Global climate coalitions need safer harbor from antitrust turbulence
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[April 06, 2023]
LONDON (Reuters) -Global companies that form alliances to
help them to tackle climate change need clear "safe harbour" guidelines
from governments to allay fears they could be tripped up by antitrust
rules, legal experts said.
Hundreds of companies have banded together into various groups with
pledges to reduce carbon emissions to net zero by mid-century.
But there is limited guidance from governments and regulators on how far
they can collaborate to reach that goal without overstepping antitrust
boundaries.
Zurich Insurance Group on Wednesday said it was quitting an industry
grouping of insurers focused on cutting carbon emissions. That followed
Munich Re's unexpected announcement last week that it was leaving the
group - the Net Zero Insurance Alliance (NZIA) - to avoid antitrust
risks.
The German reinsurer on Friday quit group less than two years after
co-founding the coalition, part of the Glasgow Financial Alliance for
Net Zero (GFANZ) umbrella group of sectors pushing to decarbonise.
Alec Burnside, a partner at law firm Dechert, said both Britain and the
European Commission had offered "relatively timid" guidance when what
was needed were "explicit safe harbours for companies."
"There should be confirmation in the guidance coming out of antitrust
agencies to re-assure companies committing to GFANZ," he said.
Also last week, a Danish pension scheme said it could quit the Net Zero
Asset Owner Alliance because of a perceived lack of ambition among
peers, which several sources said stemmed from fears of attracting
antitrust lawsuits.
The antitrust tensions mark a further setback to GFANZ several months
after U.S. asset manager Vanguard pulled out, citing a need to express
its own views independently to investors.
LACK OF SPECIFIC GUIDANCE
The European Union and Britain have published draft guidelines on how
companies can co-operate within the law, but have not released guidance
specific to financial institutions and net-zero alliances.
A European Commission spokesperson said its guidance, to be finalised in
June, is designed to show agreements with a "genuine sustainability
objective" will not violate antitrust laws, and that some will benefit
from exemptions.
Britain's competition regulator in February explained how it would ease
rules to ensure businesses were not "unnecessarily or erroneously
deterred" from collaborating.
Businesses can get exemptions if they demonstrate a climate change
agreement between companies meets four conditions, including provision
of benefits such as promotion of economic progress and that consumers
will gain.
In the U.S., some Republican politicians have highlighted the potential
antitrust implications of these climate groups.
They have been threatening court action as part of a broader attack on
environmental, social and governance investing. U.S. authorities are yet
to offer companies any formal protection.
Some legal experts said that while they believe the antitrust fears to
be overblown, the risk is that members of alliances will use them as a
reason to quit.
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Munich Re Group logo is seen on a
smartphone in front of displayed same logo in this illustration
taken, December 1, 2021. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration
Keith Johnson, CEO of Global Investor Collaboration Services in
Minnesota, who advises asset managers and owners on fiduciary duties
and governance, said Republicans may not have much legal ground for
their arguments but they might still get executives to dial back
their ESG efforts.
"It's not as much as the actual liability exposure as it is the
intimidation factor," he said, noting that companies would want to
avoid the hassle of litigation even if they can ultimately win.
MORE CAUTIOUS
When it gave guidance in January, NZIA made clear members were
committed to complying with regulations, including antitrust laws,
and were free to make their own policies and set their own carbon
reduction targets.
Munich Re said its concerns were linked to the relative market share
of NZIA, which has 29 members representing around 15% of insurance
premiums sold, globally.
The Net Zero Asset Owner Alliance (NZAOA), which Munich Re also
belongs to, has 85 members managing $11 trillion against more than
$126 trillion in global invested assets. Munich Re said given that
ratio, the associated risks were "significantly lower,"
Munich Re also said it remained committed to its own climate
targets, and it has restrictions on financing and underwriting of
some fossil fuel business, including new oil and gas fields.
Zurich said it wanted to focus its resources "to support our
customers with their transition" and that it remained committed to
its sustainability ambitions, but did not elaborate further on its
reasons for leaving the NZIA.
Reuters contacted its 17 other members, three of which confirmed
they would remain members. The other 14 declined to comment or did
not respond to requests for comment.
Aviva said it remained committed to NZIA as achieving net zero was
"something companies cannot do in isolation".
Allianz said the net-zero alliances were world-leading in their
efforts to mitigate climate change and that it continued to chair
the NZAOA.
Grupo Catalana Occidente told Reuters that because the path to net
zero was still being decided, assessing antitrust concerns was "not
possible, at this stage". Its NZIA membership is a "firm commitment
to climate neutrality", it said.
Ben Caldecott, director of the Oxford Sustainable Finance Group at
the University of Oxford, said that anti-competition concerns were
used as a "smokescreen" for some companies that do not want to
adhere to the requirements of a climate alliance. He said this made
it all the more urgent for regulators to provide better clarity.
"These alliances depend on momentum," said Caldecott. "If they start
to lose critical mass it becomes potentially existential."
(Reporting by Virginia Furness, Isla Binnie, Tommy Reggiori Wilkes,
Simon Jessop, Ross Kerber and Tom Sims; Editing by Greg Roumeliotis
and Jane Merriman)
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