35 years on: the compound effect of environmental solutions
Jon Wallace, Noelle Guo and Grisha Milushev reflect on progress on ecological challenges during the 35 years since the Jupiter Ecology Fund was launched.
As always, we are aiming at long-term capital growth, and we think it essential to seek resilient performance during a currently challenging time for the global economy, in which interest rates have risen and companies are feeling the effects of higher financing costs. Our philosophy is to select the leading companies across six themes: clean energy, green mobility, circular economy, green buildings and industry, sustainable agriculture and land ecosystems, and sustainable oceans and freshwater systems. We are encouraged that many environmental solutions companies are now showing resilient real-world growth. Looking back, that has not always been the case.
Moreover, the Brundtland Report accelerated a growing understanding that our economy operates within our ecological systems, not the reverse. As the report puts it, ‘We have in the past been concerned about the impacts of economic growth upon the environment. We are now forced to concern ourselves with the impacts of ecological stress – degradation of soils, water regimes, atmosphere, and forests upon our economic prospects.’ 2
In calling for action, it laid the groundwork for the earth Summit in 1992, the Rio Declaration, the UN Commission on Sustainable Development, and serves as an important benchmark by which to measure progress. Today, global environmental challenges are more clearly defined, the impacts from failure to address them acknowledged, and concrete solutions exist in most areas. Clean technologies are becoming more economically competitive and regulatory action is beginning to catch up with scientific knowledge. In our view, environmental solutions investors are better placed to capture unfolding secular trends in the global sustainable transition than ever before.
Reflecting on the Brundtland Report shows how far we have travelled and how much further we have yet to go. We believe that the global economy is beginning to experience the compound effects of deepening environmental knowledge, widening communication on sustainability and social issues, and advancing green technologies. The fact that challenges such as climate change and biodiversity loss are now recognised as inter-connected, shows that the seeds planted by the Brundtland Report are now bearing fruit.
One example of positive change since 1988 is the ozone layer, which, after suffering years of depletion from damaging manufactured chemicals such as halocarbon refrigerants and foam-blowing aerosols, is now showing signs of healing. The way the world came together to address the ozone layer problem shows how important it was to effectively communicate the seriousness of the threat. The prospect of ultraviolet rays damaging people’s skin, causing cancer and other dangers, was too immediate to ignore.
We are now nearing a similar phase of climate and biodiversity awareness. Extreme weather events are occurring more often, seasons are shifting, food yields are suffering due to disasters, insurers are accumulating extreme losses, coral reefs are bleaching and ice sheets are melting. These are all examples of climate change impacts which are easy to comprehend by the public and which inevitably will lead to increased calls for action.
Fortunately, scientists are doing their part in communicating these threats. Although the threats are severe, the world has never been in a stronger position to address them. Renewable energy costs have fallen for solar, wind, and batteries. Funding for climate tech has grown. Engineers are supported by increasingly sophisticated technology, software and computational power. Governments and regulators are pushing for climate action, biodiversity protection and sustainable development. Targets are now in place to limit global warming and protect natural capital following the COP 21 conference on climate change held in Paris in 2015, and the COP15 conference on biodiversity held in Montreal in 2022. The world now knows what needs to be done and there is an action plan for carrying out the transition.
Most countries are now signed up to international multilateral environmental agreements aimed at protecting our planetary boundaries, including the Vienna Convention, the Paris Agreement, and the Kyoto Protocol. Most importantly, global GDP growth has decoupled from global CO2 emissions growth, so nations no longer rely purely on fossil fuels to grow their economies. The world has likely reached peak fossil fuel demand for electricity. The Brundtland Report stated that an energy efficient alternative for lighting was a 100W light bulb: nowadays LED bulbs use just 3-4W. Even whaling peaked shortly before the 1980s. Air pollution kills less people now than ever before.
Unfortunately, there have also been failures. The Living Planet Index, which measures global wildlife populations, has decreased about 70% since 1988. Global plastics production has grown to 400m tonnes per annum and giant garbage islands are forming in the Pacific Ocean. Global greenhouse gas emissions have kept on growing, causing further global warming. Energy efficiency has only improved at about 1.4% per annum, far below what is required. Public climate financing has remained below targets. Financing for both climate change mitigation and adaptation is far below what is required. ‘Forever chemicals’ and microplastics are now understood to have high carcinogenic risk.
While currently less clear, it is probable that biodiversity will eventually benefit from efforts to protect natural capital. Progress on biodiversity has been slower to start in earnest compared to climate mitigation. We are only at the start of the sustainable development journey. Its fastest pace of acceleration will be in the future.
Identifying catalysts is a powerful tool to enhance returns and find the pockets where progress is most likely to accelerate. Time and time again a catalyst has been the convergence of environmental and health-related risk (the ozone layer and skin cancer being an example). Catalysts often come from technology. As in nature, change leads to change, unlocking cascading effects.
Looking ahead, where else might we see catalysts converge? We see agriculture as a key domain, largely untouched by environmental solutions, and yet hugely affected by the risks it contributes to so significantly.
If there is a single lesson to be learned from the fund’s rich history, it is the importance of seeking companies that can execute above their peers and protect their competitive advantage and so benefit from ongoing megatrends. This is why we hold company leadership to a high standard. It is also why we focus on identifying the technology winners. Finally, we understand the supporting legislation and regulation.
Having reviewed progress made during the past 35 years, we are more convinced than ever that environmental solutions will be among the leading mega-themes of the foreseeable future, and a source of long-term, above-market capital growth.
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1 Report of the World Commission on Environment and Development: Our Common Future. The United Nations, 1987. Published by Oxford University Press. Available at https://sustainabledevelopment.un.org/content/documents/5987our-common-future.pdf. Para 15.
2 Ibid. Para 15.
3 https://www.jupiteram.com/uk/en/professional/insights/us-and-eu-ira-made-in-china/
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