Tag Archives: alternative
When It Comes To Climate Change, Shell Is Backing The Wrong Horse
Opinion: Shell, with its enthusiastic embrace of fracking, has a credibility problem Eamon Ryan Fri, May 10, 2013, ‘ Shell faces up to climate change challenge” ran the headline in this paper last week. I wish it were true but the company has a credibility problem when it comes to the issue. It is betting everything on the presumption that we will keep burning the fossil fuels that it keeps pulling up out of the ground. It is hard for Shell to be talking climate one minute and a new “golden age of gas” the next. It is a major player in the energy game and that cannot but affect how it sees our energy future. It makes sense when Shell says that the capture and storage of carbon in power stations will be one of the solutions we will need, but relying on that crutch is not enough of a response to the scale of crisis we face. Its own New Len s Scenarios analysis recognises as much. Shell’s scenario planning is always very professional, which makes its latest document all the more scary to read. No matter what way it slices and dices the future, it cannot seem to find a way to keep the global temperature increase beneath the 2-degree safety barrier that scientists say we should not pass. Fossil fuels My only hope is that Shell is missing out on what might be possible because as a fossil fuel company it cannot imagine what it might be like for us to live fossil-free. The company is sceptical that renewable power supplies can provide the energy we will need, but solar power has increased 100-fold in the last 10 years. In Ireland , wind power alone could power our computers, run our cars and heat our homes. The price of solar and wind power is consistently falling and the finance gurus in Bloomberg New Energy Finance say that 70 per cent of all investment in power generation between now and 2030 is going to go into renewables. There is a war raging for who will be our preferred power supplier and I think Shell is backing the wrong horse. However, it is winning the PR battle hands down. The European council of energy ministers met in Dublin last month. They came out of with nothing but fear on their lips about the competitive advantage that the US now has as it fracks its way to energy independence. North Dakota is visible from space at night, as the oil companies flare off their excess natural gas. Shell is heading into the Arctic to drill and is chasing the shale gold rush right across the US and China . It is a risky bet, not just for climate reasons but also for the known unknowns that surround the whole shale revolution. No one is certain what the long-term supply will be, whether there will be enough clean water to flush the gas out and what the real economic price of the gas is. Europe could try to beat the Americans at the shale game by drilling across the Continent or we could instead lead the alternative energy efficiency and renewables revolution. Alternative energy The Shell scenario planning estimates that we will be able to bring the level of carbon emissions down to sustainable levels by the end of this century, but that might be a couple of decades too late. Is it beyond possibility that we could bring that change forward and create a stable economic system that will work as long as the sun still shines? Eamon Ryan is leader of the Green Party and a former minister for energy Continue reading
Investors Target Central European Property
Investors Target Central European Property By Francys Vallecillo | April 2, 2013 11:53 AM ET Investment activity in Central European commercial property reached €958 million in the first quarter of 2012, a six percent increase over the five year average, but down from €1.8 billion in the previous quarter, according to a new study. The Czech market reported an upward trend with six closed transactions in the first quarter worth €237 million, compared to a mere €20 million during the same quarter in 2012, Cushman & Wakefield reports. Hungary also saw an uptick, posting €159 million in transactions in the first quarter. But the increase in activity was not universal, Cushman & Wakefield reports. In Poland volumes declined in the first quarter to €465 million, compared to €818 million in the first quarter of 2012 and €618 million in first quarter of 2011. Prague, Czech Republic A joint venture between Norges and ProLogis for distribution space accounted for 50 percent of the industrial sector investment in Central Europe in 2012. Although overall investments are lower than the previous quarter’s, activity suggests volumes will match the numbers in 2012, the firm said. “Some investors are considering taking more risk and reviewing the more developed and relatively mature parts of CE and finding not just a yield advantage and better relative economic growth than in the west, but also an improving level of liquidity,” Cushman & Wakefield partner Charles Taylor commented. The Central European office space market is leading investor interest with investments of €646 million for the first quarter of 2013. Significant office transactions include the purchase of New City in Warsaw by Hines, Skanska’s Green Towers in Wroclaw by PZU and the Andel Park B purchase in Prague by GLL. Central Europe is tracking the international trend. As economies around the world start recovering, an increase in demand for office space can be seen in various markets, including major metropolitan areas in the U.S. and countries in Latin America . Retail investment in the region was at its lowest since 2009 with Poland reporting the only large retail transaction for the first quarter. The Poland market reported investments of E465, a decrease from E818 million during the same period in 2012. Continue reading
US Investors Targeting Foreign Property
US Investors Targeting Foreign Property By Francys Vallecillo | May 2, 2013 11:29 AM ET Driven by potentially high returns, U.S. investors are increasingly targeting funds that invest in foreign commercial and residential property. During the first quarter of 2013, investors put $2.6 billion into mutual and exchange-traded funds that invest in offices, hotels, and other foreign commercial properties, the largest number since the record $5.3 billion during the first quarter in 2007, Reuters reports. In 2012, Americans directly invested $38.71 billion in foreign commercial properties, an increase from the $32.8 billion the year before, according to Real Capital Analytics. “The big plus is diversification of your portfolio, number one,” New Jersey’s public pension funds chief investment officer Timothy Walsh told Reuters . “Number two, we actually think there’s better returns going forward.” Investors are also attracted by the high net operating income found overseas, Mr. Walsh added. Overall, global commercial investment is expected to increase this year . But this is a new model for many U.S. investors. “The basic assumption and belief, which is still untested, is [returns] won’t be super highly correlated with stocks and bonds in other countries,” said Joseph Gyourko, a business professor at the University of Pennsylvania specializing in real estate, told Reuters . “It’s going to be different than owning equities on the German stock exchange.” As a way for Americans to get in the foreign property game, almost 5.5 percent of 401(k) retirement funds now offer a global real estate fund as an option, up 30 percent since 2007, according to San Diego-based retirement firm Brightscope. Overall, as global markets are emerging and distressed markets are recovering, investors can benefit from increasing prices in local economies. “If you have a specific view on different countries or different regions, buying the real estate is more direct to the local economy of that country, than just stocks of companies that have a global revenue base,” WisdomTree Investments director of research Jeremy Schwartz told Reuters . Directly investing in foreign real estate can be accompanied by political and economic risks and experts warn to always use caution. “If you land a bunch of Americans and say just go out…they’re going to get slaughtered by the local guys,” chairman and chief executive of Prologis Inc Hamid Moghadam warned. ↓ Read User C Continue reading




