Free Republic
Browse · Search
General/Chat
Topics · Post Article

To: Arthur Wildfire! March; pyx

Thank you for the ping.

More here:

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/2501420/posts?page=20#20

0bama
Joyce Foundation
Chicago Climate Exchange
Generation Investment Management
Al Gore
David W. Blood
Goldman Sachs
Hank Paulson
Maurice Strong
Soros
...

MUCH more here:

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2501282/posts

//

http://www.muckety.com/Generation-Investment-Management/5000777.muckety

Generation Investment Management
People related to Generation Investment Management:
David W. Blood - co-founder & senior partner
L. John Doerr - advisory board member
Mark Ferguson - managing partner & CIO
Albert A. Gore Jr. - chairman
Peter Harris - managing partner & COO
Peter S. Knight - managing partner
Colin le Duc - managing partner
Miguel Nogales - managing partner
Other current Generation Investment Management relationships:
Ausra, Inc. - investor

Generation Investment Management

http://www.muckety.com/David-W-Blood/29954.muckety

David W. Blood

Gender: Male

David W. Blood lives and/or works in
London, UK.
David W. Blood current relationships:
Acumen Fund - advisory council member
Generation Investment Management - co-founder & senior partner
Hamilton College - trustee
David W. Blood past relationships:
2008 Barack Obama presidential campaign - London fundraiser co-chair
Goldman Sachs Asset Management - CEO


21 posted on 05/02/2010 2:54:32 PM PDT by maggief (Not everything is what it seems.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 17 | View Replies ]


To: maggief

Thanks again!


23 posted on 05/02/2010 3:03:05 PM PDT by Arthur Wildfire! March (Obama's CCX air selling scam: $100 trillion in 10 years. See profile.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 21 | View Replies ]

To: Arthur Wildfire! March; pyx

(no link)

A market for pollution? - Pact to trade greenhouse-gas credits
The Washington Times - Tuesday, June 19, 2001
Author: Carter Dougherty, THE WASHINGTON TIMES
Twenty-five companies and nonprofit groups have agreed to join a groundbreaking program that will fashion a system for trading credits in greenhouse gases, the chief culprits in global warming.

The Chicago Climate Exchange - based in the city known for trading commodities such as wheat, corn and cattle - hope the project will become a model for the nation as the Bush administration grapples with solutions to the worldwide problem.

The voluntary plan “would represent a major step forward while an appropriate regulatory framework for greenhouse gases evolves,” said Paula DiPerna, president of the Joyce Foundation, which is financing the study.

Richard Sandor, a prominent Chicago businessman and academic who will lead the program, says there is a market for the products, even though the Bush administration has signalled a go-slow approach on global warming by refusing to sign the 1997 global-warming treaty negotiated in Kyoto, Japan.

“We’re looking at this like we would any other financial product,” Mr. Sandor said. “We’re agnostic about the overall issue of global warming.”

Mr. Sandor is also chief executive officer of Environmental Financial Products, a Chicago company that has developed other financial services in the environmental arena.

Citing Senate opposition and its own skepticism about the 1997 Kyoto treaty, the Bush administration announced earlier this year that the United States would not sign the pact and reneged on a campaign promise to regulate carbon dioxide, the gas scientists say is mainly responsible for global warming.

The administration is developing other options for combatting the problem, which Mr. Bush shared with European allies last week.

Advocates of the trading system for carbon dioxide believe the plan is the most market-oriented way to fight global warming. It would be modeled largely on a system started in 1990 to reduce emissions of sulfur dioxide and nitrogen, which cause acid rain.

The system - voluntary, at least for starters - would allocate credits to companies for a given amount of greenhouse-gas emissions. Businesses that develop new environmentally friendly technologies for reducing their output of carbon dioxide could then monetize their innovations by selling their credits to other companies.

The Chicago Climate Exchange plans a 12-month feasibility study. If it can get a consensus among the 25 participating organizations, companies then would voluntarily adopt caps on greenhouse-gas emissions and begin trading.

Participating companies include Dupont, International Paper, Ford Motor Co. and PG&E National Energy Group, a Bethesda company that operates electricity generators and pipeline facilities.

(snip)

//

Daring to go where the U.S. government hasn’t, a group of industrial giants announced Thursday they will voluntarily reduce and trade greenhouse gas emissions, which are currently unregulated but linked to global warming.

The Chicago Climate Exchange , the first attempt in the U.S. to reduce greenhouse gases with a market-based solution, will allow participants to swap the right to pollute in a four-year pilot project.

The electronic trading scheme involves a baseline pollution limit—a certain number of tons of six greenhouse gases that each company can put into the air—and allows members that cut emissions below the baseline to sell credits to firms that can’t meet the mark.

The central idea behind the system, known as a cap and trade program, is not new. It is used worldwide and was employed by the Environmental Protection Agency beginning in 1990 to control sulfur dioxide levels. What makes the Chicago Climate Exchange unusual is that participation is strictly voluntary, and there is currently no government involvement.

The big industrial corporations include DuPont, Ford Motor Co., Motorola and American Electric Power—the largest power supplier and the largest emitter of carbon dioxide in the nation. They were joined by the City of Chicago and other companies, including Waste Management Inc. and Baxter International Inc.

Many joined for the chance to experiment with cost-effective ways of reducing emissions before they are forced to do so by future laws. Some overseas markets, including Europe, are developing a cap and trade system for greenhouse gases, as permitted by the Kyoto Protocol, to thwart climate change. Britain and Denmark are already trading on a small scale.

For some companies, who might be able to cut emissions and resell their credits at a higher price, the incentive is profit. Others said they want to show their shareholders, customers and investors that they are concerned about environmental issues.

“There’s a growing passion that markets lend themselves to solving social and environmental problems,” said Chicago Climate Exchange CEO Richard Sandor, a former economist with the Chicago Board of Trade, called by some the “father of financial futures.” “We all believe energy efficiency is good business. We’re trying to build and inform the debate to give companies a vehicle to test cut and trade.”

(snip)

In a Senate hearing last week, Republican John McCain and Democrat Joe Lieberman called for a cap and trade system through a government-provided Greenhouse Gas Database, which would contain an inventory of emissions and a registry of reductions.

(snip)

//

Exchange in pollution - credits formed
Chicago Sun-Times - Friday, January 17, 2003
Working to align market forces with social good, 13 major corporations and the city of Chicago agreed Thursday to support a new financial exchange dedicated to creating a market in pollution credits.

The Chicago Climate Exchange is a merger of environmentalism and free-market thinking. It would organize itself like the brazenly capitalist Chicago Board of Trade or the Chicago Mercantile Exchange, but with a long-term aim of helping companies curb emissions of greenhouse gases in a cost-effective way.

Companies that beat emissions standards could sell credits, recouping some costs to come into compliance with various governmental emission standards. Companies not meeting the standards must buy the credits, giving them an incentive to improve. Supply and demand would set the price.

The idea has been criticized as a way to give polluters a pass. But Richard Sandor, the exchange’s chairman and chief apostle, said it serves the planet by giving companies an incentive to reduce noxious emissions.

Sandor said his work on the concept over a dozen years stems from a “passion that markets can lend themselves to solving social and environmental problems.” It would expand a government-approved market for credits in sulphur dioxide emissions that Sandor said has become a $5 billion annual market and slashed emission levels. Sulphur dioxide is a culprit in acid rain.

The 14 original participants have agreed to a binding standard of reducing their greenhouse gas emissions 4 percent by 2006, 1 percent a year. Credits in six greenhouse gases will be traded, with most of the interest expected to be in carbon dioxide trading.

(snip)

Also, data from the marketplace will help government officials determine what are reasonable standards for pollution levels, Zimmerman said.

The exchange is due to open in late spring. Trading will take place on a computer network and there will be no trading floor.

One reason it’s in Chicago is because the city is the home of no-nonsense markets in financial and agricultural futures and options, so there’s a base of people familiar with the concept of trading credits. Sandor said speculators will have access to the market and that the exchange will announce its software specifications shortly.

The city of Chicago signed on for more than moral support. City government itself will buy and sell the credits, a step that Mayor Daley’s top environmental officer said is justified because of its role as a waste generator and leading power consumer.

N. Marcia Jimenez, commissioner of the Department of Environment, said the exchange “has the potential to revolutionize how business is done” by making companies more aware of environmental responsibilities. She said the city draws 10 percent of its own energy from renewable resources and wants to double that share by 2006.

The voluntary nature of the exchange also was appealing, she said. “We have found voluntary commitment to do the right thing is what will last,” Jimenez said.

Trading will cover pollution credits that are valid in the United States, Canada and Mexico. Sandor said a limited trading link will be established with Brazil to provide a broader test of an international market.

Trading in pollution

Founding members of the Chicago Climate Exchange , a marketplace that tries to generate financial incentives for curbing greenhouse gas emissions:

American Electric Power

Baxter International Inc.

City of Chicago

DuPont

Equity Office Properties Trust

Ford Motor Co.

International Paper

Manitoba Hydro

MeadWestvaco Corp.

Motorola Inc..

STMicroelectronics

Stora Enso

Temple-Inland Inc.

Waste Management Inc.

//

(cont.)


28 posted on 05/02/2010 3:22:53 PM PDT by maggief (Not everything is what it seems.)
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 21 | View Replies ]

Free Republic
Browse · Search
General/Chat
Topics · Post Article


FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson