Difficult to invest in green energy in Canada without Big Oil - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 07:15 PM | Calgary | -11.4°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Calgary

Difficult to invest in green energy in Canada without Big Oil

The movement to get groups like universities and pension funds to drop oilpatch investments still has momentum worldwide. But some say that pulling money from fossil fuel producers in Canada is not the best way of promoting green energy projects.

Divestiture movement continues as organizations clean carbon holdings from portfolios

Robert Walker, with NEI Investments, discusses whether Canada's oil and gas sector is an ethical investment or not

9 years ago
Duration 2:01
Robert Walker, with NEI Investments, discusses whether Canada's oil and gas sector is an ethical investment

If you thought the divestiture movement was losing steam,Norway's recent announcementshows there still is momentum around the world tostop investing in fossil fuels.

The country has confirmed that its hefty$900-billiongovernment pension fund, considered thelargestsovereignwealth fundin the world, willpurge some of itsfossil fuel stocks.

Many other organizations have made similar moves in past years.

Concordia University in Montreal launched a$5-million funddedicated to divestment, social and ethical investing. Stanford University in Californiapledged not to make direct investments in companies whose principal business is coal for energy.The Rockefeller Brothers Fund pledged to reduce investments in coal and the oilsands projects to less than one per centof its portfolio.

But in Canada, divestituremay not be the best method of promoting renewable energy development.

The reason is that, outside of government, it is the traditional oil and gas companies that are constructing much of the green energy projects in the country, such as wind, hydro and solar.

For instance,the largest wind and hydro projects in Albertaare owned in whole or in partby traditional oil, gas andcoal companies.

Capital Power is an example of a private sector company with a mixed bag of energy projects. It's aleader in renewable energy development and uses fossil fuels too. The Edmonton-based company has more than 20 wind and solar power plants in North America. It also operates a coal mine as well as several coal- and natural gas-fired plants.

"There arecampaigners that want Steve Williams, the CEO ofSuncor, to be the Koch brothers. And he isn't the Koch brothers, he's been out there in favour of a price on carbon," saidRobert Walker, withNEI Investments in Vancouver.

Walker describes the fossil fuel divestment campaign as inapplicable in Canada because the industry operates differently here than elsewhere in the world. It's difficult to invest just in wind or solar energy. He argues that a more effective strategy is to invest in traditional fossil fuel companies and work with them to improve their environmental performance. But he does say their progress is too slow.

"We do have investments in the oil sector. But we have avoided some companies historically that have denied climate change and opposed any rational policy response," said Walker.

That's the approach recommended by former Reform Party leader Preston Manning, speaking at a recent responsible investing conference in Banff. Manningsays, in general,industryis shifting its focus from economic development to environmental protection

"I wouldn't apologize for Alberta's natural resource base. We should be proud of what we are endowed with," said Manning.

War on carbon

Divestiture is all about reducing carbon emissions around the globe. While the world needsto reduce greenhouse gases, people still need oil and gas to function. That's why some experts are wary of the divestiture movement, arguing it's not a simple black and white issue.

"It's similar to the war on tobacco," said Todd Hirsch, chief economist with ATB Financial."Except societywon't fall apart without tobacco. Certain individuallives may fall apart, I don't know. But carbon is not the same way. Every person in North America, in some way or another and somemore than others for sure, we all dependon hydrocarbons. The economy would essentially collapse, not just Alberta's."

The divest movement haseven been described as "intellectually lazy" byUniversity of Calgary business professor Loren Falkenberg.

Risks of Big Oil

While Hirsch, Manningand Walker allsuggest investors try toengage traditional fossil fuel companies, others disagree with the philosophy.

"I fear that if you invest in those companies now, in the hope of supporting green energy, your dollar kind of gets cancelled out by the much larger investments that they are making in the carbon intensive side of energy," saidAndrew Logan, director of theoil and gas industry program at Ceres, a non-profit that advocates for sustainable business practices.

He suggests companies such as Shell and BP have not followed through on the robust commitments made to developing renewables.

"A couple of years ago, there were few vehicles for institutional investors, let alone individual companies, but that's beginning to change," saidLogan.

Instead of divesting carbon assets from aportfolio, investors can choose tounderweighheavy carbon interests.Some investment firms crunch the numbers and analyze how much direct and indirect carbon emissions companies are producing. Evaluating a company's carbon intensity is not difficult to do, according toYuliaReuter, senior research analyst withMSCI.

While Canadian oil and gas companies are working to improve their environmental performance, currentlow oil prices may hinder the process. Money is tight andseveral companies are bleeding cash. With low commodity prices, alternative energy projects can seem less appetizing for investors. That's exactly what happened with vehicle sales, once prices dropped at the pump. Sales of gas-guzzling SUVs took off.