A much-anticipated speech on environmental policy from President George W. Bush today showed the curious effect of presidential words on industries: Despite a lack of any real substance, Bush’s speech gave several cleantech stocks a substantial boost.
The most notable of Bush’s statements was that greenhouse gas emissions within the United States should peak in a decade or so, with a total halt in their growth in 2025 and a decline thereafter. Bush also stated that the United States would join an international accord and commit to binding targets if other countries, including developing economies like China and India, also do so.
Much of the rest of the speech was an attempt to shape future policy. Bush suggested that instead of the climate bills currently on the table, a combination of incentives and caps should be used to avoid “harming the economy” as legislation forcing emissions cuts would — in effect, a suggestive nudge for industries, rather than an aggressive push. He also noted that a federal approach is needed, rather than state-by-state rules. (Probably a dig at California, whose emissions laws are much stricter than the federal government’s.)
The Rose Garden speech fits into a recent Bush Administration trend toward a more moderate stance on environmental issues, and away from the flat-out denials of earlier years. However, in terms of ambition, it fell flat. If climate change is real, emissions need to be in decline long before 2025, at least according to most of the scientists — and even most other politicians — in the world. One activist even told the Wall Street Journal that the president’s speech was a “step backward”.
But even an unenthusiastic tip of the head toward cleantech from the top office proved to influence markets. Following the speech, shares in four major solar panel manufacturers rose about 5 percent each.
In part, that’s because many expected the current Administration to hold onto its obstructionist policies. A switch in direction by Bush likely indicates that he’s worried about the light in which he, and his party, will be seen in the future. In other words, he sees that public sentiment — still the most powerful political force — is shifting.
And with a new candidate coming into office in less than a year, the Bush Administration’s moves toward a pro-environment policy, feeble or not, lay the groundwork for immediate movement by a new, more aggressive president — as all three of the possible candidates are certain to be.
The true positive from all of this is for large financiers like banks, private equity and sovereign funds. Such investors need to be assured of a long-term positive outlook in cleantech, for projects that cost hundreds of millions of dollars — dollars that in turn support the entire sector. And with the political climate in the U.S. visibly changing, the future of that money looks more assured.
One Comment
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Dr. Ted Baehr said:
Bush is an excellent Christian, like I myself, but he’s giving in to these Communist Socialist Nazi environmental freaks. I have made a lot of money off his policies of invasion and systematic abuses of democracy, and a so-called “green” directive from the White House will not make me richer still. As founder of the Christian Film & Television Commission, and a proud Log Cabin Republican, I believe we have more at stake as Christian Americans than some fantasy about “global warming”. We need to invade Iran and take their oil, driving up my crude-oil futures holdings, and my financial interests in the Blackwater Group and in Halliburton. Surely Iran had something to do with 9/11! Surely their false Islamic religion is reason enough to start a righteous genocide! Carbon dioxide in the air is not a concern for the intelligent, thinking American.
3 Trackbacks
4:36 am
Private Equity HUB - peHUB First Read said:
[...] * Environmentalists may not have appreciated President Bush’s ”let’s get green by 2025″ speech, but it did help boost several cleantech stocks. [...]
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[...] voters, McCain stressed his environmental bona fides and sought to distance himself from the Bush administration’s record — calling for a return to 1990 emissions levels by 2020 and for a 60% cut below 1990 levels [...]
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While Washington dawdles over emissions trading, Bay Area passes nation’s first carbon tax » VentureBeat said:
[...] the potential to sharply curtail emissions in the future, political progress is likely to be slow, especially in the Bush Administration. Publicly elected officials are rarely fast to pass any bill that could be accused of harming the [...]