 Apologies for the late delivery today folks, Climate Week indulgences are catching up with me. If I had to pick one takeaway from this week, itās that the energy transition is still gaining steam even though itās out of favor in the White House. Between all the executives I spoke with this week, across a wide range of industries, I didnāt meet anyone completely scrapping their sustainability plans. It might be that Iām stuck in an echo chamber. But I actually think a moment like this, where climate action is politically unpopular, is when the reality of the transition becomes most clear: When thereās less incentive for greenwashing, Iām more inclined to take execs at their word. US President Donald Trump stuck to his usual script on the issue: āIf you donāt get away from the green energy scam, your country is going to fail,ā he said during his UN speech on Tuesday. What youāll read below is a wide range of rebuttals to that argument, including from one of the worldās biggest private investors. But if the private sector is forging ahead, the lack of climate leadership from the US seems to be rubbing off on other governments: Emissions plans released this week by China and other countries looked like a letdown. āWe cannot sugarcoat it: These new climate plans do not put us anywhere near on track for a safe future,ā Ani Dasgupta, CEO of the World Resources Institute, said. |