bluescreen
tofu eating wokerati
The FT has been on the climate change case for ages. The cost of doing something is vastly outweighed by the cost of doing too little too late, let alone nothing at all, but their readers don't seem to have been listening. This long article (from 17 August) discusses the sluggish response by investors and the flawed models they use, greatly underestimating the risks and disruption of worsening climate conditions. When they wake up to the reality, the possible Minsky moment will be 'unpleasant, abrupt and wealth-destroying'.
Conclusion:
Paywall busted: https://archive.ph/LpoHJ#selection-1595.0-1603.115
Conclusion:
There are powerful arguments why financial institutions should pay closer attention to the physical risks of climate change. Doing so might reduce the chance of sudden shocks and reinforce the case for mitigation. Moreover, it would improve the allocation of resources, deter building in flood zones and incentivise spending on climate-resilient infrastructure.
Focusing on the physical effects of poorly mitigated climate change might seem defeatist. But time is fast running out to decarbonise the economy. Investors have begun to price in the decarbonisation challenge. They need to start counting the considerable costs of inaction, too.
Lex in depth: how investors are underpricing climate risks
The costs of inaction on global warming are potentially vast and often not sufficiently factored in to asset valuesPaywall busted: https://archive.ph/LpoHJ#selection-1595.0-1603.115