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In this issue, a look at the new rules U.S. financial regulators are poised to issue on climate disc͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌  ͏‌ 
 
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March 31, 2023
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Net Zero

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Tim McDonnell
Tim McDonnell

Hi everyone, welcome back to Net Zero.

The anti-ESG investing backlash, which up to now has mostly targeted asset managers, is about to shift to federal regulators. The Securities and Exchange Commission is poised to roll out the final version of rules requiring companies to disclose their carbon emissions and other climate information. Guessing when the rules will come and how they will land on key controversial details has become a “favorite parlor game” of D.C. climate wonks, one told me. But no matter what the rules say, they’re almost certain to become a magnet for lawsuits.

Today we’ve also got a lot of charts on U.S. household energy use and the countries most economically vulnerable to the energy transition, and we text with a carbon market exec on how to restore public trust in that industry.

If you like what you’re reading, spread the word.

Warmups
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The United Nations unanimously passed a resolution requesting the International Court of Justice to issue a legal opinion on whether countries can be sued under international law for failing to act on climate change. The opinion, which has been sought for years by the island nation Vanuatu, will be non-binding, but could expose countries to lawsuits if they fail to meet their Paris Agreement commitments.

The U.K. published a revised net zero strategy that was immediately panned by environmental economists as insufficient for meeting the country’s climate targets. The government’s own analysis of the policy — which includes measures like grants for home heat pumps and approving sites for carbon capture projects — would bring the country only 92% of the way to its 2030 target.

The Republican-controlled U.S. House of Representatives passed a bill along party lines to roll back significant sections of the Inflation Reduction Act and accelerate permitting for fossil fuel projects. The bill has no chance of passage in the Senate and would face a certain veto by the president. But it highlights gaps between the parties on the critical and ostensibly bipartisan issue of infrastructure permitting, with Republicans looking to remove environmental reviews while Democrats aim to provide more resources for those reviews to be conducted quickly.

The U.S. Treasury Department released new guidelines on which electric vehicles can qualify for tax credits under the Inflation Reduction Act. The new rules lay out specific percentages of the value of battery materials and critical minerals that must be sourced or assembled domestically to qualify, and promise to publish a list of specific qualifying vehicles by mid-April. Sen. Joe Manchin, who has pushed for tighter sourcing requirements, said in a statement that the rules “completely ignore the intent” of the IRA.

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Evidence

U.S. households are using more gas and less electricity for home heating compared to a few years ago, according to survey data released this week by the Energy Information Administration. The data shows how far electric (and potentially low-carbon) technologies like heat pumps have to go to replace gas heating.

Another interesting takeaway from the survey: The lowest-income households spend the most, per square foot, on total household energy consumption (including air conditioning, cooking, water heating, etc.). That suggests they have the most to gain from energy efficiency improvements.

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Tim McDonnell

The next big ESG battle

Flickr/SEC

THE NEWS

Lobbying groups on both sides of the U.S. political spectrum are gearing up to sue the Biden administration once it releases the final version of rules requiring publicly-traded companies to disclose their carbon emissions and other climate information.

The Securities and Exchange Commission’s climate disclosure rules have garnered a record of more than 14,000 public comments since they were proposed last March, with aggressive lobbying over a few key details since then. Environmental groups, Congressional Democrats, and other supporters say the regulations are needed to give investors visibility into companies’ climate-related financial risks, and to hold firms accountable for their climate targets. Opponents, including the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and many Republicans, say the rules are an overreach of the SEC’s authority and ask for data businesses can’t accurately or affordably obtain.

The final version of the rules is expected in the next few weeks, observers say — after which they’re sure to become the hottest battleground in the war over ESG investing.

TIM’S VIEW

The debate over the SEC’s climate disclosure rules is rooted in the anxiety many carbon-intensive companies feel about the fact that CO2 emissions — once a vague metric that could at best be roughly estimated — are becoming much easier to measure, and a basis for lawsuits and shareholder campaigns. Thanks to regulation, as well as technologies like satellite monitoring and blockchain accounting, the era of hidden emissions is ending.

The most controversial part of the SEC proposal deals with “Scope 3” emissions, those that arise from a company’s supply chain and its customers’ use of its products. For many carbon-intensive companies, including fossil fuel producers and major retailers, Scope 3 makes up the majority of their total carbon footprint. The proposed rule requires disclosure of Scope 3 emissions if they are material to a company’s finances, or if they are included in a company’s climate targets.

Universal Scope 3 emissions disclosure is central to the broader ESG fight, because it would allow investors to make a more nuanced judgment about climate-related financial risks — companies with a lot of Scope 3 emissions are most likely to face costs or asset impairments as the economy uses less fossil fuels and policymakers crack down on emissions. High-carbon companies that don’t take steps to mitigate that risk — by changing their business model, for example — could face higher costs of capital, see board members ousted by shareholders, or face legal action.

This month, SEC Chair Gary Gensler acknowledged a favored argument of opponents of Scope 3 disclosure, saying that the process for tabulating them is not as “well developed” as the process for Scope 1 (from a company’s direct operations) and Scope 2 (from purchased electricity) emissions.

That may be true, but it’s quickly changing, as the major accounting firms, as well as a host of startups, standardize Scope 3 tabulation. Many large carbon emitters, including Chevron and ExxonMobil, already measure their Scope 3 emissions and have targets to reduce them (at least in terms of emissions per unit of oil and gas sold). And no matter what the SEC decides, companies with operations in Europe will likely need to account for their global Scope 3 emissions anyway, as European Union regulators finalize their own disclosure rules, which are likely to be more strict.

“It just won’t be that hard of a question,” said Madison Condon, a professor of environmental and corporate law at Boston University who published a paper last week urging the SEC to “not back down” on Scope 3 requirements. “This is becoming so commonplace that Scope 3 is integrated into existing supply chain and basic accounting software. It’s literally just in Quickbooks.”

If the SEC axes the Scope 3 requirement, as the American Petroleum Institute — the main American fossil-fuel lobby group — and others have requested, it will likely face lawsuits from environmental and shareholder advocacy groups. If it doesn’t, it may face lawsuits from Republican attorneys general and groups like API and the Chamber. One middle-ground approach would be to phase in the Scope 3 requirement over time.

Then again, softening the blow on Scope 3 probably won’t be enough to keep the SEC’s lawyers out of court, since other details of the rules are also contentious, said Rob Schuwerk, executive director for North America at Carbon Tracker, a think tank.

“Litigation is inevitable, and the SEC will recognize that,” he said. “So there’s no real incentive to drop any of the controversial stuff.”

KNOW MORE

Another controversial element of the SEC rules has to do with how companies report climate-related risks in their detailed financial statements — for example, if an asset like an oil refinery might lose value more quickly than anticipated because of the energy transition, or if anti-deforestation policy could make agricultural land holdings less valuable. Such risks are generally not disclosed, according to a Carbon Tracker analysis last year of 134 carbon-intensive companies.

The proposed rule is highly sensitive to these costs, requiring their disclosure if they amount to more than 1% of the value of each line item in a financial report (typically, the SEC’s bar for a material risk is 10%). That number may be scrapped or watered down in the final rule.

Gary Gensler. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein

ROOM FOR DISAGREEMENT

The rules also target physical climate risks — how exposed a company’s assets are to wildfires or flooding, for example. Although this type of risk is in a sense more tangible than transition-related risk, it may be difficult to pin down because of uncertainties and a lack of geographical detail in climate models. Although a growing number of firms offer physical climate-risk forecasts, scientists have complained about the widespread use of “black box” models using methodologies that are not open for review.

Some wiggle room in these estimates may be acceptable for a company trying to plan for the future in broad strokes. But it could become a problem when used as the basis for specific financial risk statements to investors. In a second paper last week, Condon argued that state and federal governments should invest more in public-access, highly granular climate impact modeling to improve the transparency and reliability of these projections.

THE VIEW FROM WALMART

The prospect of mandatory Scope 3 disclosure is putting some companies that have otherwise been at the forefront of emissions monitoring into an uncomfortable position. Walmart, for example, reported Scope 3 emissions for 2020 of about 162 million metric tons, 90% of its total. The company launched an initiative in 2017 to track and reduce supply-chain emissions, and claims to have avoided 574 million metric tons of CO2 since then, the equivalent of shutting off 150 coal-fired power plants for a year. Yet in a filing to the SEC, Walmart warned that through that experience, “we have come to believe that current Scope 3 reporting is unreliable,” and urged the SEC not to require it.

NOTABLE

  • Complying with these rules could cost an average company about $500,000 in the first year and less in following years, the SEC projects. But giving investors more clarity and assurance around a company’s climate risks will likely lower the cost of capital by much more than that, Columbia University accounting professor Shivaram Rajgopal argued in a filing.
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Semafor Stat

Share of total global warming since 1851 attributable to greenhouse gas emissions from the U.S., the highest share of any country, according to a new study this week.

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One Good Text

Marco Magini, executive director of climate projects at South Pole, the world’s top seller of carbon offsets. A carbon market advisory group backed by the U.K. government, environmental groups, and others, published new integrity standards for carbon offset traders this week, following a series of damning investigations into the prevalence of junk credits. Many independent experts say the new standards are too little, too late.

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Watchdogs

Which countries are most vulnerable to climate change? This question is usually approached in terms of physical risk, from droughts, floods, and other disasters. A paper published today by Oxford University economists takes a different approach, by looking at the countries whose economies will be most damaged by a transition away from fossil fuels. They developed a “brown lock-in index” to assess which countries receive the highest portion of their export income from fossil fuels, particularly those in a raw or unprocessed state. These countries, shown in the map above, have the fewest opportunities to replace high-carbon economic activity with a low-carbon alternative.

Conversely, the paper also uses a “brown complexity index” to assess countries that are top exporters of fossil-related manufactured products, including internal combustion engines and fossil-derived chemicals. These countries, shown in the map below, tend to have more diversified economies and advanced industrial capabilities that are required for low-carbon technologies. Countries that today are top exporters of “complex” brown products, in other words, “may find it relatively easy to shift towards greener activities,” the paper concludes. Countries like Canada and Russia that rank on both indices — albeit at the low end — may find the energy transition more value-neutral.

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— Tim (with Prashant Rao and Jeronimo Gonzalez)

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