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Enel, Google and other businesses power past coalImage Source: Shuttershock
Business stands ready to partner with governments to help deliver the vision
of the Paris Agreement. But in order to successfully navigate the potential
disruption created by the low-carbon transition, companies need to know that
governments have a clear destination.
By steering strongly with loud and clear policy signals, governments can
help businesses to fully engage and deliver the scale and speed of
decarbonization needed to limit global warming to well below 2 degrees
Celsius.
One of these clear policy signals came to the fore last month in Bonn,
Germany, during the annual gathering of policymakers, forward-looking
companies and non-state actors known as the Conference of the Parties
(COP23).
At COP23, the U.K. and Canadian governments launched the
Powering Past
Coal Alliance.
Bringing together a group of more than 25 countries, states and regions,
this alliance sends a powerful message that coal’s time has passed.
The
declaration
stated (PDF)
that the
health
effects of air pollution from
burning coal, including respiratory diseases and premature deaths, impose
massive costs in both human and economic terms. Recent analysis has found
that more than
800,000 people die annually around the world from
the pollution generated by burning coal. One U.K. study found that deaths
related to emissions from coal cost the country’s economy between
$2.91 billion
and $8.42 billion
in a single year.
Now is the time for business to harness the level of ambition shown by
governments, to drive real change in the global economy, protect the health
of vulnerable people and limit global warming. The alliance invites
companies to sign the
Powering Past
Coal Declaration,
which supports governments with a commitment to powering their operations
without coal.
100 percent renewable
Many forward-looking businesses already embrace the shift away from coal and
other fossil fuels, by committing to shift to 100 percent renewable power.
The
RE100, a partnership between
The Climate Group and
CDP, is a collaborative
global initiative uniting more than 118 influential businesses committed to
100 percent renewable electricity.
Together, they are creating more than 155 terawatt-hours (TWh) in demand for
renewable electricity annually — about as much as it takes to power
Malaysia.
Companies such as Apple, BMW, BT, Coca-Cola European Partners, General
Motors, Microsoft Corporation, Google and Unilever have committed to going
100 percent renewable and it’s proving to be good for business. These
companies are part of a group that outperformed companies in the Bloomberg
World Index by 9.6 percent and the Dow Jones Sustainability World Index by
19.6 percent,
according to
CDP data.
"Electricity costs are one of the largest components of our operating
expenses at our data centers and having a long-term stable cost of renewable
power provides protection against price swings in energy," said Urs Hölzle,
senior vice president of technical infrastructure at Google.
Now is the time for business to harness the level of ambition shown by
governments, to drive real change in the global economy.
Many of these companies are looking beyond their own operations and actively
helping to push the global market for renewables forward. For example,
HSBC recently announced it will provide $100 billion in
sustainable financing and investment by 2025, while also committing to
reduce
exposure to thermal coal
and transition to 100 percent renewable electricity.
"We plan on working closely with RE100, other corporates, governments and
regulators to open up renewable energy markets and support the
decentralization of power generation across our operational centers," said
Andy Maguire, group chief operating officer at HSBC Holdings. "This will
enable HSBC and other corporates to develop PPAs globally and support the
transition to a low-carbon economy and 2-degree world."
Meanwhile, leading utilities such as
EDP and
ENEL have set
science-based targets to help transform
energy markets and deliver their corporate strategies.
"Enel’s engagement in climate action is an integral part of the group’s
business strategy, as shown by our pledge to become CO2-free by 2050 and our
focus on the group’s renewable growth," said Enel Group CEO Francesco
Starace.
A just transition
Such collaboration between government and business can be a force for real
and positive change. But as the transition away from coal gathers pace, it’s
vital to ensure that workers' rights are protected.
Companies increasingly see the need to consider the rights of workers in the
energy transition. Those who do not risk facing the growing economic
headwinds that often accompany
higher
unemployment, such as increased
taxes and stagnating growth.
"Part of this just transition is to invest more money in stimulating the
right transition," said Paul Polman, Unilever CEO and a leader of the B
Team, a global nonprofit that brings businesses together to collaborate on
social and economic good.
Following the launch of the alliance, B-Team leader and General Secretary of
the International Trade Union Confederation
Sharan Burrow said the transition
needs to secure decent, low-emission jobs while upholding rights, protecting
vulnerable workers and communities and leaving no one behind.
By: Nigel Topping
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