Committee hears of economic gains and positive outcomes from the government’s net zero strategy
|
The Treasury Select Committee today held its first oral session on
the economic opportunities of decarbonisation and green finance.
Witnesses: Chris Stark, Chief Executive, Committee on Climate
Change Nick Robins, Sustainable Finance Professor, London School of
Economics Sagarika Chatterjee, Director of Climate Change,
Principles for Responsible Investment During the session,
Conservative MP Colin Clark raised the question of whether the oil
and gas...Request free trial
The Treasury Select Committee today held its first oral
session on the economic opportunities of decarbonisation and
green finance.
During the session, Conservative MP Colin Clark raised the question of whether the oil and gas industry was incompatible with net zero. Sagarika Chatterjee said it was important that investors decarbonised their portfolios. There was a range of ways to do that, one was which was stewardship. That is, how investors engaged with companies, including those in the fossil fuel sector. A specific UK example was that of BP, where there were nearly 60 investors who came together, co-filing a shareholder resolution at BP’s AGM asking the company to disclose how they would align with the Paris agreement. What was interesting was that the BP board got behind the resolution themselves.
She pointed to another example, of Royal Dutch Shell, where
investors had pressed the company to think about the Paris
agreement and the company indicated in May that they would be
aligning executive remuneration with reductions in greenhouse gas
emissions targets as well as improving their disclosure.
Nicky Morgan opened the session with a
question about the achievability of the government’s net zero
target and how the impact on the economy was taken into
account. Replying to Simon Clarke, Mr Stark said he was very confident the net zero target could be met at a cost of one to two per cent of GDP. He said this could be a pro-growth story. Miss Chatterjee shared Mr Stark’s optimistic view, saying a transition to a low-carbon economy could result in economic gains of $27 trillion by 2030. She agreed with Mr Clarke that there was an opportunity for London and other cities to become the home of green finance on a global basis.
Professor Robins said there was a task for the Treasury to do in
terms of analysing the benefits of avoiding catastrophic climate
change, health benefits and the implications for growth. There
was an “amazing bargain” to be had. Professor Robins said the hydrogen sector would ultimately be a way of using the UK’s renewable resources. Mr Stark said hydrogen was useful because it could be burned without causing carbon emissions, but also for fuel switching. Alison McGovern asked about a ‘just transition’ and social dimensions of net zero. Professor Robins said there should be a clear process to help communities in terms of investment. Mr Stark said this was of fundamental importance that he would like the Treasury to look at. Reply to Charlie Elphicke on the subject of green finance, Professor Robins said the £5 million fund was a small amount, but was a great signal to get the process of linking mortgages to green living going. Mr Elphicke focussed his questions on ways of incentivising people to make their homes more energy efficient. On the subject of electric cars, Mr Elphicke said the Treasury was “a discgrace” for not investing in chargepoints. Could investment in chargepoints be done by public finance, or could it be done by green finance? Miss Chatterjee said green finance presented many opportunities. Mr Stark agreed that the Treasury and Department for Transport should address the issue of “charge anxiety.” it wouldn’t take much to make that change and he thought it would happen very quickly over the next ten years. It was a classic example of the government getting ahead of the issue.
West Streeting raised the issue of the risk to financial firms of
climate change. At the conclusion of the session, Chris Stark replied to Nicky Morgan that the net zero strategy had placed the UK as a global leader in environmental issues and other countries were already following suit. Miss Chatterjee added that the UK was viewed throughout the world as leading on the subject.

 |
