This week, BlackRock CEO and Chairman Larry Fink released his annual
letter to
CEOs
— which has come to be seen as a harbinger of the investment world’s focus each
year.
As in recent years, Fink discusses companies’ role in addressing societal issues
— including the climate crisis. Past letters have introduced coal-exclusion
policies
or frameworks intended to attempt to lower BlackRock’s own
emissions.
This year’s letter (which appeared without the letter to clients that has been
traditionally paired with it in past years), however, steers clear of this theme
entirely. Fink highlights the importance of authentic and transparent CEO
engagement with stakeholders, particularly employees; and announces the launch
of BlackRock’s Center for Stakeholder Capitalism — designed to “help us to
further explore the relationships between companies and their stakeholders and
between stakeholder engagement and shareholder value.” But he does not discuss
any new strategies to concretely decarbonize the asset manager’s portfolio or
reduce its massive exposure to climate-destructive companies.
Instead, Fink seems to answer the growing number of activist organizations that
have criticized BlackRock’s failure to walk its climate-action
talk
— its refusal to divest from coal and other fossil fuels while Fink proselytized
the need for its clients to embrace and scale clean energy for a net-zero
future. While Fink asserts that “the decarbonizing of the global economy is
going to create the greatest investment opportunity of our lifetime. It will
also leave behind the companies that don’t adapt, regardless of what industry
they are in,” he also details the importance of a slow clean-energy transition,
to ensure that people continue to have access to reliable and affordable energy
sources. A valid point, but he goes so far as to say: “Any plan that focuses
solely on limiting supply and fails to address demand for hydrocarbons will
drive up energy prices for those who can least afford it, resulting in greater
polarization around climate change and eroding progress. Divesting from entire
sectors — or simply passing carbon-intensive assets from public markets to
private markets — will not get the world to net zero.”
Predictably, Fink’s more-tepid-than-usual stance on the need to end dirty energy
has irked environmental activists.
“In 2022, few things rise above the political fray, but climate science has to
be one of them,” says Casey Harrell, Senior Strategist with The Sunrise
Project. “In his letter, Larry Fink is trying to be everything to everyone —
and that is not true leadership. If he will not stand up to climate skeptics,
what will happen when some of the heavy-emitting companies that BlackRock owns
are, to use his words, ‘dodos’ instead of ‘phoenixes’? This letter does not
invoke confidence that Larry is the leader we need him to be, and we hope that
the client letter will have much more detail and much more specific ambitions
about what BlackRock will do.”
Continued support for the companies literally fueling the climate crisis
The world’s largest asset manager, BlackRock has recently surpassed $10
trillion assets under management. The Wall Street behemoth remains one of the
leading investors in fossil
fuels
and companies driving
deforestation:
Analysis
conducted by Universal Owner shows that only 10 percent of BlackRock’s
assets under management are responsible for 85 percent of its portfolio
emissions.
The
IPCC
and IEA have made it clear: To
keep the earth from warming more than 1.5°C, we must stop investing in new
fossil fuel infrastructure immediately. But according to a
report
by Reclaim Finance and Urgewald, BlackRock holds $85 billion in coal
companies, $24 billion of which are invested in companies planning to expand
their coal business. While Fink highlights sustainable investments having
reached $4 trillion globally, he fails to mention that as of January 2021,
worldwide investments in coal alone surpassed $1
trillion.
And in late 2021, BlackRock finalized a $15 billion deal with Saudi
Aramco
to acquire 49 percent of the oil & gas major’s gas pipeline subsidiary.
“There’s not much to see here other than more hot air from a would-be climate
leader,” says Ben Cushing, Fossil-Free Finance Campaign Manager with the
Sierra Club. “Larry Fink’s latest letter to CEOs is just another rehashing
of the same vague rhetoric, without any meaningful new commitment to actually
help lead the necessary transition to a climate-safe future. Fink is insisting
on continuing to prop up dirty fuels like fracked gas and peddling the outdated
and dangerous view that gas has a place in the energy transition, despite the
scientific consensus that we need to stop expanding fossil fuels immediately.
Will this be yet another missed opportunity for BlackRock or will it finally
hold polluters and laggards accountable?”
There’s no arguing with Fink when he says, “Delivering on the competing
interests of a company’s many divergent stakeholders is not easy.” But at a time
when more and more consumers are ditching banks that finance fossil
fuels,
fellow asset managers such as Vanguard are being called out on their lack
of climate
action,
and banking giants such as HSBC are making definitive commitments to end
coal
financing,
continued hedging could see BlackRock move from leader to laggard.
Get the latest insights, trends, and innovations to help position yourself at the forefront of sustainable business leadership—delivered straight to your inbox.
Sustainable Brands Staff
Published Jan 18, 2022 1pm EST / 10am PST / 6pm GMT / 7pm CET