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HOT TOPIC: Global Warming and Climate Change, Global Warning Information, UpdatesGlobal Warming and Climate ChangeInstitutional investors are focused on the potential or rising risk posed by climate change to the companies they hold in portfolios. “Climate change,” “global warming” and “sustainability” (of the company owned, over the long-term) are trigger phrases now for all manner of shareholder activities – and corporate responses. The argument is not always about “if” climate change is occurring or “who” or “what” is responsible – often, the investors now ask: What is the company doing to prepare for and mitigate the risk? Investors have many questions: Has the company charted its “carbon footprint” – has management taken steps to inform shareowners of real or potential climate change risks – what are the potential costs of mitigating such risks – and more. Looking to put muscle behind these requests, shareowners are filing numerous proxy petitions (shareholder sponsored proxy resolutions) on the ballot in 2008. Coalitions are being formed to address climate risk issues at public companies. On September 18, 2007, a broad coalition of investors, state officials with regulatory and fiscal management responsibilities, and environmental groups filed a landmark petition asking the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to require publicly-traded companies to assess and fully disclose their financial risks related to climate change issues. The coalition formally asked the Commission's Division of Corporation Finance to immediately begin "[c]losely scrutinizing the adequacy of registrants' climate disclosures" under existing law. The institutional investors involved represent $1.5 trillion in managed assets and include major public employee pension funds, state treasurers and comptrollers, state attorneys general and major environmental organizations. Their “First of a Kind” resolution will create major waves on Wall Street and in the corporate suites as the campaign goes on. (This issue is not going anyway anytime soon.) The coalition includes the Environmental Defense, Ceres, the California State Treasurer Bill Lockyer, Florida Chief Financial Officer Alex Sink, Maine State Treasurer David G. Lemoine, New York State Comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli, North Carolina State Treasurer Richard Moore and Oregon State Treasurer Randall Edwards, as well as New York State Attorney General Andrew M. Cuomo. The Securities and Exchange Commission staff had no immediate reaction, but in the overall dialogue regarding shareholders rights, federal regulations and corporate governance, this measure landed like a bombshell in Washington, DC. Accountability-Central will continue to present news and commentary as the climate change issue unfolds and various capital markets players present their views and opinions. Comments from Accountability-Central Users
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Latest on Global Warming and Climate ChangeFebruary 9, 2010 Is Climate Change Legislation Dead in 2010?Source:Triple PunditThe latest chatter on the Hill is that climate legislation is not likely to pass this year. High jobless numbers, financial reform and the health care debate continue to thwart efforts focused on the environment. It is possible... February 9, 2010 Text of SEC Climate-Change Guidance ReleasedSource:Compliance WeekThe Securities and Exchange Commission published last week the text of its controversial new guidance on disclosing climate-change risks, giving companies a fresh set of concerns to incorporate into the annual report just as... February 9, 2010 Water at core of climate change impacts-UN experts
Source:Reuters
The main impact of climate change will be on water supplies and the world needs to learn from past cooperation such as over the Indus or Mekong Rivers to help avert future conflicts, experts said on Sunday. February 9, 2010 NOAA Reorganizes With Eye Toward Assessing Effects of Climate ChangeSource:New York TimesThe National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration launched a new climate service today, a reorganization effort aimed at improving long-range assessments of climate change, sea-level rise and severe weather. February 8, 2010 Addressing Global Warming: Retrain Coal Workers for Green JobsSource:Mary Ellen Harte & John Harte, The Huffington PostA perfect storm of factors are massing against continued coal burning, and given the catastrophic consequences of current and future climate change, it's coming none too soon. After more than a century of coal mining, the most... February 6, 2010 Bring Back Van Jones! Blindsiding Clean Energy with Dirty CoalSource:Jeff Biggers, The Huffington PostIf President Obama's brilliant green jobs administrator hadn't been hounded out of office in a bizarre witch hunt last fall, we would be engaged in an exciting discussion about pursuing a just transition to a clean energy economy... February 5, 2010 New Yale Study Shows Majority of Americans Support Climate Education and Carbon RegulationSource:Jerry Cope, The Huffington PostA new study released today by Yale University in conjunction with George Mason University finds the majority of Americans favor regulating carbon emissions and educational programs related to climate change. While the recently... February 5, 2010 Climate Change: The SEC Weighs In (Or Not)Source:ForbesNot exactly uplifting words, but they reminded me of a group of hollow, stuffed folks who seem like a "paralysed force, a gesture without motion"--of course, I'm referring to the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). February 4, 2010 House bill would prevent EPA regulating carbonSource:ReutersWith congressional action on climate legislation in doubt, two House committee chairmen have filed a bill to block the government from regulating greenhouse gases under its own power. February 4, 2010 A New Clean Economy — With Old Sources of Energy
Source:Time
Since his election, President Barack Obama has emphasized the importance of developing new sources of energy and cultivating the jobs that will come with them. "I am convinced that whoever builds a clean energy economy, whoever... |
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