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This Gamble On Carbon And The Climate Could Trigger A New Financial Crisis

There is little evidence that institutional investors have recognised that they are sitting on a carbon-asset timebomb Kevin Watkins theguardian.com , Friday 2 August 2013 Summer 2013: eastern Europe is facing one of the heaviest floodings in the last 50 years (Photograph: Ruben Neugebauer/Corbis If you want to see market irrationality in action, look no further than current stock market valuations for the world’s major oil, gas and coal companies. At a time when governments are supposedly preparing for a global climate change deal that will cut carbon emissions , energy multinationals are investing in carbon assets like there’s no tomorrow. Put bluntly, either we’re heading for a climate catastrophe, or the carbon asset bubble will go the way of sub-prime mortgage stock. Yesterday’s disappointing second-quarter results for Royal Dutch Shell provided a useful guide to the future. Over the past couple of years the company has invested heavily in exploration. It has pumped billions of pounds into fracking for natural gas in Ukraine and Turkey; the development of tar sands in Canada, and drilling in the Arctic. The market verdict, prompted by a dip in prices, reduced profits, and concern over costs: a drop in share prices. You can’t help wondering what will happen when carbon prices are aligned with climate imperatives. We are now just two years away from the crucial 2015 UN climate negotiations. If successful, they will put a price on carbon, driving down returns on fossil-fuel investments by capping carbon emissions. Market reactions will make Shell’s results look positively healthy. Yet there is little evidence that institutional investors have recognised that they are sitting on a carbon asset timebomb. You don’t have to dig too hard to find the gap between market valuation and real world ecology. Avoiding dangerous climate change, defined as a temperature rise of 2C, will require the global community to operate within a constrained carbon budget. That budget has a ceiling of 545 gigatons in carbon dioxide (GTCO2) emissions to 2050. Today, state energy firms and private companies are sitting on reserves amounting to three times that level. Carbon arithmetic points in only one direction. If governments are serious about reaching a 2015 multilateral agreement that avoids dangerous climate change, fossil fuel reserves need to left where they are. The Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change at the London School of Economics estimates that only 20-40% of oil, gas and coal reserves held by the 200 largest energy companies can be exploited if we are to avoid dangerous climate change. Yet the market valuation of these “unburnable carbon” reserves is over $4tn, to which can be added $1.5tn in company debt. The misalignment between our planet’s ecological boundaries and energy markets is set to worsen. High energy prices and concerns over power shortages in emerging markets are fuelling a global scramble for carbon assets. Collectively, the 200 largest energy companies invested $674bn (£441.4m) on the development of new fossil fuel reserves in 2012. If financial markets are mispricing risk, governments around the world have yet to recognise some basic cost-benefits realities. Companies investing in Arctic oil and gas exploration stand to gain revenue streams that will be counted in billions of dollars. But as highlighted in a recent Cambridge University study, the rapid melting of Arctic sea ice and permafrost threatens to unlock methane emissions that will generate costs of up to $60tn, much of it associated with the impact of floods, droughts and storms in developing countries. In effect these companies are taking what they see as a one-way bet on governments failing to tackle climate change. It’s a dangerous play. If governments fail to act on their climate change commitments, financial exposure to fossil fuel assets could become a systemically destabilising liability. Five of the 10 top companies listed on London’s FTSE 100, accounting for a quarter of the indexes’ capitalisation, are almost exclusively high carbon. The Australian Securities Exchange has a recklessly high exposure to coal. The New York exchange is also sitting on a large carbon bubble. Energy companies are exposing institutional investors, mutual funds and banks to dangerously mispriced assets, yet current regulatory frameworks are failing to address the systemic threat. Unfortunately, governments are actively encouraging energy companies to bet on dangerous climate change. The European Union has driven the world’s largest carbon market into freefall by oversupplying permits, undercutting incentives for investment in renewable energy in the process. As a group, rich countries spend over $800bn annually actively subsiding fossil fuels , creating markets for oil, gas and coal companies. Britain’s recent decision to grant tax concessions to companies involved in fracking is a recent example of a wider failure to align fiscal policy with climate commitments. For every $1 invested in renewable energy support in the OECD another $7 is spent on carbon-intensive fuels. From a climate change perspective, this is the policy equivalent of a government running an antismoking campaign while removing the tax on tobacco and subsidising cigarette consumption. Developing countries are also trapped in a cycle of policy-induced carbon-intensive growth. Currently, they are spending over $1tn annually to subsidise fossil fuel use, according to the IMF. These transfers often dwarf budgets for health and education. As research at the Overseas Development Institute has highlighted, most of the benefits go to industry, large-scale agriculture and middle-class consumers. Eliminating subsidies for fossil fuels could open the door to a win-win scenario. It would cut energy-related CO2 emissions by 13%, slowing the drift towards the dangerous climate-change cliff. Coupled with signals to indicate that carbon prices will rise and early investment in renewables, it would unlock the private investment and spur the technological breakthroughs needed to drive a low-carbon transition. Diverting fossil fuel subsidies into low-carbon energy cooperation would also generate wider benefits. Developing countries such as India and China are already investing heavily in wind and solar power. But if emerging markets are to break their dangerous addiction to coal and other fossil fuels, they need financial support to phase out their carbon-intensive stock. Providing that support through the reallocation of fossil fuel subsidies would help create markets for low-carbon investors – and it would go a long way towards building trust in international climate negotiations that are too important to fail. •Kevin Watkins is executive director of the Overseas Development Institute, a UK development think tank. Continue reading

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Syria’s War Halves Wheat Harvest, Erodes State Share

Civil war in Syria has cut the wheat harvest to its worst level in nearly three decades and the government’s share of the crop is being further eroded as it struggles to procure grain from rebel-held farming areas. Civil war in Syria has cut the wheat harvest to its worst level in nearly three decades and the government’s share of the crop is being further eroded as it struggles to procure grain from rebel-held farming areas. Estimates collated by Reuters from more than a dozen grain officials and local traders suggest the harvest could be as low as 1.5 million tons, less than half the pre-conflict average and well below forecasts from a United Nations food agency. The agricultural slump deals a blow to the policy of self-sufficiency in food which is a cornerstone of President Bashar al-Assad’s efforts to sidestep Western moves to isolate and weaken his government through sanctions. That policy, part of a command economy imposed by the ruling Baath party when it took power in 1963, turned Syria into a wheat exporter until water shortages six years ago caused in part by intensive farming encouraged by hefty state subsidies. Despite good rains this year, a scarcity of seed and fertilizer combined with labor shortages and damage to irrigation systems and storage facilities from the relentless conflict have led to the worst crop since 1984, when the country was hit by major drought, the traders and officials said. Several said the harvest was likely to be as low as 1.5 million tons, with a minority saying it might reach closer to 2.0 million — still significantly lower than the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization initial forecast of 2.4 million tons, made shortly before the June-July harvest. “A favorable rain season like this year would have produced 4 million tons before the crisis, covering the country’s annual consumption,” said a regional commodities trader said. Until recently the government had stuck to more optimistic forecasts, with Agriculture Minister Ahmad Qadiri saying in May he expected output to reach 3.6 million tons. Since then officials have retreated, blaming Western sanctions for the steep fall in output. Prime Minister Wael al-Halki now says the crop will be around 2.5 million tons. State wheat trade Farmlands east of Aleppo, which has seen heavy fighting between rebels and government forces for the last 12 months, have produced just 50,000 tons of wheat so far this year compared to pre-crisis harvests of 175,000 tons. But the low yield is not the only problem for authorities who are also struggling to buy grain from some of Syria’s richest farmland — much of it now held by rebels — stretching from the northern border with Turkey to Iraq in the south-east. In the village of Deir Hafer, 40 kilometers (25 miles) east of Aleppo, sacks of Ahmed Rahal’s wheat harvest have been piling up in his makeshift warehouse. That has forced Rahal and other farmers, who used to deliver nearly three quarters of their national harvest to the government under a state-dominated wheat trade that subsidized their production, to look for other buyers. “I no longer even dare go to Aleppo to sell my wheat, there are many checkpoints on the way,” said Rahal, who was selling his 100 kilo wheat sacks to private traders. The state’s loss of control over a substantial part of the wheat growing areas means that at least half the 2013 wheat production is now outside the government supply chain, according to grains experts and commodities traders. Their view is backed up by the volume of grains collected by the wheat marketing monopoly so far. It has received only 950,000 tons, according to officials in the state run General Establishment for Cereal Processing and Trade (HABOOB). “We are getting a fraction of what we would normally get this time of the year with only a few centers opening across the country to receive wheat,” a source in HABOOB, the agency responsible for government grain procurement, told Reuters. Although the government marketing monopoly raised the price it pays for wheat by 25 percent from last year it was still below market value, prompting some farmers in areas accessible to Turkey to sell their crop there, where prices are at least double. In other rebel areas, farmers – especially those growing only wheat – have little alternative to transporting their crop for sale to government collection centers. A quarter of grain bought by the state was likely to have come from rebel areas near Hasaka in eastern Syria, said leading Syrian wheat expert Hikmat Gulak. “We have encouraged farmers in every way to go to government delivery centers, and increased payment. Ensuring Syrians are fed should be above politics,” said a grains official. The state had deposited funds worth 70 billion Syrian pounds – $350 million at current exchange rates – in the Central Bank for purchases of wheat from local farmers. Imports hampered The drop in local production since last year has forced Syria to step up grain imports with at least one million tons of mainly soft wheat purchased from global markets in 2012, according to a grain official contacted in Damascus. But increasingly short of hard currency, Syria will struggle to continue importing, he and other experts concur privately. This prompted authorities to seek to unfreeze blocked foreign accounts to pay for food purchases, they added. In a tender issued on Thursday, a Syrian state agency said it planned to pay for 200,000 tons of soft milling wheat using funds in bank accounts frozen by Western financial sanctions. Damascus first suggested that payment method earlier this month, but is not clear whether it has succeeded in freeing up any of its frozen cash. The country has so far imported only 300,000 tons of wheat, mainly of Black Sea origin since the start of the year, according to the official. A pre-crisis, one-year strategic stockpile of more than 4 million tons of wheat has almost run out in the last two years, said two former grain officials familiar with the matter. Production was around 2 million tons last year, and grain traders and experts contacted in Syria say the country would require at least two million tons of imported wheat this year to help cover the shortfall. That compared with FAO estimates of 1.5 million tons, based on official agricultural sources. On the other hand, agricultural experts say the conflict that has left many parts of rural Syria outside government control and forced nearly two million refugees to flee to neighboring countries, will inevitably ease the pressures on authorities. “The state now is feeding only part of its citizens so in fact it does not have the same burden. In rebel controlled areas, an increasingly autonomous economy with its own dynamics is developing,” said Abdullah Samaha, an Aleppo-based economist. A growing pattern of reliance by Syrians both in rebel-controlled and state-held areas on food handouts from international aid agencies such as the UN’s World Food Program, has also reduced demands on authorities. Food barter deals with regional ally Iran and credit lines have helped Damascus get 250,000 tons of Iranian flour this year, easing bread shortages in state-controlled areas caused by the loss to rebels of almost half the northern city of Aleppo, where most of the country’s milling capacity existed. Bread basket region The biggest hit to a state wheat procurement system has been the loss of nearly 50 percent of the harvest from Syria’s main eastern breadbasket area known as al-Jazira, which spans Hasaka, Deir al-Zour and Raqqa, where wheat fields rely on underground wells and the Euphrates River. The resource-rich region traditionally produced 65 percent of the country’s pre-crisis average 3.6 million wheat tons. The area around the now rebel-held city of Raqqa alone produces a quarter of the national harvest. “Last year, Raqqa delivered half a million tons to the state. This year if we have 150,000 that would be great,” said Gulak, who worked in government procurement in the Jazira area for decades. Most grain delivered to the state now comes from Hasaka, with 600,000 tons compared to over 1 million last harvest. “This year more farmers will keep more of their harvest for personal consumption and sale to local merchants because in such circumstances its safer than sending to a faraway government centre,” said Haneen Bakr, a former grains official in Damascus. “In some areas where armed groups are in control they are forcing people to sell their wheat at lower prices.” Islamist rebel groups such as Ahrar al-Sham that operate in Syria’s northern rural areas were already making steps to fill the vacuum left by the state by buying crops from farmers. Several rebel groups have even brought second-hand mills and harvesters from Turkey to operate in rebel-held towns across northern and eastern provinces. In the rebel-held border crossing of Bab al-Hawa near Turkey and other towns in rural north Syria, armed groups now manage and operate several small flour mills with an average 2 to 4 tons daily capacity, supplying local bakeries. agweek Continue reading

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Returns On US Timberland Hit Highest Since 2008

Returns on US forestry hit their highest since the global economic crisis, and are poised for further gains, despite setbacks to hopes for housebuilding, a key destination for lumber. A timberland index compiled by National Council of Real Estate Investment Fiduciaries showed returns of 9.36% in the year to the end of June, the highest figure since autumn 2008, as the world was falling into slump. The figure, of which income accounted for 2.71 points and capital appreciation for 6.51%, came against a backdrop of disappointment for the domestic property market, slowed by rising borrowing costs. “The second quarter rise in US interest rates and the 9% drop in overall US housing starts triggered a slight downward adjustment in forecasts for housing demand for the remainder of 2013,” the council said. Shares in DR Horton and PulteGroup tumbled on Thursday after both housebuilders reported slowdowns in sales growth, fuelling fears over the impact of raised interest rates on the sector. DR Horton said that its new house orders rose 12%, year on year, in the latest quarter, below Wall Street expectations of a 28% figure, and the 34% the group achieved in the previous period. PulteGroup orders fell 12% in the quarter, compared with Wall Street forecasts of 4% growth. ‘Growth ahead’ However, Ncreif said that “expectations are still on track for housing starts to climb north of 950,000 starts for 2013, a strong improvement after 2012’s 780,000 starts. “As the economy and housing markets continue to improve, the timber fund index should continue to see positive results.” The returns from timberland are well below those of 20.0% from farmland over the past year, but unlike agricultural property is on a rising annual trend, on Ncreif data. The disappointing domestic housebuilding conditions contrast with buoyant export demand, which drove log prices in the US Pacific North West up 10% in the April-to-June period. Chicago lumber futures tumbled by 24% over the quarter. Weyerhaeuser profits rise The data came as Weyerhaeuser, the US timber giant, reported a quadrupling to $196m in underlying earnings for the April-to-June quarter, on revenues up 19.4% at $2.14bn, growth it attributed largely to the “improving housing market”. Earnings per share reached $0.35, ahead of Wall Street forecasts of a $0.29-a-share result. Weyerhaeuser shares edged 0.3% higher to $52.85 in early deals in New York. Continue reading

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