Large Asset Managers, VC's, Say Economic Competitiveness and Job Creation Would Take Major Hit in CA if Referendum Passes
Published 10-19-10
Submitted by Ceres
Sixty-eight major investors collectively managing $415 billion in assets today issued a joint statement urging a "No" vote on Proposition 23, the California ballot initiative that would halt implementation of the state's landmark, bipartisan clean energy law. The signed statement (link below) was unveiled at a news media teleconference at 11 a.m. Pacific Time.
"As investors, we need certainty about the policies that govern the sectors in which we invest so that we can make strategic, profitable investments over the long term," said the statement, issued two weeks before the ballot vote. "This policy certainty, however, would be eliminated if Proposition 23 passes....(it) would cause California to lose billions of dollars of investment and thousands of jobs to competitors like China, Japan, Germany, or other U.S. states that have more stable commitments to clean energy policy."
Additionally, the statement's signers said that passage of Proposition 23 "would undermine California's role as a national clean energy leader, and could lead to the rollback of environmental protection mechanisms in other states that look to California as a model for environmental policy - further harming our clean tech industries. This could in turn delay our entire nation's transition to cleaner energy and greater energy independence, all while sending a negative message to the rest of the world about America's leadership in clean energy technologies."
The signers, including California-based firms Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, Catholic Health Care West and VantagePoint Venture Partners (18 California-based firms were among the signatories), said in the statement that passage of Proposition 23 would negatively affect California's economy the following ways - these are quotes from the statement:
Speaking at the teleconference were Alan Salzman, CEO and managing partner of California-based VantagePoint Venture Partners, Kevin Parker and Bruce Kahn of Deutsche Bank Climate Change Advisers, and Chris Davis, Director of Investor Programs at Ceres and Deputy Director of the Investor Network on Climate Risk - a network of 90 investors, many of them signatories to the statement, focused on the business impacts of climate change.
"The impact Proposition 23 will have on the future of clean technology investing cannot be overstated," said Salzman. "If passed, this proposition would seriously impact our clean tech industries and send exactly the wrong message to investors and businesses across the state, the country and the world. A NO vote on Proposition 23 is a vote in favor of our clean-energy future."
Other signatories to the statement include the National Venture Capital Association, California-based CMEA Capital, Domini Social Investments LLC and Pax World Management LLC.
The full statement is available at: http://www.ceres.org/Document.Doc?id=622
Ceres is a nonprofit advocacy organization working to accelerate the transition to a cleaner, more just, and sustainable world. United under a shared vision, our powerful networks of investors and companies are proving sustainability is the bottom line—changing markets and sectors from the inside out.
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