Domini Social Investments, believes Michelle Chan is taking the lead in socially responsible investing." />
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Michelle Chan: Fighting for sustainability in the bank sector

Amy Domini, founder of Domini Social Investments, believes Michelle Chan is taking the lead in socially responsible investing.

Carmel Wroth | Jan/Feb 2009 issue

The way to do that, she discovered, was to frame ethical conversations in terms of financial risk. Project finance provided the perfect entry point. These loans are typically guaranteed on the basis of the revenues of the project, which leaves the bank no claim to a client’s other assets should the project fail. This means the bank’s bottom line is much more vulnerable to the risks of the project; it’s therefore in the bankers’ interest to assess the negative environmental and human impact that might cost money to fix. “These issues at the project level are very visible, real and occasionally quite tragic, so they scream out for a robust risk-management framework,” says Sustainable Finance Limited’s Arnold.

The work on project finance paid off in 2003 when a group of major U.S. and European banks voluntarily adopted the Equator Principles, a set of ethical standards and operating procedures for managing these kinds of investments. Participating banks agree not to lend money to borrowers who don’t comply with standards of environmental and social responsibility, as defined by the World Bank’s International Finance Corporation, including concern for pollution, biodiversity, fair working conditions, involuntary resettlement and the rights of indigenous peoples.

Chan often uses the phrase “necessary but not sufficient” to talk about her work. “Are things different today than they were yesterday because this bank or group of banks has decided to follow environmental standards?” she wonders. “It’s something I ask myself all the time.” If the roster of financial conglomerates at which Chan has helped shape environmental policies is any guide—Citigroup, JPMorgan Chase, Goldman Sachs, Morgan Stanley and others—it does make a difference.

Shawn Miller, director of environmental and social risk management at Citigroup, says Citi has changed the way it operates as a result of adopting the Equator Principles. For example, a company wanted to borrow money for an oil and gas development in the Middle East that posed harm to a coral reef. Citi hired outside experts to assess the situation and finally required the project developer to alter the plan and protect the reef. Citi now invests more heavily in alternative energy, and recently committed to uphold a set of standards for coal power investments. Called the Carbon Principles, these commit the company to working with coal-fired power clients to encourage lower CO2 emissions and investment in alternative energy options.

“It’s opened up the company’s thinking on broader opportunities, not just from a risk-management perspective,” Miller says. “It helped us start thinking, ‘Okay, we manage our risk appropriately, but we can also make money out of doing good.’”

The crucial question for Chan is: Will banks stick by the principles they espouse, especially during a dire economic downturn when profits may take precedence over principles? In 2004, Chan founded BankTrack to support organizations that were keeping watch on banks both in the U.S. and abroad. BankTrack is a confederation of international environmental and human-rights groups that monitor and lobby the global financial sector. In part, they work to fill in what Chan sees as the biggest missing piece of the Equator Principles: accountability. They track information about “dodgy deals” and make sure the public is aware of banks’ activities.

A few years ago, Chan started paying attention to the influence of another major power player in development: banks of emerging economies. In particular, she looked at China, which was expanding its investments in other countries to feed its growing economy. “What we’ve found is the most lucrative and easy natural-resource extractions have already been taken by Western nations, but you now have emerging market economies competing with us for the same kind of concessions,” Chan says. “Since the world is reaching its ecological limits, the struggle to get the last resources out is going to be pretty nasty.”

For example, China is involved in Indonesia, where forests are being cut down at a rate of almost 5 million acres (2 million hectares) annually, mainly from illegal cutting, according to the World Bank. Chinese banks fund several logging operations there, and environmental groups allege that some companies engage in illegal forestry practices, including logging in endangered tiger and elephant territory. Chan has been to China several times, teaching environmental groups to use some of the same advocacy techniques she put into practice with Wall Street banks. Groups there are protesting a range of companies they say pollute or disregard human rights in China. She’s impressed on them the direct connection between polluting companies and the financial institutions that underwrite them. “If you can follow the money and get conditions put on the money, you can potentially improve the actions of corporations,” she says.

It turns out that environmental organizations have a surprising ally: the Chinese government. Starting in 2007, Beijing has passed a series of laws to restrict major banks from lending to and investing in companies with poor environmental records in their operations within China. For instance, China created a “green credit policy” that blacklists companies with negative environmental records. Another law requires companies seeking initial public offerings to get approval from the Chinese Environmental Ministry. “It’s funny and heretical to rip a page from China’s quasi-socialist playbook,” Chan says. But she adds that China—which recently bailed out its financial sector as well—is in a situation similar to that in the West, and the U.S. could learn from its model. “It’s something that we should consider as we rewrite our financial regulations or consider our economic stimulus package,” she says. “We should consider how this moment can be shaped to create a more sustainable future.”

Chan’s office is decorated with mementos of her travels: strings of glimmering purple fish scales from an indigenous group in the Amazon; a miniature barrel of sweet, light crude oil from the Urucu-Porto Velho pipeline in Brazil; a bright set of trading cards made for the annual Socially Responsible Investing Awards, which include one made in her honor—a young superhero in red tights brandishing a sword, captioned “Michelle Chan: Global Avenger.”

But Chan is hardly the typical fire-breathing radical. She labors quietly and courteously in boardrooms and at conferences, and sees change come in the smallest of increments, as shifts in the definition of corporate responsibility. She fervently hopes this is affecting practice. But measuring success on the ground is still hard. Even after 13 years, she doesn’t know for sure how much improvement has come from her work. Until banks provide greater accountability and transparency, she can’t tell whether their directors are following through on their good intentions. Unless the markets are regulated with the environment in mind, the money trail too often leads to more pollution, more population displacement and more species under threat.

“We do live in an instant gratification world,” says Chan. “But anyone involved in social change realizes these things don’t happen overnight. When you take the longer view, whatever you can achieve in your time on Earth is a contribution. It’s a job to be shared with others, as well as others that come after you.”



“Michelle Chan is an extremely strategic thinker, a hard worker, and a dedicated freedom fighter. When I think about what socially responsible investing can do to make the world a better place, she is one of the first people I think of.”



Amy Domini, founder and CEO of Domini Social Investments, and author of several books on ethical investing

Carmel Wroth is Ode’s editorial intern.


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Comments (1)

Thanks for sharing this post! That’s a great advice for those investors out there. In these times of economic meltdown, we need to invest properly and efficiently. As we can observe these days, a lot of banks, regardless of their size, are in trouble. Every morning now seems to bring the dread of wondering which financial shoe will be the next to drop. However, these do offer some clues as to our own bank’s ability to weather the storm. The banks that need the most help, the smaller banks in communities, are usually the ones that get ignored while the biggest ones, that made campaign contributions we might add, (as we cough sarcastically) are the ones that get the short term loans from the stimulus package. However, after we gave them all that money, they don't want to lend it. Less mortgage loans are being lent, and less aid is available for students. What happened to the short term loan we gave the banks? personalmoneystore.com/moneyblog/2009/04/01/frozen-credit-frozen-banks

posted by AlecS on 4/ 7/2009 5:32 am

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