New York City Will Divest Pension Funds from Fossil Fuel Companies

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Today New York Mayor Bill De Blasio announced a goal to divest New York Cityโ€™s pension funds from fossil fuel reserve owners within five years. This makes New York the first major American city to announce such aย move.

According to a statement, the cityโ€™s five pension funds have approximately $5 billion invested in over 190 fossil fuelย companies.

โ€œNew York City is standing up for future generations by becoming the first major U.S. city to divest our pension funds from fossil fuels,โ€ said Mayor de Blasio. โ€œAt the same time, weโ€™re bringing the fight against climate change straight to the fossil fuel companies that knew about its effects and intentionally misled the public to protect theirย profits.โ€

Mayor de Blasio explained how the city was โ€œbringing the fightโ€ when he also announced the city will be suing the five largest investor-owned fossil fuel companies โ€” BP, Chevron, ConocoPhillips, Exxon Mobil, and Royal Dutch Shellย โ€” and seeking damages for the money the city will have to spend to protect itself against the impacts of climateย change.

This is in addition to separate legal action by New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman to hold the industry accountable for misleading the public about climate change. Schneidermanโ€™s lawsuit against ExxonMobil claims that there is evidence that Exxon had โ€œtwo sets of numbersโ€ used to discuss the impact of climate change on the company โ€” one set for the public and one for private companyย conversations.

Climate activist and author Bill McKibben hailed the announcement. โ€œThey should light up the Empire State Building in green tonight โ€” for the money the city is going to save, and for the planet it will help protect in the process,โ€ย he said in aย New York Daily Newsย op-ed.

โ€œClimate change is perhaps the toughest challenge New York City will face in the coming decades,โ€ de Blasio said inย todayโ€™sย statement.

Protecting the Islandย City

With this divestment decision and lawsuit, New York City is placing itself at the forefront of the fight againstย climate change. Which makes sense because New York, a city surrounded by water,ย is on the frontline when it comes to climate change impacts as well, from sea level rise to intenseย storms.ย And for a city the size of New York, dealing with climate change will not beย cheap.

A New York Times article this week describes efforts to redraw the cityโ€™s flood maps, noting,ย โ€œWith its 520 miles of coastline and thousands of acres of waterfront development, New York has more residents living in high-risk flood zones than any other city in the country.โ€ In 2012 Superstorm Sandy hit New York and surrounding areas, and the resulting roughlyย $70ย billion in storm damagesย made it the second-costliest weather disaster in U.S. history, second only toย Hurricane Katrina. Approximately $19 billion of those damages were in New York City alone, according to the New Yorkย  City Office of Management andย Budget.

This week the city administration also acknowledged that while $20 billion has been budgeted to deal with the coming impacts of climate change โ€” that will only be a first step. New York City will continue to deal with the risks of storms like 2012โ€™s Sandy as well as the inevitable impacts of sea level rise, and solutions,ย even if successful,ย will be veryย costly.

Various proposals to protect NYC from the oceanโ€™s rise have been floated, and none are cheap. Ideas include building a string of barrier islands from New Jersey to Long Island andย simply building a wall around lowerย Manhattan.

New York avoided the recent flooding that Boston experienced in the first major storm of 2018. Still, Boston experienced its highest tide in 100 yearsย during this storm,ย showingย what may await other coastal cities. New models say that storms will cause major flooding in New York City every fiveย years.

And models that predict sea level rise show that drastic measures will have to be enacted to protect the city from theย ocean.

Who Will Pay forย It?

A day before New York’s announcement, Jack Gerard, CEO of the American Petroleum Institute, gave his annual address on the state of the oil industry, and there was a noticeable shift in the message when it came toย climateย change.

โ€œI think weโ€™re at the point where we need to get over the conversation of who believes and who doesnโ€™t, and move to a conversation about solutions,โ€ Gerard said, referring to climateย change.

Even the head of the oil and gas industry’s largest lobbying group publicly saysย that climate change is realย and he wants to discuss solutions. Of course, one solution, pointed out by scientists,ย is to greatly reduce the amount of carbon humans release into the atmosphere by leaving fossil fuels in the ground, which might minimize future costs andย damages.

However, enough greenhouse gases have already been emitted to lock in a significant level of global warming and related changes to Earth’s systems. Cities like New York are now facing the very costly consequences of global inaction to reduce climate change. API likely realizes that when it comes time to pay the bill for climate change, many will ask oil companies and other major polluters to cover the cost, which is probably not theย solutionย Gerard is lookingย for.

Which is also probably one reason API is working toย influenceย judges in America, as The Center for Public Integrityย reported in 2017. Asย damages due to climate change continue to stack up, more lawsuits against the deep-pocketed companies who are at least partially responsible will likely also be on theย rise.

โ€œThe costs to address climate damages and prepare for future impacts are enormous and growing,โ€ said Peter Frumhoff, director of science and policy and chief climate scientist at the Union of Concerned Scientists. โ€œTaxpayers and impacted communities are right to demand that major fossil fuel companies, which have knowingly made the situation worse, pay their fairย share.โ€

New York City is taking historic steps to address the very real dangers of climate change because when you are the mayor of a city surrounded by water like Mayor de Blasio, there is one thing you can bank on.

โ€œThe next storm is out there โ€” itโ€™s not a matter of if, but when,โ€ de Blasioย said.

More intense and frequent storms will come and the sea will rise. The question remains who will pay for theย damage.

Main image: Screen capture of NYC flood predictions from Climate Central.

mikulka color
Justin Mikulka is a research fellow at New Consensus. Prior to joining New Consensus in October 2021, Justin reported for DeSmog, where he began in 2014. Justin has a degree in Civil and Environmental Engineering from Cornell University.

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