a member of the IEEE, Engineers Australia and the Alternative Technology Association.

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Three species included, one species transferred and five name changes in the EPBC Act list of threatened species

Department of the Environment - Tue, 2017-08-15 13:19
The Minister has approved the inclusion of three species and the transfer of one species in the EPBC Act list of threatened species. These amendments were effective under the EPBC Act on 15 August 2017. ...
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Graph of the Day: South Australia’s shifting fuel mix

RenewEconomy - Tue, 2017-08-15 13:17
Today's chart is a simple illustration of shifts in the fuel mix so far - interestingly, after a low-wind month in June, July's high wind output means very little reliance on Victorian imports and lower exposure to high-priced gas in SA.
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Contact energy in large scale climate bonds certification

RenewEconomy - Tue, 2017-08-15 13:14
Listed New Zealand company Contact Energy Ltd (CEN) has gained Climate Bonds Certification of geothermal assets as part of its new Green Loan Borrowing Programme for NZD1.8bn.
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Know your NEM: Will the LRET be met?

RenewEconomy - Tue, 2017-08-15 12:53
Will Australia's large-scale renewable energy target be met on time? And what will happen if we move to a CET? Plus AGL's uncontroversial result; and crunching numbers on SolarReserve's Port August project.
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How solar tower and storage won on costs

RenewEconomy - Tue, 2017-08-15 12:09
SolarReserve says its winning solar tower and molten salt storage project can deliver dispatchable, renewable power at just $78/MWh. Why so low?
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Eric Rolls and the Pilliga

ABC Environment - Tue, 2017-08-15 11:05
Eric Rolls was a rare combination; farmer, poet, self-taught naturalist and historian. He also wrote Australia’s first true environmental history
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June 2017 Australian Petroleum Statistics now available

Department of the Environment - Tue, 2017-08-15 10:26
The Australian Petroleum Statistics provide statistics on petroleum production, refinery inputs and outputs, sales and stocks of petroleum products, and prices.
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Majestic archipelago

BBC - Tue, 2017-08-15 09:56
The Galapagos Conservation Trust has announced the winners in its annual photographic competition.
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Record-sized data centre planned inside Arctic Circle

BBC - Tue, 2017-08-15 09:08
The facility in the north of Norway will take advantage of cheap energy and the cool air.
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