We Can’t Control Inflation, Yet We Believe We Can Control the Climate

 | Nov 09, 2021 05:40AM ET

Policymakers can’t keep inflation at 2%, but they think they can keep the world’s temperature from rising 2° Celsius (or 3.6° Fahrenheit).

That’s how CLSA’s equity strategist Damian Kestel describes the goings-on at COP26, the United Nations’ climate change conference taking place now in Glasgow, Scotland. The attending leaders and policymakers may look like they’re in control, Kestel said in a Friday note to clients, but “a quick look at debt levels, inflation and yield movements suggest they are increasingly now mere passengers along for the ride and painted into a corner.”

Indeed, global debt is fast approaching a head-spinning $300 trillion. Here in the U.S., national debt will soon top $30 trillion, while debt-to-GDP currently stands at 126%.

Inflation is looking less and less “transitory,” and make no mistake: Transitioning to a zero-carbon energy mix as quickly as climate scientists are urging will be highly inflationary. Investment in fossil fuels is rapidly falling, which is driving up energy prices, and yet most economies are nowhere near ready to move to 100% renewables. That includes the U.S., which was one of a few large countries—the others being China, India, Japan and Australia—that did not sign the pledge last week to phase out the use of coal.

h2 Vulnerable European Families Could Be Without Power this Winter/h2

Europe is already feeling the pain of soaring energy costs. Under the European Union’s Emissions Trading System (ETS), companies must pay a tax to emit carbon. This tax has gone up sixfold over the past 10 years, and it’s doubled in the past year alone. The bloc is now proposing so-called carbon border adjustment mechanisms (CBAMs), which are taxes on imported goods, such as steel and cement, that are produced in countries that lack tough climate laws.