A climate policy appeal was sent to the CEOs of corporate America urging them adopt a “science based climate policy agenda” in line with the IPCC and to lobby accordingly, as well as aligning their trade association’s advocacy. The letter also references the investor Climate Lobbying letter backed by investors with $6.5 trillion in AUM. This appeal to business is an encouraging call from major environmental leaders urging corporations to focus on lobbying and public policy advocacy.
An open letter to the CEOs of corporate America
The climate crisis is escalating before our eyes, causing unprecedented damage and threatening our children’s future. The costs of unabated climate change – already in the hundreds of billions of dollars – will grow to trillions, destabilizing the global economy and hurting nearly every business and family.
To limit the worst impacts of climate change, we need to achieve net-zero emissions – producing no more climate pollution than can be removed – in the United States and other industrialized nations by 2050, and worldwide soon thereafter. That’s the goal consistent with what science says is necessary.
A growing number of businesses recognize that a warming planet is a significant risk to their operations, value chains, customers, employees, shareholders and communities. We commend the many companies that have set science-based targets to cut climate pollution and encourage others to join them. In addition to these voluntary actions by companies, strong public policy is essential to create a level playing field and reduce climate pollution at the pace and scale needed. Given their power to shape public policy, businesses have a vital role to play in moving smart and effective climate policies forward.
Therefore, we urge all businesses to adopt a science-based climate policy agenda in line with the recommendations of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. Executing this agenda means that businesses:
- Advocate for policies at the national, subnational and/or sectoral level that are consistent with achieving net-zero emissions by 2050;
- Align their trade associations’ climate policy advocacy to be consistent with the goal of net-zero emissions by 2050; and
- Allocate advocacy spending to advance climate policies, not obstruct them.
We also recommend robust disclosure of the above actions to ensure transparency and demonstrate leadership, as well as strong corporate governance to enable sustained, strategic and effective engagement in climate policy. Our expectations on corporate climate lobbying are aligned with those expressed recently by 200 investors with $6.5 trillion in assets under management.
As leaders of organizations that engage with businesses on environmental issues, we call on all companies to embrace and execute a science-based climate policy agenda, starting today. Now is the time to create a future that will protect our air, water and land, preserve ecosystems, improve children’s health and create millions of jobs in a strong and resilient economy.
Signed,
Aron Cramer, BSR
Bob Perciasepe, C2ES
Bruno Sarda, CDP North America
Mindy Lubber, Ceres
M. Sanjayan, Conservation International
Fred Krupp, Environmental Defense Fund
Amy Davidsen, The Climate Group
Sally Jewell, The Nature Conservancy
Kenneth Kimmell, Union of Concerned Scientists
Andrew Steer, World Resources Institute
Carter Roberts, World Wildlife Fund
Even if the nations of the world slash fossil-fuel emissions rapidly, the United States will need to spend many billions of dollars to harden coastlines, rebuild sewer systems and overhaul farming practices to protect against floods, wildfires and heat waves that are source of so many miseries throughout the country. The task will get difficult as emissions increase, and the administration with its emphasis on policy roll-backs is not helping matters much.
Yes, “not helping matters much” is an understatement.