Calling climate change an urgent challenge, Stanford’s Board of Trustees this week reported a steep drop in the university’s oil and gas investments, and further committed to accelerating the transition to at least net-zero greenhouse gas emissions in both Stanford’s operations and its investments.
The Board, completing a year-long review of fossil fuel investments, reported that Stanford Management Company (SMC), applying economic assessment in the context of its Ethical Investment Framework, has reduced active fossil fuel holdings in Stanford’s Merged Pool of investments by more than 90% to now represent less than 1.5% of the portfolio, and that SMC has no direct holdings in the top 100 oil and gas companies.
In a resolution and accompanying statement, the Board expressed its commitment to the goals of the 2015 Paris Agreement on climate, which aims to limit the rise in global temperature this century. In line with that goal, the Board committed to “accelerating the university’s transition, including its operations and endowment, to at least net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050.”
Stanford has undertaken aggressive efforts to support the transition to cleaner energy sources, including through its new solar-based energy system and a recently announced school focused on climate and sustainability that will draw on Stanford’s academic strengths in these fields to amplify the university’s impact.
“Acting to support the climate of the planet is a critical priority for Stanford, across our activities,” said Board Chair Jeffrey S. Raikes. “Addressing the climate challenge involves an orderly transition to cleaner energy sources, and that requires addressing both the producer side and the consumer side. With this action, we are committing to accelerating the transition of both our operations and our investments at Stanford to support the net-zero emission targets that will be essential to meeting the objectives of the Paris Agreement.”
“Net zero” refers to a condition in which human-generated greenhouse gas emissions are counterbalanced by activities that remove them from the atmosphere. Metrics have not yet been fully developed for measuring this balance and applying it to the activities of companies and institutions. To meet the Board’s commitment, Stanford intends to engage collaboratively with faculty experts and external partners, including other universities that have a similar focus, to develop mechanisms for determining the net emissions of companies in its investment portfolio, and then reduce those emissions in the portfolio as a whole in order to achieve at least the net-zero standard.
In their review, trustees did not conclude that fossil fuel investments currently meet the standard of “abhorrent and ethically unjustifiable,” which is required for a Board action of divestment under Stanford’s investment responsibility policy. Trustees said the actions or inactions of specific, individual companies could be judged against the standard, however.
Clean-energy efforts
The Board began its review in response to a request from the student group Fossil Free Stanford, which called for Stanford to divest from the top 100 oil and gas companies. The Board had previously divested from thermal coal, in 2014, concluding that coal was among the most carbon-intensive fossil fuels and that – in contrast with oil and gas – less carbon-intensive alternatives to coal were already broadly available.
As a backdrop to the new review, trustees noted Stanford’s institutional commitments to advance clean energy and sustainability in recognition of the global climate challenge. They include:
- A transformative investment by Stanford of more than $1 billion in clean energy systems and transportation – including the university’s innovative heating and cooling system and solar-based electricity initiative – which will result in an 80% reduction in campus emissions by 2021 and a 100% renewable electricity portfolio, more than 20 years ahead of the goal set by the State of California.
- Investment in a range of new research and educational activities that support decarbonization, efforts that Stanford now seeks to take to the next level with the newly announced school that will draw on the university’s strengths in climate and sustainability studies to amplify impact.
- The university’s platinum ranking from the Association for the Advancement of Sustainability in Higher Education, as well as its ranking first among Doctoral/Research Institutions in the association’s Sustainability Campus Index.
“Stanford considers climate change an urgent challenge and is committed to the goals of the 2015 Paris Agreement,” the Board said in its resolution. “Stanford has made and continues to make significant investments on campus to transition an entire community to clean energy and to advance research and education to further the global transition to clean energy.”
Review process with stakeholders and experts
In reviewing the Fossil Free Stanford proposal, the Board’s Special Committee on Investment Responsibility created a task force that met 42 times as it consulted with faculty researchers, students and experts.
“Fossil Free Stanford catalyzed an important discussion for our community,” Raikes said. “We’re grateful to everyone in the Stanford community who has contributed their insights. Everything we heard reflected our community’s deep concern for the climate of the planet, even as individuals expressed varying views about the most effective means of addressing it.”
While oil and gas companies are involved in providing financial support for energy research at universities including Stanford, Raikes said the Board’s review explicitly disregarded that fact in its consideration of the Fossil Free Stanford request. The review evaluated the request solely based on the parameters of the Board’s Statement on Investment Responsibility, he said.
Stanford’s Merged Pool of investments is managed by Stanford Management Company, though many assets are invested indirectly – that is, by external partners – rather than by the university directly. SMC operates under an Ethical Investment Framework that recognizes carbon-related damage to the environment as a factor in evaluating energy investments, as well as the importance of assessing companies’ concern “for the welfare of their stakeholders and the communities in which they operate.”
In its statement reporting on its deliberations, the Board of Trustees said the Merged Pool managed by SMC has no direct holdings in the 100 oil and gas companies identified by Fossil Free Stanford. It also reported that, as a result of rigorous application of the Ethical Investment Framework, total active investments in fossil fuels have fallen from 16% of the Merged Pool in 2011 to less than 1.5% — a 90% reduction. Meanwhile, alternative energy and sustainable investments have grown to now represent 4% of the Merged Pool.
Affirming rigorous investment scrutiny
The Board reaffirmed the efforts SMC has undertaken.
“One of the key findings of our review was that Stanford Management Company is doing an excellent job of evaluating investments and external partners, factoring in the effects of climate change, and recognizing the transition that is underway to the less carbon-intensive energy sources that our planet needs,” said Gene Sykes, chair of the Board’s Special Committee on Investment Responsibility. “We’re now taking additional steps to make clear our commitment as a Board, and to accelerate the important work of moving us to net-zero emissions.”
The Board outlined several steps to further Stanford’s commitment to the goal of shifting from carbon-intensive energy to cleaner energy sources. Under the resolution, the Board:
- “Supports SMC’s investment approach, governed by the Ethical Investment Framework, which reflects and anticipates the need to transition to cleaner and more sustainable economic activity, and has led to a dramatic restructuring of the energy portfolio;
- “Underscores that, under the Framework, SMC will not invest in energy firms that operate in a manner inconsistent with established climate science;
- “In order to support SMC’s effective application of the Framework, directs the chair of the Special Committee on Investment Responsibility to participate in SMC’s annual portfolio review of all investments;
- “Supports the continued vigorous exploration by SMC of promising opportunities in renewable energy and sustainable investments; and
- “Commits to accelerating the university’s transition, including its operations and endowment, to at least net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050.”
Consideration of divestment
In considering the Fossil Free Stanford request for divestment of any investments in the top 100 oil and gas companies, the Board was guided by its Statement on Investment Responsibility. That statement notes SMC’s approach to evaluating investments and also provides an avenue for the Board to require divestment, saying that “very rare occasions may arise when companies’ actions or inactions are so abhorrent and ethically unjustifiable as to warrant the University’s disassociation from those investments.”
In evaluating the request and consulting with stakeholders and experts, the Board said it was unable to conclude that all investments in oil and gas companies could be deemed to meet that threshold.
“Based on the opinions of experts in the field, however, the Board has concluded that, in the absence of readily available alternatives at scale, the transition to clean energy will require the continued, time-limited use of less carbon-intensive fossil fuels, and that loss of these alternatives today is both unfeasible and would impose a particularly harsh cost on energy-impoverished communities,” the Board said in its statement.
In its review, the Board also considered the assertion that oil and gas companies have engaged in human rights violations that would warrant divestment from the industry as a whole. The Board concluded that such allegations should be evaluated on a specific, case-by-case basis, and that generalized claims were “insufficient to support a determination of blanket industry-wide culpability.”
However, the Board said that the actions or inactions of individual companies could meet the “abhorrent and ethically unjustifiable” standard through a case-by-case evaluation.