Actions

The Complexity of Sustainability and Investing

From Santa Fe Institute Events Wiki

Revision as of 15:50, 1 May 2020 by Toland (talk | contribs)





SFI ACtioN Virtual Topical Meeting
May 27-28, 2020
Co-sponsored by ACtioN member Putnam Investments


This meeting will take place in 2-hour sessions over the course of May 27 and May 28, featuring Daniel Schrag, Jessika Trancik, and Simon Levin. Each day, sessions will start at 8:00 am US Mountain Time and end at 10:00 am US Mountain Time.

Classical economic theory suggests that growing demand for assets with “sustainability credentials” will enable firms to decrease their borrowing costs by increasing the sustainability of their operations. In theory, this incentivizes firm leaders to employ more sustainable practices and affords an advantage to firms that, ceteris paribus, decrease their environmental impact. In practice, there are several impediments to this approach. For example:

  1. It is difficult to understand the environmental impact of any individual firm.
  2. It can be difficult to compare or rank the environmental impacts of unrelated “cross category” activities.
  3. It can be difficult to predict the strategies that economic agents will evolve in response to altered incentives.


Complexity science offers an alternative theoretical construct to better understand (i) the nature and impact of climate change, (ii) the probabilistic and nonlinear ways human intervention can affect climate change, and (iii) the impact and implications of different schemes to score and reward behavioral changes intended to improve a firm’s environmental sustainability.