24/02/2019

Climate Change-Related Litigation Was Once Seen As A Joke, But It Could Soon Become Business Reality

ABCNassim Khadem

Climate change is a financial risk companies are starting to prepare for. (Australian Antarctic Division)

Australian company directors have
started caring about climate change
Australian company directors nominate climate change as the number one issue they want the government to address in the long-term, in a survey of more than 1,200 business leaders.

CEOs of Australia's largest companies are hearing the message and realising that on issues from climate change to gender diversity the need to act is not just a moral one.
On Wednesday, Australia's largest coal miner, Glencore, joined a growing list of global companies that have succumbed to shareholder pressure to act on climate change.
The Swiss-based resources giant, headed by billionaire Ivan Glasenberg, recognised there is a business case for freezing its global coal production at current levels.
It said it would instead shift focus to producing commodities including copper, cobalt, nickel, vanadium and zinc.
The announcement was made after the company held talks with the Climate Action 100+ initiative, whose global members collectively manage more than $US32 trillion in assets.The group includes a number of major Australian superannuation funds such as AMP Capital, AustralianSuper, Cbus, IFM Investors, QSuper and BT Financial Group.
It's shown it has sway when it comes to pressuring companies to implement changes aimed at achieving the goals of the Paris climate agreement.
In recent months the group has worked with other companies, including Shell, BP and Maersk, and convinced them to take steps that show they are serious about meeting the Paris climate agreement goals.
Emma Herd, chief executive of the Investor Group on Climate Change and member of the global Steering Committee for the Climate Action 100+, said the change in sentiment was because of greater recognition by CEOs that climate change is not just an ethical issue.
"This is about financial risk, as well a company's social licence to operate," she said.
"Super funds were first onto the issue because they take a 30-year investment horizon. These are very big mainstream funds asking very big mainstream companies to have a business plan on climate change."


Banks increase exposure to fossil fuels 
Australia's major banks have been getting back into fossil fuels over the past year, casting doubt on their seriousness in tackling climate change through their investments.

Climate change-related litigation on the rise
Climate change-related litigation is no longer a joke.
Regulators are weighing in as the prospect of lawsuits becomes more realistic.In a speech in June, ASIC Commissioner John Price said directors "would do well" to carefully consider a 2016 legal opinion by Noel Hutley SC and Sebastien Hartford-Davis that they could face lawsuits for failing to consider risks related to climate change.
Meanwhile, the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA) has been pushing ASX200 companies to run "stress tests" on potential climate risk scenarios.
In November, 2017 APRA executive Geoff Summerhayes warned that "should extreme weather events become more frequent and intense as scientists predict", there could be "adverse economic impacts" that threaten financial system stability.
That same year, Melbourne law practice Environmental Justice Australia had launched a case arguing the Commonwealth Bank had breached corporate law by not disclosing climate change as a major or material risk in its annual report.
The case was dropped when the bank subsequently disclosed climate risk in its annual report.
In July last year Industry super fund REST — the default industry super fund for many retail workers — faced a federal court legal battle over claims it breached its trustee duties by failing to properly factor climate change-related risks into its investment decisions.
Mark McVeigh, a 23-year-old ecology graduate, took on the legal case against the super fund, accusing it of breaching superannuation law by failing to act in his best interests.
Then in October, the New York Attorney-General's office sued ExxonMobil, accusing the fossil fuel giant of defrauding investors by misleading them about the financial risks the company faced from climate change regulations.
Oil giant Shell was first threatened with a lawsuit last year by the Dutch branch of Friends of the Earth. Greenpeace, ActionAid and other groups have now joined in, accusing Shell of "deliberately obstructing" efforts to keep global warming well below 2 degrees Celsius.
They have threatened they will move to a court summons on April 5 if Shell does not change its business model to comply with the Paris climate accord.
A study released on Monday by environmental campaign group Market Forces found just 14 per cent of Australia's top 100 companies have disclosed detailed scenario analysis demonstrating their viability in a 2-degree policy pathway.
As investors, regulators and litigators continue to exert pressure, it's only a matter of time before companies act.

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