In a letter delivered this morning to House and Senate leaders and the Obama Administration, U.S. investors specifically called for adoption of the following policies: a strong national Energy Efficiency Resource Standard; a national Renewable Portfolio Standard (also called a Renewable Electricity Standard); a mandatory national climate policy to reduce greenhouse gas emissions economy-wide; and a low-carbon fuel standard and other transportation policies to lower use oil use and greenhouse gas emissions.
Coordinated by Ceres and its Investor Network on Climate Risk, the letter was signed by leading pension funds such as the California Public Employees' Retirement System (CalPERS), the California State Teachers' Retirement System (CalSTRS); large asset managers including BlackRock and Deutsche Asset Management; nine state treasurers; three state/city comptrollers; two labor pension funds -- SEIU Master Trust and UNITE HERE -- as well as other investors (see full list of signers below).
The letter states that strong energy and climate action is 'essential' for long-term economic prosperity and that the costs of inaction could be 'economically debilitating.' "We are convinced that building our nation's low-carbon energy infrastructure is an important part of the solution to our current economic crisis. Delaying action on these policies will deny U.S. families and businesses access to low-cost clean power, reduce our nation's energy security, and require more stringent, costly solutions to address climate change in the future," states the letter.
"The value of aggressive, national action to fight climate change and remake our energy and transportation sectors cannot be overstated," said California State Treasurer
"The policies outlined in the letter would allow us to invest our clients' assets with appropriate cognizance of the continuing risks -- and exciting opportunities -- that will result from physical, regulatory and technological change spurred by a changing climate and the policy response," said
"Strong national climate and energy legislation will send clear market signals to the business community -- creating new industries, putting people back to work, and helping move American companies to the forefront of global competitiveness on clean energy," said Mindy S. Lubber, President of Ceres and the Director of the Investor Network on Climate Risk, an alliance of 77 investors with approximately
Calling energy efficiency and conservation the "fastest, easiest, and cheapest ways to significantly reduce greenhouse gas emissions and improve the bottom line of companies," the letter urges passage of a national Energy Efficiency Resource Standard that would set national energy savings targets and save utility customers up to
The letter assigns high importance to sending a signal to the markets that greenhouse gas emissions will carry a price. "National climate legislation acting in harmony with the market will facilitate greater investment in clean technologies and other climate change solutions and will enable the U.S. to not only compete globally, but to lead," it states.
To facilitate rapid deployment of existing and emerging technologies, the letter urges Congress to enact a strong national renewable portfolio standard (also referred to as a renewable electricity standard), a policy already in place in 29 states.
Stressing the need to extend clean energy policies to the transportation sector, the letter urges legislators to: adopt a national low-carbon fuel standard, support expansion of public transit and legislation to promote the reduction of vehicle miles traveled, adopt performance-based incentives to stimulate the development of new technologies and adopt maximum feasible fuel economy standards. SOURCE Ceres,

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