:
Yes, that's why I said we'll discuss that in the steering committee. Thank you, Mr. van Koeverden.
We have with us Peter Dietsch, professor at the University of Victoria, who's testifying as an individual. We have from the Canadian Climate Institute, Jonathan Arnold, acting director, clean growth. From the Carbon Tracker Initiative, we have Mr. Michael Coffin, head of oil, gas and mining.
We'll start with Professor Dietsch for five minutes, please.
:
Thank you for inviting me as a witness to your committee.
I'd like to start by acknowledging the Lekwungen people from whose territories I'm zooming in today.
[Translation]
I will make my presentation in English, but then I will be happy to answer questions in French.
[English]
In a nutshell, here's what I'm going to show in the next five minutes. I will argue that our current financial infrastructure throws a wrench in the green transition. I'll proceed in four main steps. I will look at the main policy approach today, explain where that approach goes wrong and why, and I will look at the situation here in Canada in particular. Finally, I will finish with a concrete policy recommendation.
:
Okay. You've just heard the four steps.
Step number one is the main policy approach today.
There are many different ideas out there about how to facilitate the green transition. However, here's something that policy-makers globally seem to agree on today. They agree that relying on government spending alone will not be enough for a successful green transition and that private investment will be needed too.
This is why different policy frameworks try to incentivize private investment in green energy. Think of the Biden administration's Inflation Reduction Act, or here in Canada, the clean fuels fund. Now, what all these initiatives are betting on is that investing in green energy will be sufficient to bring emissions down and to meet our climate goals. This, I will argue, is a mistake because it's based on a misunderstanding of how our financial system actually works.
To see why that's the case, consider two features of contemporary economies. The first feature is money creation. Many people think of commercial banks as intermediaries. Robin needs to put in some money before Chris can take out a loan. It's true that banks are intermediaries, but they're not just intermediaries. Their banking licence enables them to create money out of thin air, and they will do so if they think the borrower will pay the money back. There are some regulatory constraints on this, but they're not very restrictive.
What this means is that if a bank thinks that a fossil fuel project will be profitable, it will provide a loan. The other important thing to realize here is that no licensed bank in an economy such as Canada's can extend any loans without the support of the central bank, and in our case, it's the Bank of Canada. This support takes many forms, including clearing the money the commercial bank has lent through the national payment system. In other words, it would be misleading to call money created by commercial banks “private finance”. Instead, this is public money creation outsourced to private institutions.
Let's move on to the second feature of contemporary economies: negative externalities from greenhouse gas emissions.
We know that market prices don't incorporate the social and environmental costs of climate change, which are huge. Various forms of carbon pricing, including carbon taxes, try to correct for this inefficiency and raise the price of carbon-intensive activities to a sustainable level. However, economic models tell us that today's carbon prices are nowhere near where they would need to be. Notice what this means. Many fossil fuel projects that are unsustainable and inefficient will still be profitable.
Now step back and ask yourself what happens when these two features of contemporary economies that I've just described occur at the same time. In short, commercial banks will keep lending to the fossil fuel sector. They can keep lending to the fossil fuel sector because there's no firm limit on their lending. They will keep lending because they deem that sector to be profitable. As long as carbon prices remain inefficiently low due to political choices, this will indeed be the case.
In other words, all the green investments our current policies are encouraging will not stop commercial banks from lending to fossil fuel projects; they'll simply do both. We will end up with more and cheaper energy, but we won't bring emissions down.
If you saw the early estimate for 2023 emissions published by the Canadian Climate Institute last week, we're at 702 megatonnes. That's only slightly down from the year before, and the subcategory of emissions from oil and gas is actually up.
This brings me to my third point: the situation here in Canada.
Since the adoption of the Paris Agreement in 2015, the world's 60 largest banks have provided $6.9 trillion in financing to fossil fuel projects, with $705 billion U.S. coming in 2023 alone. Five Canadian banks are among the top 21 banks lending to fossil fuels worldwide, and they have provided a total of $911 billion U.S. to the sector since 2015. What I want to re-emphasize here is that this is not private lending. This is lending that happens under the auspices of central banks, including the Bank of Canada, and this lending is therefore a political choice.
If you talk to representatives of the Bank of Canada, they're likely to contest part of what I've said. They will say that climate considerations are not part of their mandate, and this is true. However, notice that this is entirely compatible with their policies having significant side effects on climate and on climate policy.
Finally, this is point four: policy recommendations.
In light of this analysis, what could be done? How could we stop our financial architecture from putting a wrench in the green transition and instead mobilize it for effective climate mitigation?
What we've seen is that it's not enough to turn the financial capital—
:
Thank you for the opportunity to meet with the committee this morning.
My remarks today focus on four policy insights from the Canadian Climate Institute's research and our work with the sustainable finance action council on developing a green transition taxonomy in Canada.
The first insight is that climate change and the global response to it is quickly transforming the fundamentals of economic competitiveness. The costs of climate change are increasing rapidly and already costing Canadian households billions of dollars. These costs will continue to rise as extreme weather events become more frequent and will be a drag on the financial system and economic growth.
At the same time, a combination of markets, technology and policy is accelerating the energy transition faster than what most experts thought possible even just a few years ago. Renewables such as wind and solar are being deployed faster and cheaper than any other source of electricity in history. Over 70 countries have now committed to net zero by mid-century, which covers over 90% of global GDP, 80% of global oil demand and 75% of global natural gas demand. All of these trends are reshaping what competitiveness means in the global economy.
The second insight is that the architecture of the global financial system is aligning with this new economic future through standards for climate-related disclosure, taxonomies and transition plans. On climate-related disclosures, countries representing more than half of global GDP have either adopted or are in the process of adopting the ISSB's standards. This includes the European Union, the United Kingdom, Japan, Australia and Brazil. Thirty countries have either adopted or are developing their own sustainable taxonomies. This list includes most of the G7 and G20 countries, plus many developing economies.
Efforts to standardize corporate transition plans for businesses and financial institutions are also well under way. The U.K.'s transition plan task force has set a gold standard for what credible transition plans look like, while the IFRS—the body responsible for setting global accounting standards—is now adopting this work in full. These developments are standardizing and improving information in capital markets, ensuring transition and physical risks from climate change get priced into how capital gets allocated. This helps reduce greenwashing and drives investments that are genuinely aligned with global climate goals, both of which help reduce systemic risk in Canada's financial system.
The third insight is that falling behind on these emerging global standards will compromise Canada's ability to attract capital. Transitioning Canada's economy to compete in the global energy transition requires an additional $80 billion to $115 billion annually. Most of this capital will need to come from the private sector and foreign investors in particular, given the relatively small size of Canada's economy. The U.S. Inflation Reduction Act is amplifying the competition for attracting these investment dollars.
These facts stress why it's imperative that Canada keep up with global standards in climate-related disclosure, transition plans and taxonomy. On one hand, investors and lenders looking for opportunities within Canada will expect the same level of high-quality and consistent rules set internationally. Without complete and comparable data, investors and lenders will underinvest due to this higher risk. On the other hand, Canadian multinationals are increasingly exposed to more stringent reporting and disclosure standards in other jurisdictions. A 2024 report by the Institute for Sustainable Finance found that over 1,300 Canada-based companies will be subject to the EU's new sustainability reporting standards.
The fourth and final insight is that strengthening Canada's financial architecture coupled with strong climate policy can improve the country's long-term competitiveness. So far, Canada has been slow to adopt global standards in all three areas and should accelerate these efforts. On disclosure, the Canadian sustainability standards board is in the process of adopting globally aligned disclosure standards, but it's facing pressure to weaken them. Canada has also been slow to develop a green transition taxonomy. The sustainable finance action council's 2023 “Taxonomy Roadmap Report” was supported by the country's 25 largest financial institutions. However, efforts to establish a national standardized taxonomy have yet to get under way.
Overall, maintaining and growing Canada's market share in the energy transition will hinge on its ability to attract capital. Matching or surpassing international standards will help the country get there. In fact, Canada is well positioned to take a global leadership role in these areas. The SFAC taxonomy road map provides the first sophisticated framework for labelling transition investments, designed to help Canada transition its existing emissions-intensive engines of growth. Done well, Canada could play an outsized role in promoting the adoption of this framework in other emissions-intensive economies. Having one of the ISSB offices located in Montreal also gives Canada a unique leadership platform and responsibility.
In addition to accelerating these foundational pieces of financial architecture, other key policies are important complements to improving Canada's long-term competitiveness. Among these, Canada's industrial carbon-pricing system is driving the bulk of emissions reductions in the Canadian economy, while also protecting the competitiveness of individual sectors and helping to attract low-carbon investment.
Thanks for the opportunity to discuss these important issues, and I look forward to your questions.
:
Yes, they do, but we can always do better.
This is a very good question to reframe what I said earlier. Central banks' main mandate today in most countries is the narrow mandate of price stability. For a long time, I would say for most of the postwar period, that was a good mandate, because what central banks did to promote price stability did not have too many unintended side effects on other policy objectives.
Now, with the financial crisis, with the COVID crisis and with the new instruments that central banks have been employing, there have been more unintended side effects of these policies on other policy fields, including wealth inequality and the climate. That's why we're in a position where we have to rethink the interaction between what central banks do and what other parts of government do.
What I tried to show earlier is that something that happens under the supervision of the Bank of Canada, namely bank lending, throws a wrench in the green transition. I think that's something that we need to realize and act upon.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
Thank you to the witnesses for joining us. We're always so grateful for expertise and for people who do this research for a living and come to our committee to provide us with wisdom and insight.
My first question will be for Professor Dietsch.
Professor Dietsch, earlier this year, our government brought forth Bill , which contains a truth in advertising amendment that requires corporations to provide evidence to support their environmental claims. Subsequent to that, the Pathways Alliance, a group of oil sands companies, removed all of their website and social media content from the Internet.
The Competition Bureau defines greenwashing as false or misleading environmental ads or claims, or environmental claims that seem vague, exaggerated or not accompanied by supporting statements. It's fairly clear that we've seen that type of behaviour or conduct from the oil and gas sector in Canada, but in your view, are there financial institutions in Canada that are also greenwashing when they use broad terms like “sustainable finance” without backing them up with data?
:
Good morning, and thank you for the opportunity to speak.
Climate change is absolutely the defining challenge of the century and will give rise to increasingly severe financial risks unless we accelerate climate action. Risks include not only the cost of adapting to physical impacts, for example, increased fire and hurricane intensity, but also those related to transitioning businesses as policy-makers act to attempt to avert the worst physical aspects. Transition risks include both policy and regulatory-related transition risks, predominantly focused on decarbonizing activities, and technology-related transition risks related to changing demand patterns and consumer preferences.
Individual sectors are impacted differently by these climate-related financial risks. They are, however, all interrelated. Policy action to reduce the physical impacts on sectors such as agriculture drives policy action to decarbonize others, such as transport—for example, mandates to shift to electric vehicles. In turn, this reduces demand for oil products for transport fuels via substitution. Coal and gas are similarly impacted as electricity is increasingly generated from renewables.
Climate risks are felt by businesses across all sectors and, by extension, their investors. This is particularly so for investors with long-term liabilities invested across a broad cross-section of the market—universal owners—including defined benefit pension schemes. Given many such schemes—including four of the five largest Canadian funds by assets under management—are state-backed, climate risk is ultimately held by governments and taxpayers. Climate change must be viewed as a systemic financial risk to markets, and politicians who dismiss climate risk as a woke concern do so at their own peril.
From the Canadian economic perspective, agriculture is a big sector, highly exposed to physical impacts, while also a major fossil fuel extractor and exporting economy. As European banks increasingly turn away from fossil fuel lending, these risks are becoming concentrated within the Canadian financial system. Lower long-term demand for oil and gas exports will also impact our system.
Investors must consider the impacts of these climate-related financial risks on portfolios and use appropriate climate models and scenario analyses to do so. Pension funds should keep the methods they use to assess risks current and keep members informed on how they are managed.
Current practices in the investment industry have major shortcomings, however. A range of key players, from investment consultants to pension funds and banks, rely on economists' flawed research to map warming to future GDP damages, informing investment decisions as well as supervisory stress tests. Such economists' work is generally self-referential, generally ignoring critical feedback from climate science.
Invalid assumptions within one such model, the DICE integrated assessment model from William Nordhaus, include, one, that industries not exposed to weather will be unaffected by global warming, which also ignores the two types of transition risks I described earlier, and two, a quadratic function is appropriate to extrapolate damages, despite other functions—for example, an exponential function—equally fitting our historical data but projecting far greater climate impacts.
Such damages are likely greater for a given temperature and occur sooner in time. They will likely have a greater cost in present value terms—i.e., the financial costs are less discounted—so the benefit of climate action is underestimated within the financial system.
Carbon Tracker's report “Loading the DICE” warned that, “Following the advice of investment consultants, pension funds have informed their members that global warming of 2-4.3°C will have only a minimal impact upon their portfolios.” Another study looking at economists' projections suggested a 5°C world would lower GDP by 10% and a 7°C world by just 20%, which cannot conceivably be reconciled with climate scientists' warnings that such temperature rises will be an “existential threat” to human civilization.
Ultimately, financial institutions, central banks, regulators and governments have all been misled by such models, underestimating the dangerous and likely economic damages of climate change.
While that report was focused on U.K. pensions, it featured in the Canadian press and findings were applied to a number of Canadian pension funds including AIMCo, PSP, IMCO and others, where a “lack of disclosure leaves plan members [ultimately] in the dark about the pension risks of climate change”.
Furthermore, a review of 2023 Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures reports of leading pension funds found many others were lacking in terms of their climate disclosures, particularly around client choice of scenarios and climate risks being presented.
We see a number of areas for potential regulatory interventions. These focus on investors, investment consultants, the economist community and a consideration to require corporates to publish transition plans—as, for example, the U.K.'s transition plan task force and the EFRAG guidance in the European Union.
:
No, that's fine. I've had some time to think about it now. The question was on whether or not greenwashing is more widely spread than the fossil fuel sector.
I'd say two things. I'd say that there is greenwashing going on in the financial sector too, but there's an explanation for this. As Mark Carney, who you want to invite, I think rightly, to your committee, keeps repeating, financial institutions are very bad at evaluating climate risk. They might actually believe that something is sustainable when it isn't.
That leads me to the second point, which is that we need a paradigm shift about what's going on. Blaming commercial banks alone would be short-sighted. It's the Bank of Canada that supervises what they do. They lend to fossil fuels. Who gives the Bank of Canada the mandate? The government does. Who elects the government? We do. In a way, we're all in this together. We have to realize that these are political choices that we're making. What's happening in the financial sector is in a way a huge implicit subsidy to the fossil fuel sector. That is not discussed as such.That's what we need to focus on.
:
Thank you. I couldn't agree more with the notion that we're all in this together. Climate change doesn't care what colour your lawn signs are. It affects us all—but I won't say equally. It certainly does affect already more vulnerable people more than it does others.
This question is for all three of you, with perhaps Professor Dietsch going first. Most people agree with the notion that runaway carbon emissions are largely responsible for climate change and extreme weather, and understand that oil and gas producing nations like Canada need to reduce our emissions. All industries in Canada have demonstrated some progress except Canada's oil and gas sector. Higher emissions are being driven primarily by oil sands and bitumen production in Alberta. Despite that, Conservatives seem to be of the opinion that Canadian emissions are somehow exceptional, more ethical or less damaging to our environment.
Is that compatible with the science? Do you believe pricing pollution is one way to reduce our emissions?
Professor Dietsch, I'll start with you.
:
Thanks for the question.
To start with the last part first, yes, carbon pricing is fundamental. The research of the institute has shown that the industrial carbon pricing system in Canada has driven the bulk of emissions reductions in the country. That would include emissions reductions from such industrial sectors as oil and gas, although, as you mentioned, emissions continue to go up. Carbon pricing plays a role there, certainly, but there are other complementary policies as well that we've looked at. Those include more stringent methane regulations, a cap on oil and gas emissions and other market-based policies.
I think this gets back to the idea of a taxonomy. We've laid out a framework for how investments in oil and gas might meet the label of transition under very stringent requirements. We put out a paper on that last year. Essentially, it would require commitments at a corporate level to net zero with clear, credible transition plans as well as having, at the asset level, an emissions curve that aligns with net zero. It's a high bar but not impossible. That's the type of policy that we see as necessary to bend the curve.
I'd like to thank the witnesses. Their presentations were very interesting, but I didn't have their notes. I would like them to send them to us.
I'll start with you, Mr. Arnold, from the Canadian Climate Institute.
We often talk about clean growth. It irritates me to see these two words used together. Mr. Coffin has just touched on this point, saying that we must first move towards reduction. Growth in a decarbonized economy means prioritizing carbon-neutral energy sources—
:
I imagine you're going to reset the clock to zero, Mr. Chair.
As I was saying, the words “growth” and “clean” are often lumped together, and that really upsets me. Mr. Coffin just mentioned it. We must first move towards reduction. Growth in a decarbonized economy means prioritizing energy sources that are carbon-neutral and those that are the least harmful to the environment and human health.
When the financial system, faced with a lack of regulation, fails to adjust, it's the whole of society that pays for the damage caused by the climate crisis. Just think of the enormous damage in Montreal this summer, in August.
Mr. Arnold, your organization has a lot of credibility, and I think the federal government is listening carefully. Will you unambiguously support the climate-aligned finance bill? I imagine you're very familiar with Bill , which is being considered by the Senate. I'd love to hear your comments on it.
:
Thank you for the question.
I think there are many elements of that legislation that align with the research we've done related to taxonomy and disclosure. I think that, broadly, there's a lot more effort that needs to be made in that regard.
To your to your earlier point, we released a report two years ago now called “Sink or Swim”, which really tried to divide up the the types of activities and the types of change that we need to see in the economy. We stress-tested the Canadian economy based on different global low-carbon scenarios. From that, we were able to see different impacts in what we call “demand-decline sectors”, which are fossil fuels. There, what really needs to happen is that those sectors—those businesses—need to transform into new business lines that align with net zero.
There's a second bucket of sectors we call “carbon cost sectors”. These are the sectors that are emissions-intensive, that need to reduce their emissions and will have demand through the transition.
:
I'll stop you there, Mr. Arnold.
What I understand from your answer to my question is that you support Bill . You even think we could go further. Indeed, this bill also deals with taxonomy.
Mr. Coffin, it was music to my ears when you said we had to move towards a reduction. We welcomed the CEOs of the five biggest banks and they explained how they were contributing to the fight against climate change. You mentioned pension funds, but there's also insurance and all the other financial sectors.
Can you tell us how their actions affect climate change? That's my first question.
Secondly, I'd like to know how successful the establishment of a serious and predictable regulatory framework for insurance, pension funds and all other sectors of finance could be.
:
There's an awful lot in there.
For me, there's a real need, from the taxonomy question, to think about things that are genuinely transition and sustainable activities or transition finance. I think it's really important that oil and gas companies ultimately don't receive transition finance because they don't have to become anything. It's critical they move away from what they currently do, but they don't have to become anything. I think there's a real risk that companies will get financing through transitional green bonds to do potentially green things, but it actually helps to continue the financing for what they're doing.
Driving that stronger regulation is really important. That's particularly the case for things like carbon capture and storage and for things like natural gas and LNG. If you have regulations, the financial systems and the pension funds being, in some ways, hoodwinked by the industry that carbon capture and storage is a solution and that it's a climate-positive piece, that is actually one example of when the investment sector and investment community must really challenge what they are being told by industry—critically challenge it—and must not fall for, ultimately, these false solutions by industries that are perpetuating business as usual.
Crucially, government frameworks and regulation...and I've seen this through my work on a number of—
I'll start with Professor Dietsch.
First of all, thanks so much to all the witnesses.
If I understand your argument correctly, the green transition is unlikely to succeed in the way that we're currently approaching it. Really, fossil fuel investment has continued and will continue to remain strong. We've heard from previous witnesses during this study that one in five bank directors have an explicit connection to a fossil fuel company. We know there's a lot of overlap between the interests of the big banks and the interests of the large oil and gas companies in Canada.
Can you talk a little about how your suggestion—this credit policy—might impact that?
The bottom line of my intervention is to say that it's not enough, and this is what current policies in both Canada and elsewhere are focused on. It's not enough to turn the tap on for green finance investment, because we have a financial system that is malleable and that is flexible. When we do that, we just get more and cheaper energy.
What we need to do is to actively turn the tap off for fossil fuel financing. Whatever the landscape of interests—the cross-holdings between companies, say, between the financial sector and the oil and gas sector—might be, I think effective regulation would prevent some of this investment from happening.
This allows me maybe to say something that I was going to say at the end, namely about what a credit policy could look like. For instance, you could charge banks that have a higher exposure to fossil fuels. You could charge them higher interest rates as the central bank, or you could require higher capital requirements. At the extreme, you could even tell them that if you get into financial trouble due to your fossil fuel holdings, we aren't going to bail you out. All of these are measures that would effectively incentivize those banks to reduce their lending to the sector.
Broadly, I think this just comes down to a big question of information not being standardized in a way that participants in capital markets can really use it such that you would see those risks starting to get priced into decision-making.
Right now, we do not have a good, full grasp of the physical risks of climate change or the physical costs of climate change. As a result, those are not getting priced into decisions. We still see housing developments, for example, being developed in areas that are at extreme risk of flooding, sea level rise or wildfires, so our adaptation team at the institute is doing work in this area to study that in more detail.
The same goes for transition risks. We don't have a standardized definition of what is “green” or “transition”. As a result, there are lots of different interpretations, and that creates ambiguity. The lack of standardized, credible information causes many investors to underinvest in the energy transition and to over-invest in things like oil and gas, which carry a higher transition risk.
:
Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
I would like to thank all the witnesses for coming to take part in our consultation today. They are welcome in their House of Commons and their Canadian parliament.
Climate change is real, we all know that, and we need to adapt to its effects. As said in his speech to a gathering of 2,500 Conservative activists in Quebec City a year ago, we need to offer tax incentives to reduce emissions using new technologies. Secondly, we need to speed up the process of giving green energy the green light. Canada has every advantage in terms of natural resources and energy, and we need to develop this potential to the full. Canada will be very well served by itself, first and foremost. We must also work hand in hand with first nations to develop all this potential, if this is to be done on a first nation's ancestral lands. These four elements have always been repeated by our party, and they were well defined by our leader, Mr. Poilievre, a year ago.
Mr. Arnold, earlier you said you were very happy to see the solar and wind energy sectors developing. In your opinion, if we put a lot of effort into accelerating the green process, whether it's solar energy, wind energy, hydroelectric energy, geothermal energy or even nuclear energy, will Canada come out on top?
As we've said before and we'll say it again, we need to speed up the process of giving green energy the green light.
Thank you to the witnesses.
I could ask you so many questions. I could sit and listen to you all day, but I have a few pointed questions. We just heard from Mr. Deltell that the issue is about increasing investments in technology. The Conservative Party likes to say that this is the problem, that we're not investing sufficiently in technology and that this will solve our problems.
Could you comment on this? Do you think that investing in technology will, in fact, on its own, meet our net-zero targets?
Perhaps we can start with Mr. Arnold.
:
The first point was to say that the risks of climate change can very much be financial as well as physical. As I outlined, there are transition risks that impact, for example, the oil and gas sector, particularly in Canada.
As global demand falls for oil and gas, particularly for transport fuels, that creates a big problem. By ignoring that transition risk, you're ultimately ignoring the financial headwinds facing that industry and the potential to significantly over-invest in new projects and new production that ultimately fail to deliver a financial return to investors and stakeholders. The use of those fossil fuels continues to take the world beyond climate limits and thus produces a cost through the externality associated with the carbon emissions.
By failing to take account of that, it ultimately fails to take account of the financial risks. Ultimately, that is bad for all. Crucially, it's failing to recognize the systemic nature of climate change and the fact that it will impact all sectors.
:
This is an important point.
There are two ways central banks think about climate. One is, to what extent does climate impact finance? The other is, to what extent does finance impact climate?
Central banks across the world have come a long way in thinking about how climate impacts finance. They are encouraging commercial banks to look at their exposure to risks. When climate considerations undermine price stability or financial stability, the central banks are on it.
In the other direction, it's not the case. As I laid out earlier, when the financial sector acts in a way that slows down climate mitigation, central banks are not very proactive about that part of the equation. I think that's an important part of the equation.
:
We're back with our second panel.
We have with us Mr. Richard Dias, who's appearing as an individual. He is a global macro strategist. We have from Environmental Defence Canada, in person with us, the senior manager of climate finance, Ms. Julie Segal, and from Re-generation, we have the co-executive director, Gareth Gransaull, who is also by video conference, as is Mr. Dias.
You have five minutes for opening statements.
We'll start with Mr. Dias.
:
Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. Thank you.
As a proud Quebecker and Canadian, I'm honoured to speak with you today and I want to express my gratitude to the committee members for the opportunity to provide testimony.
First, I'll tell you a little bit about myself. I graduated from McGill in finance and economics. I am a CFA charter holder, with over 18 years of experience as a global macro strategist. In this capacity, I've worked for large institutional asset managers and hedge funds in the city of London, United Kingdom. I'm now back in Canada as a portfolio manager, helping families preserve and grow their wealth.
I'm one of the co-hosts of The Loonie Hour, Canada's most popular economic and financial market podcast, which is committed to demystifying capital markets for Canadians. I love what I do, and I'm committed to a dispassionate analysis of macroeconomic phenomena. I've earned my reputation as someone who can articulate cogent and pressing analysis without fear or favour.
In my role as a global macro strategist, I've researched more topics than I can remember—productivity, housing, monetary policy, energy, etc. Having worked for a large financial institution, I've also been exposed to green finance, ESG and other sustainable investment initiatives, as well as the corporate apparatus that has mushroomed to exploit society's concerns over the environment.
Having reviewed some of the witness testimony in preparation for today, I want to highlight that several speakers are engaged by firms that would stand to directly benefit financially from the types of regulations that are likely to result from the study in question. As loyal employees, they are responsible for telling this committee that green finance, sustainable investing and the regulations proposed will benefit Canada and the environment writ large. However, their firms' revenues are tied not to lowering global emissions or hitting Canada's Paris Agreement commitments but rather to the billable hours or extra fees they can amass to help navigate the increasing regulatory burden that these regulations would necessarily result in.
I bring this up to cast a spotlight on something that is a critical pillar in the investment world, which is fiduciary duty—the obligation to act in the best interests of clients or employers. Put simply, who do you ultimately work for? Investment managers, for example, have the solemn duty to maximize financial returns for investors or pensioners. It is not to use their position of incredible power to prioritize one social or environmental goal over another, no matter how noble that goal is. Using regulations to coerce financial institutions to subordinate their clients' interests in favour of political goals is on its face unethical, as it would be for a bank manager to direct a bank's considerable financial power to achieve a political aim rather than to act as a sober custodian for its shareholders.
Furthermore, it is not even clear that this would work, resulting in both unethical action and a net loss of returns to its clients and profits to its shareholders—and there are plenty of examples. The consultants, however, will get very rich.
In effect, this is legislation through the back door. Given that reporting of this nature is onerous and the negative impact on a country suffering—and I quote the Bank of Canada here—a productivity emergency, it is clearly ill-advised.
Another angle for your consideration is the law of unintended consequences. On this I submit the following testimony. Green energy policy, as it is constituted, is the greatest thing to happen to fossil-fuel companies since the transatlantic flight. I'll repeat that: Green energy policy has been a gift for the industry you're trying to neuter.
Humans consume 101 million barrels of oil a day. This number is rising; it is not falling. Even in a world of hyper EV adoption, it is likely to stay well above 100 million barrels for at least a generation or two. The issue with this is that recent green energy policy has been focused on starving public oil companies of capital in order to constrain or constrict the supply of oil, but that is doing nothing for demand. This situation has, predictably, lifted the floor on oil prices. As a result, normally spendthrift oil companies are now reluctant to deploy capital to procure fresh reserves.
Cash flows, on the other hand, are at record levels because demand is rising and prices are high. This has lifted cash flows, along with the falling capex. There has been an explosion of free cash flow yields. Profits are at a record level, and cash is being returned to shareholders by dividends and share buybacks, and these companies are paying down debt. Green energy policy has instilled a fiscal discipline in the CEOs of these oil companies for which shareholders have been begging for 40 years. The industry has never been healthier.
Surely—
My name is Julie Segal. Thank you for inviting me to appear.
I lead a program on climate finance policy at Environmental Defence. I managed a portfolio of investments before working on policy. I'm a member of the Quebec government's advisory committee for its road map to a sustainable financial system.
This study about the environmental and climate impacts from Canada's financial institutions is important. Canada needs policy to align its financial system with climate action and Canadians want it. I'm glad to detail solutions today.
Globally, Canada is still recognized as a low-regulation jurisdiction on sustainable finance. The lack of climate-aligned finance policy in Canada harms our environment and people living across the country. The lack of climate-aligned financial policy also damages our competitiveness for business and investment. For the benefit of this environment committee, I will focus on the environmental impacts.
To start, Canadian financial institutions provide among the largest sums of money to oil, gas and coal. The harms from oil, gas and coal are irrefutable when it comes to climate change, with fossil fuels being the leading cause, and are likewise obvious for other environmental harms like water pollution.
Where our banks and pension managers place money today determines these real-world impacts. Their climate ambitions do not match the urgency required to limit global warming, and they are not investing sustainably enough. Nearly all of Canada's financial institutions have committed to reducing their climate-harming emissions, but very few have plans or have started to act. Data shows that financial institutions' targets and plans improve when they are regulated to deliver on them.
People across Canada understand this. This is a very important point I'd like to underline. In recent polling, people across Canada said they do not trust their finance institution to take meaningful action on climate change without regulation. Over 90% of people do not trust voluntary action from their financial institution. The majority of people surveyed want rules to ensure the financial system invests more sustainably. When this is framed as directly countering greenwashing, just about 80% of people want the government to implement sustainability rules for the financial sector.
We have ready-made policies in Canada that can be executed. The climate-aligned finance act introduced by Senator Rosa Galvez is currently being studied in the Senate. I had the pleasure of being an adviser for this bill. It outlines a set of policies that would align our financial system with Canada's climate commitments of limiting global warming to 1.5°C.
More broadly, requiring plans from financial institutions—known as climate transition plans—is key. This is something nearly all participants mentioned today. This ensures that banks, pension plans, insurers and large companies detail plans for climate action, including short-term actions.
Modernizing the mandates of financial regulators is another key point for ensuring accountability, as is clarifying that leaders of financial institutions should aim to help mitigate climate damages. Public opinion supports these policies. Over 120 groups have specifically endorsed the climate-aligned finance act. Elected officials from four political parties, including members from this committee, endorsed a motion to align our financial system with safe climate action.
People understand that climate change is expensive. People understand that financial institutions should serve their interests, as the clients of banks and the beneficiaries of pension funds. Right now, the financial sector is under-regulated on climate and environmental impacts.
Canadians are waiting for outcomes on climate-related financial policy. This is the missing piece of Canadian climate policy.
In your committee report, I very much encourage you to urge the federal government to prioritize using all tools at its disposal to align Canada's financial system with the Paris Agreement. Canadians want mandatory policies that ensure that finance is sustainable and resilient to climate change.
Thank you very much for inviting me to testify today. I look forward to questions.
:
Thank you so much for your time. It is an honour to speak to you today.
My name is Gareth Gransaull. I'm a researcher at the Institute for Integrated Energy Systems at the University of Victoria. I am also presenting as the co-executive director of Re-generation, a non-partisan coalition of business and economic students at 23 campuses across the country.
I want to begin my remarks by observing that the people around the world most concerned about climate change are not actually environmentalists. They're military experts. The Pentagon calls climate change an “existential threat” and is preparing for a world of heightened national security risks due to conflict, displacement and natural disasters. However, when you look at the climate stress tests of major financial institutions in Canada, in the fine print you'll notice something strange. Many of them say that climate change is not a material risk to their asset values.
How is this possible? Nobel Prize-winning economist Joseph Stiglitz and Nicholas Stern have publicly said that the mainstream models we use to quantify climate risk, which central banks and prudential supervisors then use to create the guidelines they give to financial institutions, are deeply flawed. As a result, the data on which the so-called risk experts rely is often very wrong.
Let's give an example. We know that the world is warming faster than predicted, which means more days of extreme heat. At temperatures higher than 35°C, photosynthesis begins to shut down. Therefore, scientists predict that by 2030, the frequency of crop failures in the world's breadbaskets could increase by 450%. The most prominent model that purports to account for the impacts of climate change on the economy, the DICE model, as Mr. Coffin mentioned earlier, literally assumes that the systemic failure of global food production wouldn't matter that much, because agriculture is only 3% of GDP. Let that sink in for a second.
In other words, we're living in a reality gap. There's the real world, where 26 million people were displaced by natural disasters last year alone, and then there's the alternate reality that the banks and regulators are living in, where three or four degrees of warming apparently won't affect asset prices. That is actually what the CFA Institute is currently teaching their certificate students. Conversely, if you look at the recent report by the U.K. Institute and Faculty of Actuaries, you see that they predict a possible destruction of global GDP by as much as 50% by 2070.
The world is currently on track for 3°C of warming. At 1°C, the town of Jasper, Alberta, burnt to a crisp overnight. Because the climate system behaves in non-linear ways, 3°C is not three times worse than 1°C. It's exponentially worse.
There are nine globally significant tipping points that could all cascade simultaneously. The Institute for Economics & Peace predicts that at current rates, there could be 1.2 billion climate migrants by 2050. This is why the 1.5°C temperature threshold is so important. The good news is that the International Energy Agency has developed a net-zero pathway that would allow us to preserve a livable climate without relying on unrealistic levels of reverse combustion. This is coming from the world's top energy economists, but they're very clear about what this means—no new fossil fuel projects after 2021.
The largest five Canadian banks are not aligned with this science-based pathway. They have given over $1 trillion to the fossil fuel industry since the signing of the Paris Agreement, including $26 billion to fossil fuel expansion in 2022 alone. Climate change is a systemic risk to the financial system, but it's one that the financial system itself causes by funding fossil fuel expansion. This self-reinforcing cycle is not going to end without greater policy ambition. Canada's current approach is a “choose your own adventure” that allows financial institutions to disclose risks without actually requiring actions to limit those risks.
To address this, we need mandatory 1.5°C-aligned transition plans that align with international best practices, including the UN guidelines for net-zero commitments. One way would be to introduce the climate-aligned finance act put forward by Senator Galvez, which would substantially improve corporate governance on this issue. We also need to make sure that new fossil fuel projects are not given a green label under any voluntary or regulated system and that natural gas stays out of Canada's transition taxonomy.
Thank you so much for your time. I'd be happy to answer any questions.
:
Having worked for large financial institutions, I think it's important to understand how, why and when these people get paid, and it is absolutely not to meet global or countrywide green energy goals.
I'm not sure if I'm allowed to give specific names of ETFs as examples that claim to be designed to support climate initiatives or whatever, but what they do is exploit people's good intentions or noble view that emissions should be lower or what have you.
The consultants you've heard are the exact same way. If tomorrow someone invented a machine that immediately fixed climate change at the snap of a finger, those consultants would all be out of business, and I'm sure they would be reluctant to suggest that as a means to deal with this obviously very big problem.
It's very important that we keep those people's incentives front of mind and hold that fiduciary duty as a sacred totem. Those investors should be representing the financial interests of those clients, first and foremost and above all else, and allowing for legislation. If you want to ban oil and gas, bring it to Parliament and let's vote on it rather than going through the back door, which is the way I see it, and subverting the fiduciary duties these investors have on behalf of their clients.
:
Absolutely. Let's be honest. For some of the companies that are supposed to be leaders in this ESG stuff, it's basically just a box-ticking exercise. It's really important because, through the advent of ETFs, the brokerage fees—the fees that these large asset managers have been able to charge—have basically been destroyed.
You used to be able to, through all kinds of either research dollars or soft dollars, charge hundreds of basis points to your clients for the assets that you were managing. ETFs basically allowed individuals to buy pieces of, let's say, the S&P 500 for a de minimis amount of money. It absolutely destroyed that part of the business.
Financial businesses have been so readily willing to sign up for sustainable investment stuff, green energy policies and ESG, because if they say, “Oh, it's expensive to do the due diligence around this business,” of course, that expense means you're adding value. You're doing your job as the financial guy or girl to see if this business is really meeting their climate objectives.
What you end up doing is you supposedly add value, and then you're allowed to charge a lot of money for that value and, therefore, your margins go up because instead of charging five basis points on a S&P 500 ETF, you're now allowed to charge 60 basis points for a product that basically does the exactly the same with scarcely any reporting.
That's not to mention it's not at all clear they even meet these objectives that they set. For example, there's a vegan climate ETF that charges 60 basis points of management expense ratio that basically just tracks the S&P 500, which you can buy for five basis points. The company is happy. The regulators are happy. The consultants are happy. The only person who seems to lose out is the individual who genuinely cares about either being vegan or about the climate or what have you.
Thank you to our witnesses.
Based on this discussion we've been having this morning, I have some questions around the changes we might consider recommending to the Bank of Canada or to the Bank of Canada Act.
I'm going to start with Ms. Segal.
It's very interesting to see how Senator Galvez's Bill is progressing through the Senate. They passed second reading over a year ago, looking at measures like the reporting requirements, the enforcement of targets with respect to commitments on climate, the additional capital adequacy requirements for banks, the appointment of persons with climate expertise on the boards of reporting entities and the establishment of climate alignment as a superseding duty for directors, officers or administrators of reporting entities. It's definitely not a status quo bill.
Could you comment on how we could possibly include the climate change taxonomy in the Bank of Canada's mandate to promote the economic and financial welfare of Canada, knowing that climate change is a real risk to our economic and financial welfare?
:
Thank you, MP Longfield.
I'll start off by saying that I appreciate the end framing of taxonomy and the Bank of Canada. I think it's very important to look much broader. The taxonomy is one piece of policy that has gotten quite a bit of discussion, and the Bank of Canada is one financial regulator. I think, when looking at all of the pieces within the package of CAFA, including many that you mentioned, including transition plans and updating the mandates of regulators so that they can hold accountability and can evaluate risk on climate change, that much broader package of policies for coherent progress on climate-aligned finances is what I would encourage the committee to consider.
Regulators in Canada, including the main federal financial regulator, OSFI, and the Bank of Canada, have studied the significant risks of moving too slowly on climate transition. They've highlighted that billions of dollars are at risk of vanishing, essentially, of being lost in the financial institution if they move too slowly on climate change and if the policy environment moves too slowly on climate change.
In moving forward with climate-related financial policies, like transition plans, like all of those mentioned and the other ones mentioned in CAFA, it's very important to create lines of accountability. To ensure the effectiveness of policy and regulation, you need oversight on those, just like in any other policy. That's why modernizing the mandates of financial regulators is such an important piece.
I'll highlight that other jurisdictions have moved forward with that as a core part of not just their climate strategy but also their financial strategy. The European Union, as part of their green deal, introduced a package of climate-related financial policies, including clarifying the roles of regulators to oversee the new climate-related policies they're putting forward.
Mr. Gransaull, your organization defines itself as an NPO run by young Canadians. You aim to contribute to the leadership development of the next generation. I think that's a fine mission, and I applaud it. In particular, you are training these people to design the economy in a way that better serves human and ecological well-being.
Last June, we hosted CEOs from major banks and oil companies. On that occasion, Mr. Kruger, from the oil sector, told us that the idea that “the prosperity of the oil and gas industry comes at the expense of the planet” was a myth. According to him, “it's not true”.
I'd like to reiterate one of the problems that was mentioned, and it kind of ties in with a question posed by my colleague Mr. Longfield. When there is no scientific expertise on boards of directors, for example those of financial organizations, there is a lack of data when it comes to finding suitable solutions for investments supporting the transition. In fact, you gave a few examples of misinformation earlier on.
Given the mission that your organization pursues, what do you think of the statement made by Mr. Kruger, CEO of the Suncor company?
:
Thank you so much, Madame Pauzé, for the question.
I believe the statement by Rich Kruger is an intentionally misleading one. To the extent that oil and gas companies are misaligned with the recommendations of the International Energy Agency on science-aligned 1.5°C pathways in which no fossil fuel developments are to be sanctioned after 2021, it is very obvious that they are pursuing short-term profit at the expense of the health of the environment.
The interesting thing is that this exact kind of trade-off is something that oil and gas executives are very aware of. Imperial Oil did modelling in the 1990s in documents, which have now been made public, regarding the economy-wide effects of a national carbon price. This information is available in reporting by Geoff Dembicki in his recent book, The Petroleum Papers.
The results of the modelling that Imperial Oil did found that, while a national carbon price would raise the overall national GDP in the long term by stimulating the development of new sectors, it would actually reduce Imperial Oil's profits directly for the business lines it was currently in business for. It then decided to spend the next few decades lobbying against robust climate policy, which is why we're in the situation we're in now—in addition to the behaviour of many other companies in that regard.
:
Thank you very much for the question, Ms. Pauzé. I'll answer in English.
[English]
The European Union has a perspective that considers both the risks and the impacts of the financial sector when it comes to climate change and sustainability. In Canada, we don't yet have a disclosure premise to even just get information to the market, let alone considerations of how investments affect the environment and climate change.
To some of the earlier discussions today, I'll highlight that, in fact, disclosures do not necessarily affect financial flows one way or the other. They provide information. They're in fact quite benign.
What the European Union does further, and what I encourage for consideration in Canada, is to have policies that look at the actions and impacts of financial flows in advancing what you were highlighting, Madame Pauzé, as a concept of the double materiality of financial flows. Finance does have real impacts on the worsening of climate change or resilience to it.
Thank you to the witnesses for your testimony.
I want to start with Mr. Gransaull.
In response to something Mr. Dias said, in your comments you noted the importance of keeping LNG out of the taxonomy. Mr. Dias said that was surprising, given the U.S. is using LNG to drive down emissions.
Now, in January of this year, the U.S. announced a pause on LNG export permits, because their analysis is out of date and doesn't account for the greenhouse gas emissions. Can you talk a bit about why it's so important that we do not include fossil fuels—and, in particular, LNG—as part of the taxonomy and particularly why we would not want to label fossil fuels as sustainable?
:
Thank you, Ms. Collins, for that question.
First of all, there is a myriad of reasons why this is necessary, to the extent that.... Essentially, natural gas, for many reasons, has fugitive methane emissions that are not measured, so a lot of the claims that have been made—that natural gas is the reason why various jurisdictions have actually seen a significant decline in emissions—are oftentimes not accounting for the role of this other greenhouse gas, which is actually, in the short term, 81 times as powerful as carbon dioxide. That's a very important point.
Also , there is another point that's very important to raise. At this point, because of the long-term trajectory in the decline of prices in renewable energy in ways that have been entirely unpredicted by economists—as a result of rapid learning curves and technology adoption—we now know that renewable energy in a lot of places is cheaper than natural gas at this point, which undermines the long-term investment thesis for new LNG in a way that ultimately means that, a lot of the time, new LNG exports will actually displace demand for new renewable energy, particularly in Asia.
The other point about the cost curve that's necessary to know is that this also causes a risk of stranded assets for new LNG as an asset class in a way that is likely to cause significant financial effects in the future.
I would highlight the well-put points by colleagues from Carbon Tracker saying that transitioning away from fossil fuels is essential to keep warming to safer levels. Decarbonizing the process of that in fact creates an opportunity cost. As I said, I used to work in finance, and that concept of opportunity cost is fundamental, as is the sunk cost of throwing bad money after bad, which we should not be doing with this taxonomy.
I'll underline again this global perspective and agreement of transitioning away from fossil fuels. The United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change, which includes just about 200 countries, agreed that we need to transition away from fossil fuels and increase renewable energy and energy efficiency. Just two days ago, the UN Summit of the Future reiterated those points about transitioning away from fossil fuels, scaling up renewable energy and increasing energy efficiency.
That trajectory is quite clear globally and Canada would be entirely remiss to move in a different direction. That's from a climate perspective. From an investment perspective, the credibility of a taxonomy would be incredibly hampered, to put it lightly, if it were to include fossil fuels. For both business and environmental reasons, artificially labelling fossil fuels—oil, gas or coal—as sustainable does not make sense.
:
The principal allies of Canada that have been moving forward with transition plan regulation include the United Kingdom, Australia and the European Union. They have regulated this in the EU through what's known as the corporate sustainability due diligence directive, in the U.K. through a landmark initiative called the transition plan task force and in Australia through a comprehensive sustainable finance road map.
All of these have started with very traditional financial regulation policies by requiring transition plans in disclosure. The new government in the United Kingdom has committed to requiring alignment with 1.5°C from those transition plans, so it's saying that you not only must have one but also need to have a credible one for climate action. That is recognized as the gold standard, the benchmark, of transition planning globally. Standard setters, globally, the ISSB, as it's known, has picked up that U.K. progress for transition plans, and it's only proliferating globally. It is happening through traditional financial policy mechanisms and being continuously strengthened, globally, even though Canada has not yet started and certainly should.
:
Thanks very much, Mr. Chair.
Ms. Segal, we have heard a lot about this kind of doomsday scenario from Canadian economists, who claim that oil sands production and the contributions to the economy are so vital to Canadian identity and to the Canadian economy, yet we know that oil sands are basically the only sector that is still increasing its emissions. It contributes a large, but less than 2%, quota to our annual GDP.
I don't want to take away from the importance of the energy sector in Canada. It certainly has driven our economy for many years.
Is it your perspective or opinion that without oil sands production in Canada our economy would flatline and stop growing, or would we hit a giant recession, as has been intimated by other witnesses?
I don't have a personal opinion on this, but my understanding of the research is that the oil sands provide an increasingly small economic contribution to Canada. The oil and gas sector has been shedding job opportunities voluntarily for many years—actually before climate policy even really began at the federal or provincial level.
It has been shedding workers and communities who devoted their lives to the industry in efforts to perhaps consolidate operations. In essence, it has been making an increasingly small contribution to the real benefit of Canada's economy and workforce, etc.
The emissions from the oil and gas sector are obviously quite harmful. The environmental impacts from the oil and gas sector are obviously quite harmful if we consider the toxic waste-water leaks that have happened from large oil and gas companies, which were revealed earlier this year.
I would highlight all of those points and reiterate what I shared before about this sunk-cost fallacy. Yes, that has been part of the economy of Canada for many years, but in fact all of our competitors—many of whom other witnesses mentioned, including Asian economies—are actually moving much faster towards the climate transition. China is the fastest installer of renewable solar energy. It is the fastest innovator in green technologies—to the extent that Canada is already falling behind.
I very much encourage policies that ensure we create job opportunities and economic opportunities in the obvious contemporary green economy rather than the anachronistic one that no longer serves us.
:
Am I correct that this was being directed toward me, Madame Pauzé?
One thing that people don't quite understand is that the financial system is deliberately opaque and often made out to be much more complex than it is.
Financial policy is an opportunity, in fact, for government to take accountability for an important sector that is having an impact on the world that we're living in and on the effects of climate change. By not regulating the financial sector, it's missing a very important piece of Canadian climate policy, which needs to be made consistent with other pieces.
I would also highlight again the very significant cost of inaction here. This is relevant to people living across the country. This is relevant to businesses and investors. If we think about the drought in the Prairies in 2021, it cost and harmed farmers living there. The B.C. atmospheric river caused significant devastation and supply chain damages across the country.
Those really show the need for economic policy.
:
The idea that there are no trade-offs is, to me, one of the major fallacies of this kind of analysis and work. What you're seeing in Germany is a perfect example of that. Germany's economy shut down nuclear power plants and is transitioning to renewable energies, and, as a function of that, their industrial production has collapsed and their unemployment rates are rising. Their economy was centred on turning cheap energy into products that we all wanted.
One person outlined that you don't care about people. I would tell you, as a person who grew up in a working-class neighbourhood with working-class parents, that employment and a growing economy are the best ways you can improve the lots in life of underprivileged people and people who don't have fancy degrees and are certainly not consultants.
I think this idea that there are no trade-offs to constraining and basically shuttering the single most important importer of hard currency to our economy in the form of fossil fuels is, to me, very naive and, I would argue, disassociated from the fact.
:
I'd say there would be numerous responses.
One is that the idea that everything we are asking for is a violation of fiduciary duty is false. There are many legal experts across the country who have issued opinions that the responsibility of corporate directors to understand and mitigate climate risk is a necessary part of fiduciary duty in Canada.
I would add that, in Canada, fiduciary duty is defined as a duty of care for the interests of the corporation, which can include a large variety of concerns, including long-term concerns. Also, we must understand there are companies that have already failed as a result of climate change. Pacific Gas and Electric in California had a $30-billion bankruptcy that their corporate directors were not able to foresee as a result of climate change. Now the company doesn't exist.
In terms of fiscal discipline—
:
I believe there are a lot of considerations involved.
One of them is that there are sometimes, unfortunately, trade-offs between the very short-term interests and the long-term interests of companies.
In the way capitalism has evolved over the last 50 years, there has been an increasing trend towards defining fiduciary duty in very short-term ways, particularly as the compensation of corporate directors has been increasingly linked to stock price, which was not always historically the case. As a result, events like the bankruptcy example I gave are more likely to be the case in the future, to the extent that corporate directors are incapable of acting on longer-term time horizons, including the horizons over which climate change materializes.