Bloomberg
Climate activists are starting to map out a coordinated campaign to oppose the potential re-nomination of Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell,
because they view his record on fighting climate change through the banking system as scant and not aggressive enough.
The campaign will kick off on August 26 at the start of the Jackson Hole Economic Symposium, a gathering of Federal
Reserve and economic officials in Wyoming.
Through demonstrations on the road from the airport and at the entrance to the lodge where the conference is held, the activists want to nudge President Joe Biden to appoint someone new to lead the Federal Reserve. They want Biden to pick a chairman who views climate policy as significant as monetary policy and maximum employment.
Seven environmental groups, including the Sierra Club, have come out in opposition to Powell’s renomination so far, but the public protests at Jackson Hole mark an inflection point for the broader climate movement as it refocuses its attention from the bipartisan infrastructure package and the Democrats’ $3.5 trillion spending proposal to the fight over the Fed chair.
The Jackson Hole campaign, which organisers expect to draw 100 to 150 people, is being organised by several grassroots groups including the local chapter of the Sunrise Movement, Protect Our Winters and 350.org. Typically, about 120 financial, economic and Federal Reserve leaders attend the conference.
“Our view is that climate change and climate risk is the single largest threat to the financial system,†said Yevgeny Shrago, policy counsel for Public Citizen’s Climate Program, which studies the intersection of climate change and financial regulation.
“Despite that, Powell is way, way behind on climate.
The first time he seriously talked about climate risk was once it became clear Biden would become president.â€
A Fed spokeswoman declined to comment. Powell was nominated to the chairmanship by former President Donald Trump in 2018.
Biden has previously said climate change is a major priority for his administration. In late June, he met with financial regulators at the White House, including Powell, where they discussed their progress on the president’s executive order on climate-related risk.
The Fed under Powell has increasingly turned its focus to financial risks presented by climate change in recent years, attracting criticism from Republican lawmakers.
It joined the Network for Greening the Financial System in December, a global coalition of central banks engaged in the study of climate risk that was launched in 2017.
A handful of climate leaders say they would prefer Biden instead appoint current Fed governor Lael Brainard, former deputy secretary to the Treasury Sarah Bloom Raskin or economics professor Lisa Cook to lead the central bank.