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Investors say that Trump's rollback of greenhouse gas emissions will create confusion and could increase costs.

Shareholder advocates and portfolio managers claim that the Trump administration's decision, to reverse an Obama-era legal analysis, which underpinned greenhouse gas regulations will cause confusion and increase costs for both businesses and investors.

Donald Trump, the U.S. president who has called climate changes a "hoax," intends to formally rescind on Thursday 2009 scientific findings which?linked carbon dioxide to harmful health effects - data that have?guided standards of pollution for over 15 years.

This is the most significant 'climate change' policy rollback by the Republican administration. It follows a series of regulatory reductions and other measures intended to free up fossil fuels and slow down the development of clean energy.

Shareholder activists and asset managers say that the decision will leave companies in limbo. They will wonder if they will be forced to make course corrections under a new administration. Large multinational companies will probably not see much change, as they will be required to adhere to stricter emission standards all over the world.

Marcela Pinilla is the director of sustainable investments at Zevin Asset Management. She said, "This rollback creates a profound uncertainty for businesses that have already spent billions on emissions reduction."

We're disrupting a trajectory towards a low-carbon economic system just as businesses have committed substantial capital for that transition. Those who reverse course risk having their assets stranded if policy changes again.

STOP-START PLANNING

Beth Williamson of Calamos Investments' sustainable equity research said that the move could "move risk to other areas" by adding another layer of uncertainty in the?carbon-intensive industry.

Williamson, an associate portfolio manager and semiconductors, industrial equipment, and power electronics upstream suppliers, also said that such "stop-starting" planning can also cause volatility in the supply chain.

Andrea Ranger is the director of shareholder advocacy for?Trillium Asset Management. She said that the repeal may make it difficult for investors to choose winners during the transition, and could create uncertainty for companies with large capital expenditure plans.

"Because it is a whiplash effect if the new administration says, 'yep we will do it again'." Jonathan Pragel said that the reversal of policy would result in additional operational costs, which most boards of directors are not willing to pay.

"The cost to eliminate this infrastructure and then have to rebuild it in case there's another change, that is a very expensive proposition."

Data from the nonprofit Net Zero Tracker shows that the number of U.S. firms committing to achieve net-zero emission across their entire business by 2050 has increased by 9% by 2025. 304 companies in the Forbes Global 2000 Index have committed to this goal, up from just 279 the year before.

INVESTOR PRESSURE

Investors and other nations, including regulators from the European Union, will continue to insist on this, even if automakers are exempted from reporting federal requirements.

Investor advocate Giovanna Eichner, of Green Century Capital Management, said: "Investors are going to continue making it clear that managing climate risks is important for protecting shareholders and their bottom line."

Investor resolve is not weakened by losing this finding, but accountability. "Climate risk continues to threaten shareholder value and profits."

A spokesperson stated that since BMW's headquarters are in the European Union it must still follow the disclosure and emission requirements in Europe, no matter what the U.S. decides. The new U.S. regulation might not have much of an impact on us, as we are a global player.

Ford, General Motors Stellantis Mercedes, and Volkswagen, all global automakers, did not respond to a request for comment.

Rachel Delacour is the CEO of Sweep's sustainability data management platform. She said: "We have seen from our clients that those companies who excel are integrating ESG into their daily operations, and not just reporting on it. This is the competitive edge."

LEGAL CHALLENGES

A federal court in January ruled that the Department of Energy had violated the law by forming a climate science advisory group, which then produced a report intended to support the repeal effort.

Mark Wade, director of sustainability research at Allianz Global Investors believes that boards of large companies with investors from around the world who want data will not lose it.

"These 'U.S. companies are so large that they need non U.S. investors. Wade stated that if you remove the incremental risk buyer, it will affect (share price) valuations.

Even if they keep quiet, many U.S. businesses continue to work to adapt their business to a future low-carbon.

Wade stated that while the proposed EPA repeal was "very unhelpful," large U.S. corporations are still interested in profiting from the energy shift: "If you can find the next hydrogen or nuclear fusion solution, you will be the next billionaire," Wade added. (Editing by Dawn Kopecki, Nick Zieminski and Dawn Kopecki; Additional reporting by Nick Carey and Nora Eckert)

(source: Reuters)