The coronavirus pandemic is one of the biggest and unprecedented seismic shifts in the global economy that we've ever
seen in modern history, and it's just getting started.
Already, economies around the world are shutting down. The federal reserve has pumped trillions into the United States
economy in just a matter of days. Global supply chains have collapsed as entire Chinese industries went dark. And this
is just the first stage. We're heading into a year's long recession that will have far-reaching consequences, some of which we can predict with near certainty, and some of which will be
entirely unpredictable.
Of course, the global economic system has seen major shakeups before. The timespan known as modern history, in official
terms, begins with the onset of the industrial revolution. The globalised market economy that we live in today is all
thanks to the revolution that started in Great Britain in the late 18th century, which mechanised manufacturing and made
mass production possible. Likewise, in only slightly lesser terms, our current political economy wouldn't be what it is
now without World Wars I and II, the Green Revolution, and the invention of the internet.
So no, market shocks and economic recalibration are nothing new. But with each passing year, the world's economy becomes
increasingly intertwined and interdependent. Globalisation grows stronger and more widespread all the time, meaning that
every economic shakeup anywhere on earth will only have more and more far-reaching consequences as we move forward. The
evidence is overwhelming.
For those of us that have grown up against the backdrop of the 2008 recession, Arab Spring, Occupy Wall Street, to name
just a few economic shakeups, crises, and movements, not to mention the looming omnipresent dread of the existential
hyperobject that is climate change, it seems that, in many ways, the neoliberal economic trajectory that we are on has
reached its limits and dropped us off at the doorway to Armageddon.
Hyperbole? Maybe. But spend five minutes on the internet and you'll see that it's a common sentiment.
In October of last year, protests, riots, and uprisings were fomenting and blooming like so many fireworks across the
globe. "In Lebanon they are against a tax on WhatsApp and endemic corruption. In Chile, a hike in the metro fare and
rampant inequality. In Hong Kong, an extradition bill and creeping authoritarianism. In Algeria, a fifth term for an
ageing president and decades of military rule," the Guardian wrote at the time. "The protests raging today and in the past months on the streets of cities around the world have varying triggers. But
the fuel is familiar: stagnating middle classes, stifled democracy and the bone-deep conviction that things can be
different – even if the alternative is not always clear." And now? Well, a global pandemic certainly isn't improving the
mood. And there's likely more to come in the not so distant future.
Scientific American reports that we can expect a lot more pandemics in our future, as urbanization, suburban sprawl, deforestation, and
overpopulation have worn down the spatial barriers between humans and wild animals.
"We invade tropical forests and other wild landscapes, which harbor so many species of animals and plants—and within
those creatures, so many unknown viruses," David Quammen, author of Spillover: Animal Infections and the Next Pandemic, wrote in the New York Times back in January.
"I am not at all surprised about the coronavirus outbreak," disease ecologist Thomas Gillespie, associate professor in
Emory University's Department of Environmental Sciences, told Scientific American. "The majority of pathogens are still
to be discovered. We are at the very tip of the iceberg."
"We made the coronavirus pandemic," reads a New York Times headline from January. "It may have started with a bat in a cave, but human activity set it
loose." When logging, mining, drilling, shopping malls, and apartment buildings have set us up for not just one
apocalypse but an accelerating series of worsening apocalypses, it's time for a change. And a new generation of
investors, innovators, scientists, and scholars, are ready for it.
The coronavirus crisis has paved the way for one of the biggest shifts in capital reallocation that the world has ever
seen. This new generation of investors is working with an urgency never felt before, because they believe that they're
the last line of defense to save the world.
Hyperbole? Probably not.
Look no further than the starry-eyed, revolutionary ideas of Elon Musk and the geniuses of Silicon Valley, and then
consider that these are the old guys. Going forward, green energy, decarbonization, social justice, appropriate
governance, sustainability, resilience, climate-smart investment, and equal rights won't just be buzzwords, they will
actually be on the corporate agenda. Continuing to pour money into Big Oil and Big Pharma will no longer be marketable.
Investors are already using their money as a voice for change. The ESG or Environment, Sustainability, and Governance
investment niche already has over $30 trillion in assets under management. It's now more than a trend. It's the future.
And a small Canadian company with big ambitions knows this all too well. Facedrive is looking to take on some of the biggest names in transportation with a simple, but important philosophy: "take
something as simple as hailing a ride and turn it into a collective force for change." The company is actively taking
control of its place in this movement and helping shape a better world. More importantly, it's marketable. A key feature
that has been missing from the adoption of greener alternatives.
Facedrive is a local company bringing its values to the main stage. Its message has traction. It's already partnering
with major international names and capturing investor attention in a way that other companies dream they could.
This is not about politics. It's about logic and a healthy dose of realism. And that's exactly what makes Facedrive so genuine and accessible. Sure, business, as usual has made a lot of money for a lot of people and has driven
incredible innovation and some of the best quality of life in human history. Yes, an oil-powered industrial complex has
paved the way for modern medicine that have saved untold millions if not billions of lives, food systems that have
staved off widespread famine, and we now live with the comforts of electricity, heat and air-conditioning, air travel,
and thousands of other nearly objective improvements to our daily lives. (In the first world, that is.) But now we must
reckon with the unintended externalities of all of this economic growth. Our soil is degraded, our oceans are polluted
and acidifying, we're losing biodiversity at breakneck speed, and the earth is getting warmer. Investors, if they are s
mart, will start investing in the future, not in the cash cows of the past.
Few can attempt to deny that this is the direction that the global political economy is heading. Consumers are savvier,
the stakes are higher, and business simply can't go on as usual. It's just a matter of time before a fossil-fuel based
economy peters out, whether we reach peak oil by exploiting the global reserves or whether demand simply fades away as
renewable energies become more efficient and more cost-effective. Solar and wind power are already cheaper than coal in
most of the world, and they're getting cheaper all the time.
Much of the developed world, with Canada, in particular, leading the charge, are already taking major strides towards
decarbonising their energy industries. Even cleaning up transportation with efforts like Toronto's electric bus
initiative, or even local companies like Facedrive making waves with greener solutions to some of our biggest challenges. And let's not discount the researchers around
the world racing to improve green energies and find a solution to unlock the solution to the green energy holy grail
that is nuclear fusion. These efforts are all finally starting to be taken seriously, getting the attention, and maybe
more importantly, the investments they need to push their visions further by the day.
Heck, even Saudi Aramco had to admit that peak oil is due by midcentury in documents shared as part of their initial
public offering last year. Yes, to be sure, their IPO was the biggest in history, and fossil fuels continue to make big
money for their investors--but for how much longer? And what of all those in the middle and lower classes that are not
only not reaping any significant economic benefits from the current investment agenda, but are often actively suffering
from it, either directly by market squeezes and a widening wealth gap, or indirectly by environmental and health
externalities that the global poor routinely bear the burden of.
Last year's protesters in Chile, Hong Kong, Algeria, Iraq, Iran, and Lebanon may not have known exactly what kind of
change they wanted, but there are people that do. And a good number of those people are the new class of investors who
give a damn.
Clean energy and climate-friendly technologies have long been bottlenecked at the research and development level because there simply wasn't enough investment money. But that's changing, and
it's changing rapidly. Some of the deepest pockets in the world are diving into renewable energies in a way that would
have sounded like a fairy tale even five to ten years ago. The big four of Silicon Valley and the tech industry as a whole have been pouring money into the renewables sector.
Take Google (GOOGL), for example. Despite being one of the largest companies on the planet, in many ways it has lived up to its original
"Don't Be Evil" slogan. Not only is Google powering its data centres with renewable energy, it is also on the cutting
edge of innovation in the industry, investing in new technology and green solutions to build a more sustainable
tomorrow. It's bid to reduce its carbon footprint has been well received by both younger and older investors. And as the
need to slow down climate change becomes increasingly dire, it's easy to see why.
Social media giant Facebook (FB) is doing its part, as well. Not only have they made dramatic progress towards their goal to run on 100% renewable
energy by the end of 2020, they're working to build more water-efficient data centres. In fact, their data centres use
80 percent less water than typical data centres.
Not to be outdone, Apple (AAPL) has made significant moves towards renewables, as well. All of Apple's operations run on 100% renewable energy. "We proved that 100 percent renewable is 100 percent doable. All our facilities worldwide—including Apple offices,
retail stores, and data centres—are now powered entirely by clean energy. But this is just the beginning of how we're
reducing greenhouse gas emissions that contribute to climate change. We're continuing to go further than most companies
in measuring our carbon footprint, including manufacturing and product use. And we're making great progress in those
areas too," CEO Tim Cook explained.
Amazon (AMZN), for its part, is not carbon neutral quite yet, but it is making massive moves to clean up its act. It pledges to be
fully carbon neutral by 2040, and it is buying up 100,000 electric delivery vehicles to get there. Not only that, but it
has also built a 253 MW wind farm in Scurry County, Texas, generating over one million megawatt-hours of electricity
annually.
Even Big Oil supermajors have been dipping their toes into the sector to diversify their portfolios and hedge their bets in the rapidly changing
cultural and economic zeitgeist. Total (TOT) maintains a ‘big picture' outlook across all of its endeavors. It is not only aware of the needs that are not being met
by a significant portion of the world's growing population, it is also hyper-aware of the looming climate crisis if
changes are not made. In its push to create a better world for all, it has committed to contributing to each of the
United Nations' Sustainable Development Goals. From workplace safety and diversity to societal progression and reducing
its carbon footprint, Total is checking all of the boxes that the next generation of investors hold close to their
hearts.