Liberty Mutual Must End Support for New Oil and Gas Projects to Meet Climate Targets
Insurers must end all support for new oil and gas projects in order to meet international climate targets, NGOs supporting the Insure Our Future campaign say in a letter to the CEOs of Liberty Mutual and other global insurance companies sent on June 17, 2020.
The Insure Our Future campaign also released a briefing paper revealing that four of the 15 biggest oil and gas insurers are companies that have publicly backed the Paris Agreement target of limiting global warming to 1.5°C, while seven have already limited support for fossil fuels by restricting insurance for coal. Liberty Mutual is one of the largest oil and gas insurers globally, according to this new research.
“Insurers have a responsibility to support international climate targets and align their businesses with the Paris Agreement,” said the letter, signed by 18 international NGOs including 350.org, Greenpeace, Oil Change International, and Rainforest Action Network. “As governments plan the recovery from the COVID-19 crisis insurers need to champion the transition to a sustainable, fair and resilient future as underwriters, investors and corporate citizens.”
The UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has warned that in order to limit global temperature increases to 1.5°C without relying on carbon capture and storage technologies yet to be proven viable, oil consumption must decrease by 37% by 2030 and 87% by 2050. Gas consumption must decrease by 25% by 2030 and 74% by 2050.
Oil Change International has found that CO2 emissions from the oil, gas and coal in existing fields and mines will push the world far beyond 1.5°C of warming and will exhaust a 2°C carbon budget.[1] However, governments are planning to increase oil production from 100 to 120 million barrels per day (mb/d) between now and 2040 – three times the level of about 40 mb/d which is compatible with limiting global warming to 1.5°C.[2]
Data on oil and gas insurance premiums is not publicly available. Insure Our Future identified key players from separate reports by consulting agencies Finaccord and HTF Market Intelligence and follow-up market research from both agencies independently of each other.
Each agency produced lists of the top 15 oil and gas property and casualty insurers and, despite differences in rankings, ten companies were common to both lists:
- Four of the top ten are members of the Net-Zero Asset Owners Alliance, which have pledged to align their investment portfolios with a maximum 1.5°C of warming – Allianz, AXA, Munich Re and Zurich.
- Seven of the top ten have already limited support for fossil fuels by restricting insurance for coal – Allianz, AXA, Chubb, Liberty Mutual, Munich Re, The Hartford and Zurich.
- Three of the top ten have taken no action on fossil fuel insurance – AIG, Travelers, and Tokio Marine.
Burning coal is the biggest single source of CO2 emissions, accounting for 40.3% of global CO2 emissions in 2018 (not including emissions from land use changes for which no recent data exist. However, the combustion of oil and gas accounted for 55.6% in the same year.[3]
The Insure Our Future letter is addressed to the CEOs of 27 leading property & casualty insurers and 3 leading insurance investors. It calls on them to:
- Immediately cease insuring new oil or gas expansion projects;
- Commit to phasing out insurance for oil and gas companies in line with a 1.5°C pathway;
- Immediately cease insuring new coal projects and coal companies;
- Divest all assets from oil, gas and coal companies that are not in line with a 1.5°C pathway;
- Bring stewardship activities in line with a 1.5°C pathway in a transparent way, including forceful advocacy for a green and just recovery from COVID-19.
Peter Bosshard, Global Coordinator of the Insure Our Future Campaign, said: “The massive disruption of the fossil fuel industry due to COVID-19 offers an opportunity to accelerate the required low-carbon transition. At a time when powerful governments are bailing out politically well-connected oil and gas companies, the insurance industry needs to stand up as a voice of reason and bring scientific evidence into the decision-making process about high-carbon projects.”
“Insurers are in the business of understanding risk. They understand why the world must rapidly transition away from all fossil fuels, and are already taking action to phase out coal. Now they must also take the next step by phasing out support for the oil and gas industry,” said Elizabeth Bast, Executive Director of Oil Change International. “Insurers can’t be climate leaders if they continue to backstop oil and gas expansion. Instead, they should aim to mitigate climate risks of all kinds by pursuing a managed phase-out of fossil fuel production.”
Nnimmo Bassey, Director of the Health of Mother Earth Foundation in Nigeria, said: “Oil and gas have often been described as the devil’s excrement. Some think they are actually worse. In countries around the world, they leave environmental destruction, public health crises, corruption and also oppression in their wake. Insurance companies need to support a rapid transition from oil and gas to people and climate friendly alternatives.”
Since the Unfriend Coal campaign launched three years ago, 19 major insurers have adopted policies to end or limit insurance for the coal industry. These insurers control over 13.6% of the primary insurance market and 47.6% of the reinsurance market. Insurers have also divested coal from roughly $9 trillion of investments – over one-third (37%) of the industry’s global assets.
The campaign sent the letter to 30 insurance CEOs, including 13 in Europe (Allianz, Aviva, AXA, Generali, Hannover Re, HDI Global, Legal & General, Lloyd’s, Mapfre, Munich Re, SCOR, Swiss Re and Zurich), 10 in the US (AIG, AXIS Capital, Berkshire Hathaway, Chubb, The Hartford, Liberty Mutual, MetLife, Travelers, TIAA and W.R. Berkley) and also 7 in Asia and the Pacific (MS&AD, Ping An, QBE, Samsung Fire & Marine, Sinosure, Sompo and Tokio Marine).
It was signed by 350.org, ClientEarth, Foundation Development YES – Open-Pit Mines NO (Poland), Earthworks (US), Greenpeace, Indigenous Environmental Network, Instituto Internacional de Derecho y Medio Ambiente (Spain), Japan Center for a Sustainable Environment and Society, Market Forces (Australia), Oil Change International, Rainforest Action Network (US), Reclaim Finance (France), Re:Common (Italy), Sierra Club (US), Solutions For Our Climate (Korea), Stand.Earth (Canada), Sunrise Project (Australia) and Urgewald (Germany).
[1] Oil Change International, Platform, Friends of the Earth Scotland, Sea Change, May 2019
[2] Stockholm Environment Institute et al, The Production Gap, 2019 report
[3] Global Carbon Project Atlas, accessed on May 7, 2020
For further information about oil and gas insurance check out our new briefing paper!