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Tyler Cowen: Vision of free, prosperous and responsible individuals

November 21, 2018 Ben Yeoh
IMG_6060.PNG

Tyler Cowen has written a moral philosophical treatise that favours sustainable economic growth as the major tool for enriching humanity, but contained by (1) strong forms of human rights and (2) a heavy weighting to the distant future and (3) a wider definition of wealth than GDP which therefore puts much more weight on managing the environment plus the government investing in ideas and other intangible capital for the long-term.


I summarise what a few of the ideas mean to me. My friends will know a lens of the long-term, art/theatre, intangible capital, sustainability, mortality and healthcare, and forms of happiness have been topics of interest to me.


I found it a thoughtful counterpoint to “de-growth” economic philosophers, such as Kate Raworth. Raworth puts much more emphasis on the limits of environmental capital and therefore “circular economy”. Cowan has good regard for the environment but puts weight on economic growth as being the major driver lifting humanity’s wealth-plus over many years of history. I think the interested reader should attempt both sets of work to understand the different lens they come from. Although, my reading of the works suggest much practical overlap even if Raworth refutes “growth” and Cowan claims “growth” as the major driver of humanity. The protection of environmental capital is an overlap, as is protecting future generations, as is a criticism of current GDP measures as a proper measure of wealth.


I like Cowan’s approach of plurality (there are many type of thing that makes us “happy” not one type of thing - the ancient greeks had a few types of love and a few types of happiness, but my reflection is that there are probably even more) and the way important ideas or conclusions cut across traditional lines of left/right thinking.  However, if you’ve already dismissed “trickle down” economics and dislike several libertarian notions you’ll likely disfavour certain of Cowan’s conclusions.


Other ideas that spill out is this focus on ideas. This chimes with the work on intangibles I am interested (cf. Haskel & Westlake, Capitalism without Capital) and the very heavy focus of my day job investing work on ESG/intangibles/Sustainability as well as a focus on long-term investing. (see links end)


Cowan ends up on the same page as Nassim Taleb with respect to climate change (I think) because of the emphasis on distant future and weighting future generations heavily. Taleb arrives there via precautionary principle applied to complex system of only one planet. (see links end)


Cowan emphasises not “sweating the little things” and putting a focus on the big material changes. This chimes with the maxims of many investors that boil down investing work to a few small number of important drivers and not a host of detail. Small items (butterfly wings causing a hurricane) can have large impacts but it’s too difficult to predict to sweat them too much. (cf. consequentialist thinking)


Cowan’s focus on the distant future has some regard to restitution for the past. Cowan ends up suggesting restitution with a small premium is a viable solution. This is an interesting outcome to me, especially with respect to climate change and slavery. Perhaps it would argue for a little bit more restitution for black Americans today (as potentially argued by Ta-Nehisi Coates and others) and also that advanced world countries (mainly the US as the major polluter historically) should be doing more to balance their large historic levels of pollution. I’m unsure that conclusion though will have much majority buy-in with the American people - but as a form of restorative justice, I think it could resonate well with historically oppressed minorities and level 1 / 2 countries (cf Rosling definitions).


Cowan has less weight on (the enormous expense) of caring for the last years of the elderly at the expense of the young. I think this is interesting as it chimes with some practical thinkers on healthcare. (It chimes with with science fiction work. Cowan seems struck by imaginative Sci Fi challenges). I’m particularly thinking of Atul Gawande’s book - On Mortality (see link end) but also the health economic work suggesting enormous cost in the last 6 to 12 months of life and of limited quality of life / life extension benefits. This would be better spent on other investment (the young or simply long-term ideas generation). One almost-irony being that when terminally ill choose positive palliative care, they often live longer than groups who opt for medicalised treatment to the very end - “we live longer when stop trying to live longer”. This gives a moral frame work for a thorny practical problem.


Cowan has some weight on faith. In some ways, one has to, if one puts weight on the distant future. That is an act of faith.


OK… on to some details:


Right/Wrong are typically absolute. Humans are very prone to error - irrational minds. We need to be fortified against self-deception.


“What’s good about human life can’t be boiled down to any single value” this plural view, I liked a lot. It resonated with what I understand through my life - I’m a husband, father, son - I’m a playwright - some time artist - reader - writer - long-term investor - cook and food lover. I don’t practise much sport or gym but I’ve cried thinking about my father while listening to Europe re-claim the Ryder cup, I’ve cheered and commiserated with my mother while watching Liverpool football club, I’ve sat through a 5 day cricket test match like a long Shakespeare play.


This messiness is important and I find Cowan partially reconciles this. Cowan reconciles much with a “common sense morality” which I observe most people typically apply in practice.


“We need to make room for beauty and justice”  and mercy and kindness and art and …. I find too often economists can not make room for these notions whereas I observe humans spend much time on them.  


And so, Cowan suggests:


“

First, I do not take the productive powers of economies for granted. Production could be much greater than it is today, and our lives could be more splendid. Or, if we make some big mistakes, production could be much lower, and we could all be much poorer.

…


Second, I will seek to revise some of our intuitive assumptions about moral distance. Which individuals should exert more of an influence over our choices, and which should exert less? I will argue, for instance, that the individuals who will live in the future should be less distant from us, in moral terms, than many people currently believe. Their interests should hold greater sway over our calculations, and that means we should invest more in the future. Even though it is sometimes hard for us to imagine how our actions will affect future people, especially those from the more distant future, their moral import remains high. I will therefore be asking humans to have greater faith in the future….”



I’ve realised this blog is going on, so I’m going to for now briefly skimp the 6 areas of debate Cowan covers:


Time - weighting the future/past

Aggregation - weighing one individual’s choice over another

Rules - Cowan speaks up for rules

Rights - Cowan speaks up for rights

Radical Uncertainty - how to make better choices under uncertainty

Common sense morality - work hard, take care of our families, live virtuous lives but helping other periodically where we are able to (with exceptions for the Martin Luther King’s of this world…)


To hit two  major thoughts:


(I) the productive powers of the economy

(II) the weighting of “moral distance” of future generations to us


and I hope to come back to some of his other problems in another blog.


so on (i) Cowan advocates that governments / society should maximise the long run rate of wealth/economic growth and that it should be measured by “wealth plus”


Wealth plus is GDP plus measures of leisure time, household production and environmental amenities.


“Wealth Plus : The total amount of value produced over a certain time period. This includes the traditional measures of economic value found in GDP statistics, but also includes measures of leisure time, household production, and environmental amenities, as summed up in a relevant measure of wealth. In this context, maximizing Wealth Plus does not mean that everyone should work as much as possible. A fourteen-hour work day might maximize measured GDP in the short run, but it would be less propitious over time once we take into account the value of leisure, not to mention the potential for burnout. Still, this standard is going to value a strong work ethic. 1 Maximizing Wealth Plus also does not mean destroying the natural environment. It’s now well understood that environmental problems can lower or destroy economic growth through feedback effects. We should therefore protect the environment enough to preserve and indeed extend economic growth into the more distant future. More broadly, the principle of Wealth Plus holds that we should maintain higher growth over time, and not just for a single year or for some other, shorter period of time.”


My particular concern here is that wealth plus is still too narrow a definition and fails to encompass certain notions of humanity he refers to elsewhere.


I can accept maximising wealth plus especially with a view to the distant future can increase human prosperity and happiness, but I wonder on the many intangible items that are hard to measure (not all things that count, are countable) that are left out - art, dance, community - all the “social and human” capitals - perhaps that is partly captured by the idea of “leisure” time but even in our financially poorest communities there is dance and song and art - and those items have value.


Perhaps the concept of “capital” is simply a poor notion for them. Linguistically and culturally come places shy away from the idea of human capital as it too closely evokes notions such as forced work labour camps.


I also wonder about causality here. There is the argument of Milton Friedman to seek corporate profits (and social goods spill out of that) but that’s potentially evolving into a wider stakeholder model that corporate profits spill out of fulfilling human wants and needs - that profits or wealth is an effect of labour/capital/resources/ideas and that  the total wealth mix of a nation mix contains much “other capital” not quite captured in the wealth plus definition.


Still the wealth plus definition does raise three questions that cut across political lines:


He summarises;


“We can already see that three key questions should be elevated in their political and philosophical importance, namely:


What can we do to boost the rate of economic growth ?

What can we do to make our civilization more stable ?

How should we deal with environmental problems ?”

One last thought before moving on.  Cowen argues for policies that do not pursue immediate growth too vigorously. He cites the Shah of Iran trying to modernise Iran too fast and arguably causing more damage that a more cautious approach.


I’m intrigued by this incrementalist view. It chimes with several observations I have. I wonder if you can see brexit through this lens. Brexit seems now to be a fairly radical break and the schisms it is throwing up are not incremental.


It also may not apply so readily on the company level. Companies may need more radical action to return to growth or become irrelevant. However, macro level policies may do better building on what that country has already built up.  Will dwell on it more.

Also, cf. Amryta Sen’s work.

Conclusion, has thrown up lots of ideas. Worth a read if you’d like to be challenged by a short read on a moral philosophy that ends up advocating for the environment, for growth, for sustainability and for thinking more about future generations.


As a counterpoint on trickle down economics read: try this from some IMF economists https://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/sdn/2015/sdn1513.pdf

If this has gone too deep, try  (a centre-left view) 23 Things They Don't Tell You About Capitalism

by Ha-Joon Chang Amazon link here https://amzn.to/2zoSbwe

On intangibles see: https://www.thendobetter.com/investing/2017/11/14/the-rise-of-intangibles-capitalism-without-capital

Nassim Taleb on climate here: https://www.thendobetter.com/investing/2017/9/18/nassim-taleb-climate-change-risk

Atul Gawande On Mortality: https://www.thendobetter.com/blog/2018/8/16/mortality-how-to-die-well

Cowen’s book - Amazon link here.

In Carbon, Investing, Economics Tags Philosophy, Environment, Tyler Cowen, Investing

Climate science 100 over years ago

August 29, 2018 Ben Yeoh
Source: https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ROTWKG19120814.2.56.5

Source: https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ROTWKG19120814.2.56.5

Published in 1912 (source link here), the climate impact of coal and carbon dioxide (CO2) was known then. Indeed Eunice Foote in 1856 was one of the first to suggest CO2 would lead to a warmer planet. (See American Journal of Science and Arts, google embed below). There was anouther paper in 1896 from Arrhenius in Sweden, also eloborating on these ideas (pdf here)

This highlights two factors to me: (1) Data and reporting is insufficient to bend demand-side human behaviours. Given the economic growth fueled by fossil  energy (see the work of energy economic historian Vaclav Smil) and the view from 1/3 of Americans who disbelieve man-made climate change (see Yale Survey on climate).

Data are not enough. Experts are not enough. Marketing, stories and convenience rule.

Observe how pink is for girls and blue is for boys simply because of marketing that becomes entrenched. 150 years ago this was not the case. My high school tie is pink, at a boys school, as we choose that colour in many years ago.

Observe Nespresso coffee pods, a solution for a problem we don't really have (and that makes mainly worse coffee, or not better, than other methods) but created a problem with waste recycling (that was not thought about fully until years after launch), but it's more convenient (by a small margin) and well marketed. The man who invented the idea now has regrets.

Climate is not unique in this.

The (2) point is the necessary imprecision and variability of climate models. It has taken 100 years to get to this point.  However given, this imprecision you can take risk-philosopher Nassim Taleb’s view: “We have only one planet. This fact radically constrains the kinds of risks that are appropriate to take at a large scale. Even a risk with very low probability becomes unacceptable when it affects all of us - there is no reversing mistakes of that magnitude. Without any precise models, we can still reason that polluting or altering our environment significantly could put us in uncharted territory, with no statistical track-record and potentially large consequences... While some amount of pollution is inevitable, high quantities of any pollutant put us at a rapidly increasing risk of destabilising the climate, a system integral to the biosphere. Ergo, we should build down CO2 emissions, even regardless of what climate-models tell us..." (Noted in this previous blog here).

 


The current Arts blog, cross-over, the current Investing blog.  Cross fertilise, some thoughts on autism.  Discover what the last arts/business mingle was all about (sign up for invites to the next event in the list below).

My Op-Ed in the Financial Times  (My Financial Times opinion article) about asking long-term questions surrounding sustainability and ESG.

Current highlights:

A long read on Will Hutton looking at Brexit causes and solutions.

Some writing tips and thoughts from Zadie Smith

How to live a life, well lived. Thoughts from a dying man. On play and playing games.

A provoking read on how to raise a feminist child.

Some popular posts:  the commencement address;  by NassimTaleb (Black Swan author, risk management philosopher),  Neil Gaiman on making wonderful, fabulous, brilliant mistakes;  JK Rowling on the benefits of failure.  Charlie Munger on always inverting;  Sheryl Sandberg on grief, resilience and gratitude.

Buy my play, Yellow Gentlemen, (amazon link) - all profits to charity

In Investing, ESG, Carbon Tags Sustainability

Slavery, climate change and patents - the commonalities.

July 21, 2018 Ben Yeoh
source: IEA (2018) 

source: IEA (2018) 

The black (particularly though not exclusively American) experience today plus the historic problems of slavery have parallels in the climate change and carbon tax government level debates (as well as on patent harmonisation).

Historically, many practices around slavery which would be illegal today, helped build the wealth and legacy of many countries, and many families in those countries.

Ta-Nahesi Coates (of the black American experience, Between the World and Me) has made arguments for restitution in the US (Atlantic Article).

Native people round the world (US, Canada, Australia to name a few) have also argued, and some times with partial success, for restitution for acts which would be considered genocide today but were more complex at the time.

We can see from Truth and Reconciliation processes (wiki here) that many do take the view that you can not blame the children for acts of their parents, grand parents and beyond. Even some, one can see would not blame the footsoldier for obeying acts of the general or government.

The parallel with climate is that developed world (Level 4 countries in Rosling classification) have produced most of the carbon pollution for the last 200 years (and this pollution stays around for 50 to 100 years+) and level 1/2/3 countries have not. And now when a country such as India, China etc. want to grow there’s a sense that it is unfair for them to not be able to use the same fossil fuel resources as eg the US has done historically.

It’s thought of as climbing up the ladder and kicking it away. And Level 4 countries did similar with patents and copyright (I briefly discuss this with Japan and patents in this blog on high drug pricing, also note the US did not grant copyright to foreign works for most of the 1800s and then from limited nations from 1891)

Countries compete, and countries (like companies) seldom wish to give up accumulated advantages.

Markets can also be seen to struggle with the very long term, the systemic, and shared goods, and the “tragedy of the commons”.

At least with respect to carbon – how I see it – is it will take a multi-pronged solution. Countries such as the US need to bend to lower carbon use, either through regulation or through carbon taxes (or both), and countries like China need to bend so they do not reach US levels of carbon intensity.

I have no answer to the problem of historic carbon pollution. I do not see it as feasible for a country like the US to admit and restitute for actions in the past even if there might be some consensus around the matter – which there is not - (this is a country that can not agree that healthcare is a basic human right, and which has strong split votes on a number of matters which are mostly settled in other level 4 countries (eg abortion, gun control), and Trump and his policies, have 40 to 45% support in the US which is a significant amount).

It will then need a broad range of both demand and supply side solutions: battery storage, renewables, grid storage, more recycling, coal phase out, electric cars, more cycling, more innovation in products and materials, to name but a few.

Humans will still want to build, travel and fly.

Humans will want to grow.

Humans will still want their children to have and experience things that their parents and grand parents have not.

source: IEA report (2018) 

source: IEA report (2018) 

 

In this respect, it is disappointing to see that investment in renewable technologies has fallen in 2017, and coal phase out is potentially stalling. It is most likely a blip in the trend, but still unwelcome. See the latest International Energy Agency report  

 

This would also suggest the so-called green finance initiatives are only having moderate impact (if any, some might argue).

 

I take heart (looking at Rosling again) that so many metrics globally have improved, eg life expectancy. And historically, human ingenuity has invented its way out of problems, some tricky problems too (eg Polio).

 

But, there is a part of me that wishes we spent more time and effort inventing for these problems than we did in, say, coffee pod machines (where we've created a packaging recycling problem with a coffee solution which was arguably unneeded) or even teeth straightening technology.

 

Still, I think remaining hopeful is more productive than feeling helpless.


The current Arts blog, cross-over, the current Investing blog.  Cross fertilise, some thoughts on autism.  Discover what the last arts/business mingle was all about (sign up for invites to the next event in the list below).

My Op-Ed in the Financial Times  (My Financial Times opinion article) about asking long-term questions surrounding sustainability and ESG.

Some popular posts:   the commencement address;  by Nassim Taleb (Black Swan author, risk management philosopher),  Neil Gaiman on making wonderful, fabulous, brilliant mistakes;  JK Rowling on the benefits of failure.  Charlie Munger on always inverting;  Sheryl Sandberg on grief, resilience and gratitude.

How to live a life, well lived. Thoughts from a dying man. On play and playing games.

A provoking read on how to raise a feminist child.

In Carbon, Investing Tags Slavery, Patents, Climate

Divesting sectors. The impact on returns. Evidence that oil divestment may not impact returns.

June 22, 2018 Ben Yeoh
Source: Jeremy Grantham, writes (see link to LSE talk  here): note cavests below.

Source: Jeremy Grantham, writes (see link to LSE talk  here): note cavests below.

Grantham and colleagues have looked at the S&P500, over the last 28 years, 60 years, and 90 years; excluding a major sub-component sector each time. Grantham’s overall conclusion it that it didn’t make much difference in return - although some might argue at the max range of 50bps that compounded over 28 years may be significant. Others might suggest that the power of diversifcation and time, also makes this conclusion unsurprising.

Caveats could include: not peer reviewed (although I have found similar conclusions with slightly different data sets), different exclusions may produce different answers (specifically Tobacco might come up as a narrow exclusion; cf Dimson’s data set on “sin stocks”), and that S&P500 is not world representative (however it has the best long run data set, and is a widely used index that does represent a facet of corporate America).

Grantham writes (see link to LSE talk  here)

“So my colleagues and I finally carried out a test to see exactly how an investment portfolio would have been affected by divesting from a group of companies that are listed in the Standard and Poor’s 500, the index based on the market capitalisations of 500 large companies listed on the New York Stock Exchange or NASDAQ.

These companies can be divided into 11 sectors (not including real estate). We considered the 10 long-term sectors (real estate was added relatively recently), and analysed how the index performed without each sector.

Initially, we considered the period from 1989 until 2017. [The results are shown in Figure above]. You will see how dramatically the index changes with the removal of each sector – there is only a 50 basis points difference between the best and the worst. They are basically all the same!

You will see that excluding the information technology sector made a small difference for a few years around the turn of the millennium. That was the technology bubble. Beyond the burst of the bubble, all of the indices track together again, as if nothing had ever happened.

But basically, all of those 10 variations of the index track between 1989 and 2017 as if they were the same. So we decided to see what happened if we chose a different period, incase there was something extraordinary about the past 28 years. We extended the analysis, first to start from 1957, and secondly to begin in 1925.

Source: same as chart above

Source: same as chart above

You will see in chart above that changing the period of analysis does not make much difference. The difference between the best and worst is 54 basis points instead of 50. So over 90 years, it would not have cost an investor to have divested from any one of the sectors.”

Grantham further writes:

“Who knew that the stock market was that efficient? It may be hopeless in bubbles and busts, but it has evidently priced these groups of big companies pretty well. And there is no advantage to an investor of choosing the high-growth information technology sector over, say, utilities. Utilities are priced down and information technology is priced up, but they produce the same returns. It is amazing.

What does this mean for divestment? It means that if investors take out fossil fuel companies from their portfolios, their starting assumption should not be that you have destroyed the value. Their starting assumption should be until proven otherwise. that it will have very little effect and is just as likely to be positive by 17 basis points as negative. That is an amazing contradiction to what every investment committee has ever said, as far as I am concerned.

It obviously takes a major miscalculation to move the dial when it comes to divestment. I think that decarbonisation is just such an event. And the reason I think that is that the oil companies and the chemical companies are not rolling with the punches. They are fighting decarbonisation tooth and nail. They are still funding obfuscation programmes in North America. And if you do that as a corporation, as a capitalist, you are likely to bite the dust if you are facing a major change, if you fight it. And they are fighting it. If they rolled with the punches, they might do quite well, and bleed off their capital and pay big dividends. But they are not doing that.”

I’d like to add a thought or two on the theoretical framework here. There are two to note one is

The Active Law of Fund Management which suggests the bigger the investment universe the better the risk/return potential, and,

The Efficient Market Hypothesis which suggests information is priced in efficiently such that it is hard to outperform large diversified markets

Both are theoretical although backed up by certain lines of empirical evidence (I’ve been drafting a long blog on the EMH for a while, hopefully out one day), although both are not considered perfect to explain what we can observe empirically.

As Grantham alludes to, this suggests the power of reasonable large scale diversification, and time. It seems to suggest over long periods of time, no one sector has such strong outperformance that it significantly dwarfs a large fairly diverse group of companies/stocks. I’m guessing there are always 400 to 450 stock left in any one excluded portfolio.

It’s an interesting challenge to certain notions of thematic and smart beta ideas as well, although those assessed differently.

Many of us are in the forward looking future prediction game. Although again, this might suggest, as Warren Buffet and Jack Bogle do that the average investor is then best off in low cost trackers (although note possible limited stewardship??!!), and if they wish to lose a sector or two it’s not likely to be a big impact (perhaps a small plus or minus in the order of 25 to 50bps; and arguably hard to predict although as Grantham argues, it might be oil, chemicals but for business related reasons).

I actually see Grantham’s work replicated in shorter run indices. You can look them up put the ex-Tobacco or ex-fossil-fuel type indices over the last 5 to 10 years have all done better or in the same ball park than the standard index. 5 years is short run, but might suggest that something has happened in the last 5 years perhaps different to eras further back.

In any case, back to oil divestment, so you need to know Grantham has a long time  view (bias) here and sponsors the Grantham institute. Might mean he is right and has spent a long time thinking about this. He’s being doing investment (albeit more macro and asset class lens) for much longer than me.

Still, this is a decent evidence base and theoretical framework for arguing for the divest – stranded asset argument.  It also highlights the area for engagement, if it can help bend these companies at all. 

This all comes from a talk given in April 2018 at the LSE.

Source: LSE lecture (link here), although Grantham is quoting HSBC work

Source: LSE lecture (link here), although Grantham is quoting HSBC work

In the lecture, Grantham is mainly focused on climate, weather and food. Slides here, talk below.


On climate  - click here for more carbon related  posts.  There's an argument made by risk philospher and Black Swan author Nassim Taleb on why we should lower pollution regardless of models.

The current Arts blog, cross-over, the current Investing blog.  Cross fertilise, some thoughts on autism.  Discover what the last arts/business mingle was all about (sign up for invites to the next event in the list below).

My Op-Ed in the Financial Times  (My Financial Times opinion article) about asking long-term questions surrounding sustainability and ESG.

Some popular posts:   the commencement address;  by Nassim Taleb (Black Swan author, risk management philosopher),  Neil Gaiman on making wonderful, fabulous, brilliant mistakes;  JK Rowling on the benefits of failure.  Charlie Munger on always inverting;  Sheryl Sandberg on grief, resilience and gratitude.

How to live a life, well lived. Thoughts from a dying man. On play and playing games.

A provoking read on how to raise a feminist child.

 

In Investing, ESG, Carbon Tags Carbon, Sustainability

Rio sells coal, what about the planet?

May 7, 2018 Ben Yeoh
rio-coal.png

Thesis answer requested: Rio Tinto has sold its coal mine to EMR Capital and PT Adaro Energy, an Indonesian listed coal Co. Rio is now ex-coal. Reasonable people can disagree about the stranded asset, business and financial risks of coal and this impact on Rio’s cost of capital. 

But, from the point of view of the Planet, its inhabitants and the climate this has made no meaningful difference. Ownership has changed. How the mine will be run in the future has potentially changed. Certain reasonable people could argue it has made the situation from that point of view, worse. Discuss. 100 marks available. CEO Jacques has said that Rio is not exiting coal because of environmental concerns, but because it had better investment opportunities in iron ore, copper, bauxite and aluminium. I read both the gofossilfree  movement on the arguments for divestment + Cary Krosinsky on the cons of divesting. (see links below) I advocate listening to the arguments, engaging in thoughtful disagreements, examining evidence and then making up your mind. Ray Dalio thinks we are losing the art of thoughtful disagreement. Meghan Phelps suggests there is hope.

 


 

Cary Krosinsky on the Pros/Cons of Divestment https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/lets-honest-divestment-isnt-answer-cary-krosinsky/

Good data based research by Carbon Tracker: https://www.carbontracker.org/

And by Vaclav Smil can be seen here: http://vaclavsmil.com/publications/ Bill Gates review of Vaclav Smil’s book Energy and Civilization (good summary_ https://www.gatesnotes.com/Books/Energy-and-Civilization

Movement advocating fossil free https://gofossilfree.org/divestment/what-is-fossil-fuel-divestment/

Tom Sanzillo FT Op-Ed advocating for divestment. https://www.ft.com/content/b5346cac-1e45-11e8-a748-5da7d696ccab

Stephen Beer response to Tom Sanzillo https://www.ft.com/content/ce1899ce-25fb-11e8-b27e-cc62a39d57a0

FT Editorial on divestment question at Cambridge University https://www.ft.com/content/1d8f3438-acfb-11e7-aab9-abaa44b1e130

Clara Vondrich response to FT advocating divest https://www.ft.com/content/c711a590-ad19-11e7-beba-5521c713abf4


 One of the best Munger speeches on how to think about a mental model of inversion can be found here.

If you'd like to feel inspired by commencement addresses and life lessons try:  Neil Gaiman on making wonderful, fabulous, brilliant mistakes; or Nassim Taleb's commencement address; or JK Rowling on the benefits of failure.   Sheryl Sandberg on grief, resilience and gratitude or investor Ray Dalio  on Principles.

Cross fertilise. Read about the autistic mind here.

More thoughts:  My Financial Times opinion article on the importance of long-term questions to management teams and Environment, Social and Governance capital. 

 How to live a life, well lived. Thoughts from a dying man.

In Investing, Carbon Tags Rio Tinto, Carbon, Coal

Nassim Taleb. Climate Change Risk.

September 18, 2017 Ben Yeoh
IMG_3709.JPG

On climate change… we should ask “what would the correct policy be if we had no reliable models”? writes Nassim Taleb and co-authors (see below).

We have only one planet.  This fact radically constrains the kinds of risks that are appropriate to take at a large scale. Even a risk with very low probability becomes unacceptable when it affects all of us - there is no reversing mistakes of that magnitude.

Without any precise models, we can still reason that polluting or altering our environment significantly could put us in uncharted territory, with no statistical track-record and potentially large consequences...

While some amount of pollution is inevitable, high quantities of any pollutant put us at a rapidly increasing risk of destabilising the climate, a system integral to the biosphere. Ergo, we should build down CO2 emissions, even regardless of what climate-models tell us.

Push a complex system too far and it will not come back. The popular belief that uncertainty undermines the case for taking seriously the “climate crisis” that scientists tell us we face is the opposite of the truth.

Properly understood, as driving the case for precaution, uncertainty radically underscores that case and may even constitute it. [My emphasis]

I think this case could be pushed more strongly given 3/10 Americans disbelieve manmade climate change. Even with this disbelief, most believe the climate is likely changing and an understanding of the risk framed in Taleb’s view should underscore the need for climate policy.

Source: Taleb's twitter feed

Source: Taleb's twitter feed

Nassim Taleb is not known for liberal left leaning views (although his politics are more complex to easily fit in the left-right axis; his local-global or libertarian axises are - in my view - more important) still this puts Nassim Taleb as a core anti-mainstream-left-thinker and Gregory Mankiw as an economist associated with the Republicans, strongly suggesting (1) Climate change should be taken seriously (in Taleb’s case) and (2) Carbon taxes or some form of Pigovian tax on carbon (in Mankiw’s case) should be enacted.


More from Nassim Taleb thinking on the ethics of stuffing.   or Nassim Taleb's commencement address.  

A post thinking about the pros/cons of a carbon tax (and dividend).

A long thought about various sustainability ideas.

 

In Investing, Carbon, ESG Tags Taleb, Sustainability, climate, Carbon

Bitcoin. Energy unsustainable.

September 17, 2017 Ben Yeoh
Source: https://digiconomist.net/bitcoin-energy-consumption

Source: https://digiconomist.net/bitcoin-energy-consumption

Bitcoin is unsustainable in light of its energy consumption. Several authors have examined Bitcoin’s energy consumption and concluded Bitcoin is using up as much energy as a medium sized country. Currently about 72 in the world if considered a country.

I can not find a peer review, but I see several independent sources (see end) making their own assumptions, which seem plausible (I am no expert).

I highlight the digiconomist work.  They calculate bitcoin’s energy consumption to power approx 1.5m US households,  They estimate the VISA network to be equivalent to 50,000 households.

See above

See above

As I have argued earlier, I do not believe Bitcoin is a good investment, but it might be thought of as a currency or a money.  Many are excited by the possibilities of blockchain.

This work suggests more needs to be done to make blockchain energy efficient, if this will be a sustainable mechanism.

The author Deetman writes after his calculations: “I haven't given up on the idea of distributed network transactions, but a radical rethinking of how these may be secured would be beneficial, be it at least for the environment.”  And if the calculations made by analysts below are true, I would concur. H/T to  https://digiconomist.net/bitcoin-energy-consumption as source.


References:  Bitcoin Consumes A Lot     Bitcoin Is Still Unsustainable

Electricity consumption of Bitcoin: a market-based and technical analysis

Proof of Work Flaws: Ethereum Lays Out Proof of Stake Philosophy

An Unsustainable Protocol That Must Evolve

Bitcoin Could Consume as Much Electricity as Denmark by 2020

Bitcoins are a waste of electricity    Bitcoin is Unsustainable

How Much Power Does the Bitcoin Network Use?


If you'd like to feel inspired by commencement addresses and life lessons try: Ursula K Le Guin on literature as an operating manual for life;  Neil Gaiman on making wonderful, fabulous, brilliant mistakes; or Nassim Taleb's commencement address; or JK Rowling on the benefits of failure.  Or Charlie Munger on always inverting.

Cross fertilise. Read about the autistic mind here. On investing try a thought on stock valuations.  Or Ray Dalio on populism and risk.  You can also click on the Carbon tag below.

In Carbon, Investing Tags Carbon

Climate Survey

September 14, 2017 Ben Yeoh
Source: Yale Climate Change Communication

Source: Yale Climate Change Communication

3/10 Americans disbelieve manmade climate change. This percentage has been stable for 20 years (with a slight rise to almost 4/10 in some years).

The fine work of the Yale Climate Communication Center focuses on the positive. It heralds the 6/10 who believe in manmade climate change. This proportion has also been stable for 20 years.

This discomforts me as it shows virtually no change in opinion over 20 years.

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1/10 to 1 in 8 Americans do not think climate change is happening. I find this still rather high. But perhaps I am out of touch.  1/4  Americans believe in clairvoyance (source Gallup).

Source: Gallup Poll

Source: Gallup Poll

Perhaps, most alarming only about one in eight Americans understand that almost all climate scientists (more than 90%) have concluded human-caused global warming is happening.

If that survey is correct then experts are having limited impact, and, or, peer reviewed robust information is not flowing down to the average American.

This lack of information or even disinformation (which seems to have plagued brexit) is a feature of today’s media that worries me.

The entrenched nature of people’s views also concerns me as it suggests to me there is a diminished ability to compromise and forge agreements from different viewpoints.

`'Public misunderstanding of the scientific consensus – which has been found in each of the Yale surveys since 2008 – has significant consequences. Other research has identified public understanding of the scientific consensus as an important “gateway belief” that influences other important beliefs (i.e., global warming is happening, human caused, a serious problem, and solvable) and support for action.

Updated in 2019: see here “… About seven in ten Americans (69%) think global warming is happening. Only about one in six Americans (16%) think global warming is not happening. Americans who think global warming is happening outnumber those who think it isn’t by more than a 4 to 1 ratio.
• Many Americans are certain that global warming is happening; 46% are “extremely” or “very” sure it is happening. By contrast, far fewer (8%) are “extremely” or “very sure” global warming is not happening.
• A majority of Americans (55%) understand that global warming is mostly human-caused. By contrast, only about one in three (32%) think it is due mostly to natural changes in the environment.
• More than half of Americans (53%) understand that most scientists think global warming is happening. However, only about one in six (17%) understand how strong the level of consensus among scientists is (i.e., that more than 90% of climate scientists think human-caused global warming is happening).
• About six in ten Americans (62%) say they are at least “somewhat worried” about global warming. More than one in five (23%) are “very worried” about it….”

For more information, see: van der Linden, S. L., Leiserowitz, A. A., Feinberg, G. D., & Maibach, E. W. (2015). The scientific consensus on climate change as a gateway belief: Experimental evidence. PLoS ONE, 10(2). doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0118489

If you'd like to feel inspired by commencement addresses and life lessons try: Ursula K Le Guin on literature as an operating manual for life;  Neil Gaiman on making wonderful, fabulous, brilliant mistakes; or Nassim Taleb's commencement address; or JK Rowling on the benefits of failure.  Or Charlie Munger on always inverting.

Cross fertilise. Read about the autistic mind here. On investing try a thought on stock valuations.  Or Ray Dalio on populism and risk.

 

In Carbon, ESG, Investing Tags climate, Carbon
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