The Yale Forum on Climate Change & The Media |
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Climate Talks, and Money Starts to Listen:
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![]() James Kanter |
James Kanter, a Paris-based reporter who covers financial markets and climate change for the International Herald Tribune, (IHT), talked to the Yale Forum by phone and e-mail about how his beat has changed. Kanter has suggestions on how reporters can prepare themselves to cover banks and climate.
Kanter, a New York City native, has been covered European and global business matters for IHT since 2005. He won an M&A International Media Award for 2006 and was twice the winner of the Dow Jones awards for best market-moving story in Europe. He has worked as an editor or reporter for The Cambodia Daily in Phnom Penh, Dow Jones Newswires in Brussels, and Financial Times Marketwatch in London.
Kanter said that since 2001, when President Bush "famously turned away from the Kyoto treaty," Europeans have been pushing policy platforms on emissions, technology, and jobs in response to concerns over adverse impacts of climate change.
As one example of how the U.S. rejection of Kyoto changed the banking climate, Kanter noted that Shell's chief carbon trader moved his base of operations from New York to London several years ago. "And there were others who did the same," Kanter said, adding that the changes have helped make London a center of sorts for carbon trading.
London also offers favorable options for listing young companies on the Alternative Investment Market, known as AIM, a submarket of the London Stock Exchange and an appealing notion for start-up companies making such products as solar photovoltaic panels.
As another example of post-Kyoto treaty entrepreneurial overseas activities, Kanter pointed to California energy entrepreneur Robert Hertzberg's decision to set up a solar company in Wales (see article by Kanter).
The venture capital side of the issue - banks putting up money to fund wind or solar technology, for instance - has been gaining momentum in Europe at roughly the same pace as in the United States. In other words, only recently.
It's hard to predict what will happen in this new focus on climate change, but banking and financial reporters likely will be increasingly busy covering it.
Kanter wrote in late February that investments in green power look risky on both sides of the Atlantic, in part because of continued uncertainties over firm government support. While biofuels are increasingly being debunked as a serious alternative to fossil fuels, Kanter wrote in that article, "subsidies for renewable energy remain at the whim of politicians, creating a boom and bust cycle for wind farms and solar projects, particularly in the United States."
Kanter said he learned a great deal about covering the environment and business while studying for his master's degree in environmental law and policy. He holds a bachelor's degree from Columbia University and master's degree in international journalism from City University in London. He also earned a master's degree as a Knight Fellow at Yale Law School.
In a previous job covering antitrust and competition policy in Brussels for the Dow Jones Newswires and also for The Wall Street Journal, Kanter learned how the European Commission puts together "policies that sometimes seem a little arcane to outsiders." He explained that the European Commission, based in Brussels, proposes legislation that European Union governments and the European Parliament then can tweak. Once the European countries ratify legislation proposed by the EU they are bound to it.
The EU has been in a position to make its mark on the world with greenhouse gas emissions capping and trading because this matter was put to one side in the U.S. after President Bush opted out of the Kyoto agreement, Kanter noted, even though Europe had previously looked upon the U.S. as an innovator with its acid rain laws.
Asked his advice for business journalists new to climate change issues, Kanter recommended that they seek "one-on-one briefings with leading thinkers in the field who live in your area or city."
"Try and have an expert at a local university or a leading environmental consultancy talk you through the international political landscape, and then try to have them relate what they've described to what is going on in your country, city, or state." He said green investment specialists, available in most major cities, can be excellent sources. See, for instance, his February 28 piece on the rise of green investments and the potential problems foreseen for them.
As for key background reading, Kanter of course points to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Fourth Assessment Summary for Policy Makers Synthesis Report.
He suggested that reporters also be familiar with the Stern Review on the Economics of Climate Change. "At least skim it. You will pick up a good understanding of why many economists believe it's less costly to invest in cutting greenhouse gases now rather than wait until the signs of climate change are more obvious or economically threatening:
In addition, these links might be useful to banking and finance reporters digging into the climate change issue on their beats:
Christine Woodside is a freelance writer living in Deep River, Connecticut. Reach her by e-mail at christine.woodside@gmail.com.
May 6, 2008