Showing posts with label London Labour Conference 2023. Show all posts
Showing posts with label London Labour Conference 2023. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 17, 2023

‘How can we put an end to greenwashing? LAPFF & Smith Institute Fringe at Labour Conference 2023

 


This is my presentation to this fringe. Hat tip Paul Hunter from PRIC for excellent speech notes.

"Thank you Clive. I am delighted to be here in Liverpool and looking forward to today’s discussion.

I am John Gray, I’m councillor in Newham, I’m chair of Newham Pensions Committee and I am here as vice-chair of the Local Authority Pension Fund Forum (known as LAPFF) which represents the interests of 87 public sector pension funds and 7 pool companies. I also wear various trade union pension hats. 

If any of you have worked or work in local government, the chances are you will have a pension with one of our member funds. If we have any councillors in the room, you or colleagues may well sit on the pension committee.  

As you can imagine as a major UK employer, our local authority pension funds have a lot of members which means collectively we hold a significant amount of assets – around £350 billion - much of which is invested in large international companies.  Around 6 million Brits have Council pensions

The role of LAPFF is to engage with investee companies on the way they treat our planet, how they behave towards people, and more generally the way that they are run and managed.

These issues matter in and of themselves, but as trustees of pension funds they also matter because they carry significant investment risks and opportunities. Indeed, for anyone with a pension these issues should also matter to you because failure to consider them puts at risk your retirement income.

In this context and that of our topic for discussion, I thought I would use my time today to focus on three main areas (in fringe speeches everything comes in threes'):

· Why greenwashing is an issue for investors.

· What investors can do to tackle it?

· And from an investor perspective the role government could play.

So why does greenwashing matter to investors?

The risks of climate change to our planet, society and economy should go without saying. However, in truth they cannot be repeated enough. From an investor point of view, climate change poses systemic risks to the whole economy, impacting every single investment. There are also specific risks for companies we are invested in, that will undoubtedly be left behind by the energy transition if they don’t decarbonise their business model quickly enough.

But where does greenwashing fit in here. Well to start, if information provided by a company is unclear or misleading then assessments of risks may be inaccurate which will affect investment decisions and could leave us as investors exposed.

It also means that stewardship activity we undertake could be impacted, including which companies to engage, in the asks we make of company chairs in meetings we have with them and in the voting positions we take at Annual General Meetings.

To give you an example of what we experience. We too often see companies describe themselves as having science-based climate targets. What’s not to like about that, who can argue with science.

However, when you look under the bonnet of the statements, we see a more complicated picture.

This can include a climate target which only covers so-called Scope 1 and 2 emissions – emissions from a company’s own activity – and not scope 3 emissions - pollution from their product which is used by its customers. And in the case of an oil and gas company or a carmaker that is precisely where most emissions are and where real climate risks lie.

In such instances where information is unclear, the climate risks facing a company could be masked while at a macro level it could breed complacency about the pace of climate action.

But what can investors do?

To start, investors should look beyond the glossy green images within sustainability reports and not take the information that is provided by companies at face value.

A good example of this is on the issue of planting trees to offset emissions. Leaving aside the cost or the displacement of people, when we as LAPFF added up the tree planting proposals of major emitters you know what we concluded? That we were going to need a much bigger planet to plant all those trees.

Investors also have a role more generally in scrutinising plans and the expectations we make of companies. Setting out a long-term target is not enough when action is needed now. So short term targets which can be measured and not avoided through greenwash is an essential ask of investee companies.

But we don’t just have a role in assessing information and asking for more, we also have a role in challenging companies. And on the issue of offsetting emissions our engagement with companies is bearing fruit with growing recognition of the limits offsetting will deliver.

And where plans are not credible or misleading, collectively investors should be doing more to voice their concerns and escalate action by voting against company directors at AGMs.

But we can’t do this alone. Which brings me on to the last point, the role of government.

Greenwashing is clearly an issue that regulators and governments are looking at, both regarding company disclosures but also green taxonomies, investment products and sustainability labels.

This is good first step but there are further interventions which could help further.

The first area is mandatory company disclosures. If we are going to distinguish between a company that is taking action and one that’s just talking a good game, then we need hard and comparable numbers within company reports covering areas such as investment in the transition.

Second, when the Transition Plan Taskforce reports government should push ahead with setting out expectations for how companies should undertake, integrate, and report their climate plans. This will make information comparable and clearer which will help guard against greenwashing.

And it is critical that these expectations of companies include how they are considering the social dimensions of the transition. A shift to net zero will only happen if we have a just transition for workers, communities and consumers.

Third, government can look at the corporate governance code, including around whether to make sustainability committees compulsory and requiring companies to produce a skills matrix so we can see the actual competency of boards on issues such as climate change.

And lastly, as investors we feel we should be able to have a direct say on company climate plans. LAPFF has been writing to companies calling for a vote on transition plans which will help scrutinise plans to both guard against greenwashing and ensure credible strategies are in place. But we think these votes at large listed companies should be put on a mandatory basis. In France, a proposed law is in the process of being passed which will do just that and could easily be adopted in the UK.

So, to conclude:

· Greenwashing matters because it threatens the pace of the transition and for us as investors it creates risks – and time is very much of the essence.

· From an investor perspective, we have a role in scrutinising information and challenging greenwashing – after all we own these companies.

· And lastly, to empower investors to do more, government can help by mandating improved transparency from companies. This would then enable shareholders to challenge plans that do not appear credible.


Thank you.

Sunday, October 08, 2023

Labour Party conference 2023 - Sunday

Today started off with a gentle 2.5 mile jog along the Mersey then back again.  At 12.30 I took part in a well attended, lively panel organised by the Local Authority Pension Fund Forum on "Green washing" which I will post on later.  

I am not a delegate this year at conference but attending as a elected Labour Councillor and enjoying the freedom of not being required for early morning delegation meetings and attending all conference debates and speeches (no matter how boring).

In the afternoon I checked out the conference stalls and met up with various contacts and colleagues for coffee and gossip. I had a "hello stranger, long time no see" from London Mayor, Sadiq Khan, as he walked past quickly with his escort to his next event. 

At 6pm I attended the Labour Unions reception and heard some great speeches and contributions especially from our deputy leader Angela Rayner MP and leader Keir Starmer. 

Afterwards I went to the Association of Labour Councillors reception and then the Labour Friends of Bangladesh event. During which I was asked to make a speech on my role as a housing worker in Tower Hamlets for the past 31 years and as a UNISON trade union and Labour activist.  Great food and company. 

After that I went back to my accomodation and will very shortly crash out. A good day. 
 

Monday, January 30, 2023

UNISON Labour LInk Motion on Cost of Living Crisis: London Labour Regional Conference 2023

(My speech yesterday) 

"Chair. Conference. John Gray, proposing this motion on Cost of living crisis on behalf of UNISON Labour Link, the political wing of the largest and of course best trade union in London.

Conference, yesterday, we heard from an expert panel on the cost of living crisis. This including a UNISON organiser who supports members in London NHS hospitals, who have to rely on food banks to feed themselves and their families.

But Conference there are other experts on the cost of living crisis and these experts are you all in this room, a room filled with grass root labour activists, Cllrs, Affiliates, MPs and Assembly members, and workers trying to pay our bills, who day in day out, see first-hand the misery that the Cost of Living crisis has been inflicted on so many Londoners. Don’t forget Conference that this fresh attack on living standards is taken place after a decade of cruel austerity.

And who has suffered the most misery in London? It is of course our Black community, who even before this current crisis had tended to experience the lowest wages, the highest unemployment, the worse housing, and most insecure jobs with shoddy terms and conditions. It is Black Workers who were disproportionately impacted by the pandemic, who were dying from Covid whilst carrying out vital frontline roles and who keep the public sector running in London.

Conference, this motion tells it as it is but also what will a future Labour Government will actually do to solve the crisis. As a front line housing worker in North London and as an elected unison London activist, who represents members who work in social care & the wider voluntary sector. Let me paint you a picture.

Workers, who have already suffered years of austerity, while trying to survive in London on an inadequate national minimum wage, have either insecure zero hour contracts or face the slash and burn of their terms and conditions by fire and rehire.

A future Labour Government will give all workers greater employment rights and protections from day one. End zero hour contracts and fire and rehire. A Labour Government will deliver Fair Wage Agreements that will bring employers and unions together in my sector & in social care, to negotiate binding pay and conditions.

Conference, check out the “New deal for working people launched last year by my UNISON friend & colleague, Labour Deputy Leader, Angela Rayner. This is how we will end the Cost of Living crisis.

But Conference, let me be clear. First and foremost, we must get a Labour Government elected. We must get Keir Starmer elected as our Prime Minister.

Conference, despite my youthful looks, I have been able vote in elections for 42 years. But in those 42 years there has only been 2 Labour Prime Ministers and only 1 of them had ever been elected.

While I have never agreed 100% with any Labour Prime minister or Leader, I am a firm believer that the worse day in any Labour Government is far, far better than the very best day of any Tory Government.

Conference please support this motion. Let’s not just talk about the Cost of living crisis but get a Labour Government elected to end it.

(hat tip photo Liz B)

Saturday, January 28, 2023

London Labour Party Conference 2023 - Day 1

 

From my twitter feed as a UNISON Labour Link Delegate.

At @LondonLabour annual conference. Chair of Regional board #MaggiFerncombe opens conference

Next our @labour leader @Keir_Starmer MP gives key note speech on why we will only get a #labour government by winning the trust of the #British people.

Next a panel on #CostOfLivingCrises with our own @unisontheunion @unisonglr @labourunionsuk
secretary @JoelBodmer (former chair @UnisonHAB@kimleadbeater @RNBlake #petermandelson. Peter advises us to treat recent polls like smoking cannabis "smoke but do not inhale"

After break we now have panel on "winning the General Election - getting into power" with
@LondonLabour Pearleen Sangha @elliereeves

During lunch I attended part of fringe by @RMTunion speaker Mick Lynch, @DawnButlerBrent
#ellybaker. Good to hear of their support for @labour "New Deal for working people"

Standing ovation for barn storming speech by @lisanandy on fixing the broken housing market by building #council homes (& many other things)

After Lisa panel on "House & home - solving Britain's housing crisis" @ShamaTatler Osama Bhutta
@Shelter Anya Marton @PricedOutUK chaired by @DannyBeales @Semakaleng makes point that in #london we need at least 30k social homes pa

Motions debate: @unisonglr convenor & @LondonLabour #labourlink delegate @Yvonneg57841905 seconds #Abuse is not part of the job" @CroydonUNISON

Proposing motion on "Post-Brexit - Working in Partnership" moved by @GMB_union @newham_labour @NewhamBooker @LondonLabour

Seconding the Post-Brexit motion is @CvobUnison Branch Chair & @unisonglr #LabourLink delegate @MarcelaBenede10

"It's now cheaper to save the planet than to destroy it" @Ed_Miliband speaks on "The green sprint" debate with @Miatsf @HughGoulbourne @hennassh

Final panel "Lessons from local government" @LGA_Labour Peter Robbins @timroca85 @CllrAsma_Islam @KamRai7 @GracieMaeW Regional @LondonLabour director Pearleen Sangha making her report to Conference

And final speaker @LondonLabour London Mayor @SadiqKhan . "More council homes being built in London since 1970s" "Nothing quite like handing a key to anew home to a family" "next election is a choice between a Labour Mayor on side of Londoners & a Tory on side of this rotten Government"