Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
The drivers of low carbon business strategies Andrew Sentance, Warwick Business School Warwick University Climate Policy Workshop 24th February 2010 Warwick Business School 24 May, 2017 Greenhouse gas emissions, by source Global GHG emissions in 2000 = 42GT CO2 equivalent 3% 5% 25% 14% 18% 14% 8% Source: Stern Review (2006) Warwick Business School Power Industry Transport Buildings Land use* Agriculture* Waste* Other 13% * Non-energy emissions Three key business sectors Energy (3.7% of UK GDP) Transport (4.5% of UK GDP) Agriculture (0.7% of UK GDP) Note: UK imports of food and fuels = 4.8% of GDP Warwick Business School Climate change – the role of business Reducing energy use and carbon footprint Transformation of energy and transport sectors Investing in low carbon technologies Enabling consumers to make cost-effective low carbon choices Warwick Business School Two related questions What is currently driving business action on climate change? What are likely to be the most effective mechanisms to influence future business action Warwick Business School Potential business drivers Price and cost Regulation and taxation Brand/reputation Business strategy Warwick Business School Business attitudes to climate change % of companies (N= c.2,000) Brand/reputation Environmental issues Corporate strategy New products Investments Purchasing/supply chain Importance Frequent action Regulatory strategy Carbon trading 0 Source: McKinsey Survey, 2008 Warwick Business School 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80 Current business drivers Strategic and reputational drivers seen as most important by majority of businesses Brand/reputation, corporate strategy and new products are the most significant areas of action Traditional economic drivers appear less significant in driving action But current regulatory and price signals are weak and current business action likely to be inadequate Warwick Business School Potential size of carbon markets 20000 Million tonnes CO 2 emissions, 2002 18000 Total emissions from fossil fuels 16000 Emissions from power and industrial sectors (estimated) 14000 12000 10000 8000 6000 4000 2000 0 European Union United States of China, India, Mexico, Brazil, America (25) South Africa (+5) G7 EU25, Jap, Aus, Can, USA OECD Top 20 Global emitters Extending EU ETS to power and industrial sectors in Top 20 countries would create a market of US$90-350 bn Warwick Business School UK carbon “taxes” £/T of CO2, 2009 values 300 250 200 150 100 50 0 -50 Domestic gas Warwick Business School Climate change levy EU ETS permits Stern carbon price Air passenger duty Motor fuels Carbon emissions per head CO2 per capita, 2005 values 2050 target 2-2.5 T Source: OECD Warwick Business School World GDP growth and CO2 emissions from energy Average annual growth rates, percent GDP 5 Carbon Dioxide Em issions 4 3 2 1 0 70s 80s Note: Carbon dioxide is measured in millions of tonnes Source: World Bank and BP Statistical Review 90s 2000-08 Sustainable global emissions scenarios Annual greenhouse gas emissions (GtCO2e) 70 60 50 40 30 20 2016:4% 10 Increased early grow th 2000 2010 2020 2030 2040 0 2050 Year 2016:4 trajectory with global emissions peaking in 2016 with subsequent reduction in total emissions of 4% Source: Climate Change Commission Strengthening business drivers Strengthen regulatory and price signals Reinforce strategic motivations for business action These are not alternative approaches – they should be complementary Warwick Business School Influencing business strategy Laissez faire – let the market decide Direct intervention and “picking winners” Strategic policy frameworks Warwick Business School Laissez-faire and “picking winners” Market failures: Uncertainty Innovation externalities Environmental externalities Incomplete markets Government failures: Lack of knowledge Poor cost control Delivery failures Political influence Warwick Business School Strategic policy frameworks Government sets overall objectives and identifies policy tools Action taken is consistent with the framework Clear and coherent communication to guide business expectations and planning Credible institutions and processes with expert and independent input Policy framework is stable and not subject to major paradigm shifts Warwick Business School An example Warwick Business School Climate policy frameworks - issues International dimension and need for policy agreement and co-ordination Long feedback horizon to ultimate policy goal Short track record of development of policies and institutions Multiple policy instruments Important sectoral dimension (esp for energy, agriculture and transport) Warwick Business School Climate policy - implications International framework is critical to underpin national policy credibility Focus on actions, not just targets and outcomes, to shorten feedback loop Need to build institutions Cannot rely on a single policy instrument (eg carbon tax or carbon price) Framework needs to encompass vision for changes required in key sectors Warwick Business School Why should business respond? Potential for growth and new business opportunities Consistency with regulatory, price and cost drivers Anticipating future business environment Strategic relationship with government(s) Risk of stranded business model Risk of stranded investments and products Competitive threat Warwick Business School Strategy: Porter’s Five Forces Warwick Business School Conclusions Strategic motivation is a potentially strong driver towards low carbon business models Already an important influence on business thinking and action Needs to complement more traditional price/cost and regulatory drivers Credible, coherent and well-communicated policy frameworks are crucial to drive strategic behaviour Design of frameworks needs to take into account specific characteristics of the climate policy issue, including international dimension Warwick Business School