Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Communicating about Fossil Fuel Divestment

View through CrossRef
Divestment is a socially responsible investing tactic to remove assets from a sector or industry based on moral objections to its business practices. It has historical roots in the anti-apartheid movement in South Africa. The early-21st-century fossil fuel divestment movement began with climate activist and 350.org co-founder Bill McKibben’s Rolling Stone article, “Global Warming’s Terrifying New Math.” McKibben’s argument centers on three numbers. The first is 2°C, the international target for limiting global warming that was agreed upon at the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change 2009 Copenhagen conference of parties (COP). The second is 565 Gigatons, the estimated upper limit of carbon dioxide that the world population can put into the atmosphere and reasonably expect to stay below 2°C. The third number is 2,795 Gigatons, which is the amount of proven fossil fuel reserves. That the amount of proven reserves is five times that which is allowable within the 2°C limit forms the basis for calls to divest.The aggregation of individual divestment campaigns constitutes a movement with shared goals. Divestment can also function as “tactic” to indirectly apply pressure to targets of a movement, such as in the case of the movement to stop the Dakota Access Pipeline in the United States. Since 2012, the fossil fuel divestment movement has been gaining traction, first in the United States and United Kingdom, with student-led organizing focused on pressuring universities to divest endowment assets on moral grounds.In partnership with 350.org, The Guardian launched its Keep it in the Ground campaign in March 2015 at the behest of outgoing editor-in-chief Alan Rusbridger. Within its first year, the digital campaign garnered support from more than a quarter-million online petitioners and won a “campaign of the year” award in the Press Gazette’s British Journalism Awards. Since the launch of The Guardian’s campaign, “keep it in the ground” has become a dominant frame used by fossil fuel divestment activists.Divestment campaigns seek to stigmatize the fossil fuel industry. The rationale for divestment rests on the idea that fossil fuel companies are financially valued based on their resource reserves and will not be able to extract these reserves with a 2°C or lower climate target. Thus, their valuation will be reduced and the financial holdings become “stranded assets.” Critics of divestment have cited the costs and risks to institutional endowments that divestment would entail, arguing that to divest would go against their fiduciary responsibility. Critics have also argued that divesting from fossil fuel assets would have little or no impact on the industry. Some higher education institutions, including Princeton and Harvard, have objected to divestment as a politicization of their endowments. Divestment advocates have responded to this concern by pointing out that not divesting is not a politically neutral act—it is, in fact, choosing the side of fossil fuel corporations.
Title: Communicating about Fossil Fuel Divestment
Description:
Divestment is a socially responsible investing tactic to remove assets from a sector or industry based on moral objections to its business practices.
It has historical roots in the anti-apartheid movement in South Africa.
The early-21st-century fossil fuel divestment movement began with climate activist and 350.
org co-founder Bill McKibben’s Rolling Stone article, “Global Warming’s Terrifying New Math.
” McKibben’s argument centers on three numbers.
The first is 2°C, the international target for limiting global warming that was agreed upon at the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change 2009 Copenhagen conference of parties (COP).
The second is 565 Gigatons, the estimated upper limit of carbon dioxide that the world population can put into the atmosphere and reasonably expect to stay below 2°C.
The third number is 2,795 Gigatons, which is the amount of proven fossil fuel reserves.
That the amount of proven reserves is five times that which is allowable within the 2°C limit forms the basis for calls to divest.
The aggregation of individual divestment campaigns constitutes a movement with shared goals.
Divestment can also function as “tactic” to indirectly apply pressure to targets of a movement, such as in the case of the movement to stop the Dakota Access Pipeline in the United States.
Since 2012, the fossil fuel divestment movement has been gaining traction, first in the United States and United Kingdom, with student-led organizing focused on pressuring universities to divest endowment assets on moral grounds.
In partnership with 350.
org, The Guardian launched its Keep it in the Ground campaign in March 2015 at the behest of outgoing editor-in-chief Alan Rusbridger.
Within its first year, the digital campaign garnered support from more than a quarter-million online petitioners and won a “campaign of the year” award in the Press Gazette’s British Journalism Awards.
Since the launch of The Guardian’s campaign, “keep it in the ground” has become a dominant frame used by fossil fuel divestment activists.
Divestment campaigns seek to stigmatize the fossil fuel industry.
The rationale for divestment rests on the idea that fossil fuel companies are financially valued based on their resource reserves and will not be able to extract these reserves with a 2°C or lower climate target.
Thus, their valuation will be reduced and the financial holdings become “stranded assets.
” Critics of divestment have cited the costs and risks to institutional endowments that divestment would entail, arguing that to divest would go against their fiduciary responsibility.
Critics have also argued that divesting from fossil fuel assets would have little or no impact on the industry.
Some higher education institutions, including Princeton and Harvard, have objected to divestment as a politicization of their endowments.
Divestment advocates have responded to this concern by pointing out that not divesting is not a politically neutral act—it is, in fact, choosing the side of fossil fuel corporations.

Related Results

Analisis Perbandingan Fuel Consumtption Pada Pesawat boeing B737-800 Rute CGK-DMK dan CGK-AMQ
Analisis Perbandingan Fuel Consumtption Pada Pesawat boeing B737-800 Rute CGK-DMK dan CGK-AMQ
Fuel consumption merupakan perhitungan konsumsi bahan bakaryang digunakan pesawat udara melalui dua engine, perhitungan ini akan mengetahui banyaknya fuel yang digunakan oleh pesaw...
The Adventitious-Pin-Failure Study Under a Slow Power Ramp
The Adventitious-Pin-Failure Study Under a Slow Power Ramp
In a fast breeder reactor, a slow power ramp accident could lead to a local melting of the fuel depending on design and assumptions. If we assume cladding failure in addition to th...
An assessment of health consequences of Fossil Fuel energy use in Osun State, Nigeria: Burden and Implications
An assessment of health consequences of Fossil Fuel energy use in Osun State, Nigeria: Burden and Implications
Abstract Background The use of fossil fuel energy still persists in all continents of the world especially in Africa. This study was aimed to examine fossil fuel energy us...
Thyroid Gland and Male Reproductive Anomalies Among Fuel Handlers in Gampaha District, Sri Lanka
Thyroid Gland and Male Reproductive Anomalies Among Fuel Handlers in Gampaha District, Sri Lanka
Abstract Introduction:Fuel handlers at petrol stations are continuously exposed to organic solvents from fuel and vehicle emissions. Endocrine disrupting chemicals (...
Multifunctional Bio-Additives, Remedial to Crude and all Fuel Oil Problems
Multifunctional Bio-Additives, Remedial to Crude and all Fuel Oil Problems
Abstract The nail biting fuel oil problems such as sludge formation, accumulation of deposits, improper combustion, soot formation, high viscosity, pollution, sta...
Research on Scenarios and Development Paths of China’s Commercial Closed Nuclear Fuel Cycle
Research on Scenarios and Development Paths of China’s Commercial Closed Nuclear Fuel Cycle
Abstract China implements the established policy of closed nuclear fuel cycle for the sustainable development of nuclear power. However, there seems no feasible deve...
Factors and mechanisms of elongation of VVER-1000 fuel rods during thermal tests simulating dry storage modes
Factors and mechanisms of elongation of VVER-1000 fuel rods during thermal tests simulating dry storage modes
To prove safety of dry storage conditions, thermal tests of the VVER-1000 fuel rods were performed in electrically heated furnaces in helium gas environment under stationary condit...

Back to Top