Description

Directors fiduciary duties

Directors fiduciary duties

What are Fiduciary Duties?

Under the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) (Act), a director of a corporation must exercise their powers and discharge their duties:

  • with the same care and diligence that a reasonable person would exercise in the corporations circumstances if they occupied the office held by that director (s180(1)); and
  • in good faith in the best interests of the corporation (s181(1)(a)); and

Generally, the best interests of the corporation are represented by maximising financial performance.  As result, it is not for the directors to infuse their own ethical considerations into decisions that it may lawfully make.

Having said this, the interests of the corporation can include the physical, political and regulatory environment in which it operates and so the Courts have held that directors can take these matters into account to the extent that they are linked with the interests of the corporation.

Risks

Historically, climate change was often regarded as an ethical issue for investors – a 'non-financial environmental externality' that was secondary to, and largely inconsistent with, the imperative to maximise financial returns.  Recently, however, the question of climate change has transformed into one of assessing material financial risk. 

More recently, the financial risks and opportunities presented by climate change have become a mainstream issue for the business community.  Debates over 'stranded asset' exposures (eg the IMF, OECD, WorldBank) and asset divestitures play out in the financial press.  Recognised economic and financial institutions warn of the significant economic consequences of climate change. And, globally, we are witnessing a surge in political and regulatory interventions in an attempt to deal with climate change and the resulting community concerns.

There goes the neighbourhood | The Climate Institute

This report looks at the risk that is often unrecognised and under-explained to people who own or are buying or building property along Australia's coasts (flooding, storm surge, coastal inundation, erosion etc.) and in bushfire zones. 

Stranded assets in the fossil fuel industry and why they are important

Stranded assets in the fossil fuel industry and why they are important

What are stranded assets?

CTI introduced the concept of stranded assets to get people thinking about the implications of not adjusting investment in line with the emissions trajectories required to limit global warming. There have been a number of interpretations, including:

  • Regulatory stranding – due to a change in policy of legislation
  • Economic stranding – due to a change in relative costs / prices
  • Physical stranding – due to distance / flood / drought

 

The concept has warranted a new programme at the Smith School of Oxford University which considers stranded assets across a range of sectors from an academic perspective. From a financial perspective, accountants have measures to deal with the impairment of assets (eg IAS 16) which seeks to ensure that an entity’s assets are not carried at more than their recoverable amount.

Why are they important?

CTI says: Stranded assets are fossil fuel energy and generation resources which, at some time prior to the end of their economic life (as assumed at the investment decision point), are no longer able to earn an economic return (i.e. meet the company’s internal rate of return), as a result of changes in the market and regulatory environment associated with the transition to a low-carbon economy.