{"id":7870,"date":"2013-04-12T02:00:40","date_gmt":"2013-04-12T09:00:40","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/ietransfer.wpengine.com\/?p=7870"},"modified":"2013-04-12T02:00:40","modified_gmt":"2013-04-12T09:00:40","slug":"university-endowment-divestment-from-fossil-fuel-stocks-effective","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/inspiredeconomist.com\/articles\/university-endowment-divestment-from-fossil-fuel-stocks-effective\/","title":{"rendered":"University endowment divestment from fossil fuel stocks: effective?"},"content":{"rendered":"

\"UniversityA growing movement called “Go Fossil Free<\/a>” at colleges across America is pushing University Endowment managers to divest from fossil fuel stocks.<\/p>\n

Currently, over 300 colleges, 74 cities and states, and several religious institutions are participating, meaning that they’ve moved their investment portfolios that support their endowments entirely away from coal, natural gas, petroleum, and other fossil fuel stocks. According to the group, “if it is wrong to wreck the climate, then it is wrong to profit from that wreckage”. They’ve asked that investment managers pull their support from the 200 or so publicly traded companies that hold the vast majority of the world’s proven coal, oil, and gas reserves, and hope to accomplish the task within 5 years. While noble in purpose, it’s a somewhat risky effort, given how profitable big oil is. The question is…is it going to be effective? The answer is, “it depends”.<\/p>\n

Precedent<\/h3>\n

First, precedent is good, but not at the scale of this endeavor. Historians have documented the power of divestment before, most notably in helping bring down the racist Apartheid government of South Africa<\/a>. What’s commonly known by folks who follow this kind of thing is that widespread divestment of South African stocks helped bring significant pressure on the government there to begin negotiations that eventually led to the downfall of the Apartheid regime. Student organizers of the FossilFree campaign are looking to that precedent for inspiration:<\/p>\n

\"Screen<\/a><\/p>\n

What’s not as commonly known is how long it took for the process to work for justice in South Africa. It’s not clear when the concept first emerged, but it reached a fairly substantial scale in 1962, when the United Nations passed a resolution aimed at encouraging member nations to pull their money from South Africa in the form of economic sanctions.<\/p>\n

The first University to use divestment as a direct strategy was Michigan State University, in 1978. By 1985, 9.2 billion Rand left South Africa as a result of sanctions and divestment. The economic pressures continued to mount, despite all attempts by those in power in South Africa at stopping the leak. But the time horizon, from 1962, to Michigan State in 1978, to the fall of Apartheid, was long. Apartheid did not fall until well over a decade after Michigan State divested. Those hoping for an end to fossil fuels due to university divestment should dig in for a long, but winnable fight.<\/p>\n

Will people go for it?<\/h3>\n

Second, the big question is about return on investment. Many universities rely on solid financial returns in their investment portfolios to help carry them through times when alumni donations may be lean, or enrollments down. The good news is that there are many options to invest in sustainable companies<\/a>, and the even better news is that the returns are good.<\/p>\n

Investing in fossil fuels seems highly profitable at first glance. Exxon takes the headlines on that. But a report by Ceres indicates that returns on fossil fuels are volatile, and that many investments are actually incredibly risky<\/a>. Just think about BP for a moment. Cruising along at a good ROI, then wham. Billions in costs, huge long term brand damage, executive turnover, Board resignations…<\/p>\n

Even without a carbon tax or cap and trade<\/a>, the business of dirty energy has incredible downside potential. Investment banks are increasingly wary, making credit tight. Investors are piling money into socially responsible investing, with many of them using a screen like “no fossil stocks”. BP’s stock took a huge dive after their Gulf disaster, and the cost of doing business in dirty energy would seem to only continue to rise.<\/p>\n

In addition, people are increasingly seeing clean energy as a great investment.<\/p>\n

This article continues…see page 2 of 2 by clicking here.<\/a><\/p>\n

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“Power plants with no fuel costs” such as utility scale wind and solar plants, are drawing interest from the likes of Prudential and GE. Even Morgan Stanley has gone beyond Socially Responsible Investing, and is offering impact investing to its clients<\/a> (the difference being, rather than just avoiding the bad as in SRI, impact investing specifically targets sustainable companies and puts money there). Clean energy investments hit a record $260 billion in 2011<\/a>, with the U.S. out-investing China on clean tech that year for the first time since 2008.<\/p>\n

So, bottom line, yes, I think people will go for it.<\/p>\n

Time horizon<\/h3>\n

Third,\u00a05 years may seem a long time horizon. Divesting, once that’s the direction people have decided on, takes little time to execute. It’s a matter of investment managers scouring alternative investment options, and selling off shares of companies like ExxonMobil and Halliburton. It’s clearly not as simple as that. Investment managers likely fear for their jobs if portfolio performance takes a dive at all, so I’m sure many of them are scurrying around looking for cleaner investments. \u00a0But for all intents and purposes from a technological point of view, it’s pretty straightforward.<\/p>\n

In the meantime, there are a lot of things a student, parent, or alumni can do to get started right away.<\/p>\n

Take action<\/h3>\n

FossilFree has a set of recommended mutual funds that individuals can shift their money into:<\/p>\n