Investors
who refuse to put their money into oil, gas, and coal may reap financial gains
for doing the right thing.
Fossil Fuel Extinction, an OtherWords cartoon by Khalil Bendib |
As
Earth Day approached, fossil-fuel divestment actions rattled college campuses
large and small. Targets ranged from Harvard University’s $36-billion
endowment to the University of Mary Washington’s $46-million nest egg.
That’s
only natural: Students, professors, and alumni are increasingly telling their
schools to put their money where their mission is by shunning oil, gas, and
coal assets. And there’s no more symbolic time of year to make that kind of
statement.
Conservative
icon George Will, realizing this is a thing, ridiculed Syracuse
University’s recent decision to sweep all dirty-energy holdings out of its $1.2-billion endowment. Even for fossils like the widely
syndicated columnist, it’s too hard to ignore the growing movement to make
universities — and everyone else — lock these industries out of their
investments.
If
you find this debate confusing, you’re not alone. People on either side argue
over different things.
Supporters
dwell on the specter of a climate catastrophe. They cast divestment as a moral,
ethical, scientific, and environmental duty. Foes, meanwhile, harp about
finances. They sneer that shunning entire industries is reckless and bound to
crimp returns.
I
would support divestment even if the naysayers were right. Happily, they’re
not.
Yes,
the fate of the Earth matters more than how quickly Harvard’s endowment
crosses the $50-billion line. But it turns out that marrying your money and
climate mission can pay dividends.
In
other words, this increasingly diverse community — both the First Presbyterian
Church of Tallahassee and the First Unitarian Church of Portland, Oregon are in
— will probably profit from jilting oil, gas, and coal.
MSCI,
a leading global stock market index company, tracks fossil-free performance. It
determined at the end of March that stock portfolios without exposure to these
industries had outperformed investments that included fossil fuels over
the prior five years. Since November 2010, MSCI’s fossil-free index has gained 13 percent on an annualized
basis, eclipsing conventional investment approaches by 1.2 percentage points.
That
bodes well for divestment. So, would Harvard’s holdings gain or lose if it took
the plunge?
Because most of those assets are secret, I can’t say. Yet it’s public
knowledge that the university owns (or did pretty recently) shares in Anadarko,
a Texas-based oil and gas company that’s active in fracking and played a major role in the 2010 Deepwater Horizon oil disaster. Harvard also owns shares in Vale SA, a Brazilian-based mining conglomerate, Fossil Free Indexes observes.
Over
the past year, Anadarko shares declined 6.5 percent while the Standard &
Poor’s 500 benchmark stock index gained 11.5 percent. And Vale shares
have withered as prices for the coal and iron ore the company exports have sunk. Its shares
have lost more than half their value over the past 12 months.
Even
though Anadarko hasn’t faltered as badly as its competitors — oil and gas funds fell an average of 17 percent last year — Harvard’s
endowment would have performed better without it or Vale.
The
upshot: When George Will says “the effect on the growth of institutions’
endowments will be negative” if they divest, he’s ignoring market realities,
flaunting his financial ignorance, or deliberately misinforming the public.
Some
dirty-energy asset prices clawed back from multi-year lows while Harvard
students, alumni, and faculty were making a very public case for divestment.
Still, there’s no reason to bet on a sustained rebound when experts predict
that oil, gas, and
coal prices will remain depressed.
Given
the financial rewards investors can reap for getting out of fossil fuels, the
real question isn’t whether divestment is risky. It’s why anyone would
willingly pollute their portfolio regardless of where they stand on climate
change.
Columnist
Emily Schwartz Greco is the managing editor of OtherWords, a non-profit national
editorial service run by the Institute for Policy Studies. OtherWords.org.