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10/12/2021

Remarks by Secretary of the Treasury Janet L. Yellen at the Countdown Summit | U.S. Department of the Treasury

Remarks by Secretary of the Treasury Janet L. Yellen at the
Countdown Summit
October 12, 2021

As prepared for delivery:
Hello, everyone. I’m Janet Yellen, the United States Treasury Secretary. I want to thank Vice
President Gore for the invitation and for his many years of leadership on this issue.
We’re now three weeks out on the road to Glasgow, and it’s a road crowded with many
di erent travelers. A generation ago, the road, so to speak, was a much lonelier place,
deserted by comparison. There was a cohort of environmental activists and government
o icials, like Vice President Gore, who cared deeply about climate change, but it was nothing
like the broad cross-section of leaders that will descend on Glasgow at the end of October:
representatives of nearly every country and sector, including this audience from the financial
sector
This is a welcome development. A er all, climate change has to be understood, in part, as an
economic problem, as a financial challenge. In some ways, it can be distilled into basic
arithmetic. Averting a climate crisis requires that we limit warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius, and
that, in turn, requires the wholesale transformation of our carbon-powered global economy.
It’s a project for which we have an estimated price tag: Some have put the global figure
between $100 and 150 trillion over the next three decades.
Many nations, the United States included, are now devoting vast resources to facilitate this
transformation. Governments representing three-quarters of global GDP have pledged to
make their economies net-zero by mid-century. And yet, as big as this public sector e ort is,
the $100-trillion price tag is far bigger. The gap between what governments have and what
the world needs is large, and it must be filled by others, which is to say the private sector.
Climate change isn’t the moon landing, a project that can be led exclusively by government.
If we had to make a comparison, it’s more like the recent e ort to fight the pandemic, a
global endeavor comprised of a constellation of actors; one that extends from the tops of
governments and corporations to the terminuses of supply chains and requires the
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Remarks by Secretary of the Treasury Janet L. Yellen at the Countdown Summit | U.S. Department of the Treasury

resources of every organization along the way. This is true for both developed and emerging
market nations.
Of course, we are not talking about the private sector acting against its own interests. I
suspect this group knows that better than anybody. The old notions of why the private
sector should decarbonize – because planet must be put before profit – are much less true
than they used to be. Many renewables are now cheaper than carbon-based fuels. Other
green technologies have cost curves that continue to plunge. For these reasons, financial
institutions are shi ing their portfolios to green investments. The Glasgow Financial Network
for Net-zero, or GFANZ, now includes institutions with a collective assets under management
that are fast approaching $100 trillion. Per the ambitions of GFANZ, those portfolios will be
carbon-neutral by 2050 and significantly reduce emissions by 2030. The question remains,
however: Will enough investment opportunities materialize to absorb all this capital? How
quickly can this reorientation occur? And will the capital flow to developing countries where
the need for investment is o en highest?
That’s what I expect future generations to judge us on. When they look back at government
leaders in this time, they will look both at how deeply we dug into public co ers to address
climate change, and at how well we incentivized the private sector to dig into their accounts.
Did we do a good job encouraging the private sector to begin reorienting its investment
activities toward a net-zero posture?
There are a number of measures governments can take to ensure the future judges us
favorably by these measures. In the United States, the actions we’re taking, broadly
speaking, fall into five categories.
First is public investment in the foundational infrastructure for a green economy. As I record
this video, a large infrastructure bill is moving through the United States Congress. It
includes enough funding to dot the American landscape with 500,000 electric vehicle
charging stations, which will accelerate the adoption of electric vehicles in the same way that
the building of gas stations encouraged cross-country travel. Moreover, incentivizing the
expansion of the American electric vehicle market is a smart idea with the growing number of
companies that have announced dates by which they will stop producing internal
combustion engines.
Second, governments catalyze private investment with tax and budget policymaking. For
example, President Biden has proposed an investment tax credit that we expect will
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Remarks by Secretary of the Treasury Janet L. Yellen at the Countdown Summit | U.S. Department of the Treasury

incentivize the buildout of at least 20 gigawatts of high-voltage capacity power lines. We
anticipate that it will mobilize tens of billions of dollars in private capital right away.
Third, the public sector can invest in basic research. Before the internet was commercially
viable, it was incubated at institutions like ARPA. Government can play a similar role in
shepherding nascent technologies like green hydrogen and carbon capture, helping turn
them into investable opportunities. Our administration has proposed funding for that, as
well.
Fourth involves mobilizing more climate finance in emerging economies. Since July, the
United States has doubled our international climate finance pledge, and we’re making sure
that those public funds go as far as possible. We want them matched by private coinvestment. I have convened multilateral development bank leaders twice already to ensure
their goals are aligned with the Paris Agreement and to set strong private sector investmentmobilization targets.
Finally, governments can help create transparency across financial markets, ensuring
investors know what they need to know to make investments that are green and avoid ones
that aren’t. One of the financial sector’s most essential functions is the distribution of risk—
ensuring that it falls across investors and institutions well placed to manage it. Climate
change is introducing new types of risks: risks from more frequent and severe natural
disasters, the so-called physical risks; and the transition risks, the ones that accompany the
technological, market, and policy changes needed to address climate change.
Climate-related risks to the financial system are generally challenging to measure and
assess. Financial regulators in the United States and internationally are working hard to
develop the data and methods necessary to assess these risks and to ensure the financial
system is resilient to them. I chair the Financial Stability Oversight Council – or FSOC – which
is a group of independent financial regulators. In the next few weeks, I expect that FSOC will
issue a report reviewing current approaches to incorporate climate-related financial risk into
regulatory and supervisory activities It will discuss how climate-related disclosures can be
enhanced and look at processes to identify climate-related financial risks to U.S. financial
stability.
I remember giving my first speech on the subject of climate change. This was March of 1998.
The U.S. Congress was holding hearings on the Kyoto Protocol, and the Clinton
Administration needed a White House o icial to testify. I raised my hand.
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Remarks by Secretary of the Treasury Janet L. Yellen at the Countdown Summit | U.S. Department of the Treasury

I told Congress to think of Kyoto as a form of planetary insurance. Wouldn’t even a significant
investment in transitioning our economies away from carbon be worth it if it saved entire
species and priceless coastal cities? If it helped ensure that we kept the world livable?
It’s now 23 years later, and of course, the insurance analogy still stands. Investments in a
low-carbon economy are still good preventative measures, hedges against a terrible future.
But they’re also more than that; they’re good investments not only in terms of the disasters
they prevent, but the growth they create. That’s increasingly clear now. The flow of capital
from carbon-intensive to carbon-neutral investments is probably the most dramatic and
predictable economic shi in human history. The transition is happening already. And the
United States intends not only to lead it, but to speed it up; to give the private sector all the
information and motivation it needs to contribute to building a green economy and save our
world.
Thank you again.
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