Equilibrium & Sustainability

Equilibrium/Sustainability — Bread prices soar as inflation cripples Europe

A European sidewalk staple could soon become a luxury, as the iconic French baguette contends with soaring electricity and flour prices.  

“Consumers can afford to pay more for now, but prices will keep rising,” Julien Bourgeois, whose family runs a central France flour mill, told The New York Times.  

Since Russian invaded Ukraine, Bourgeois said the price of wheat purchased by his family has risen more than 30 percent while their electricity bill has tripled, according to the Times.

To offset higher costs in the future, Bourgeois has urged the 1,000 bakeries that buy his company’s flour to mark up their baguettes by 10 cents, the newspaper reported.  

While 10 cents might not seem like a huge jump, that’s an 8 to 10 percent chunk of current baguette prices.

And in France, the cost of baguettes has already risen more than 8 percent in comparison to prices last year, according to the Times.

“We remember that the revolution started over the price of bread,” Bourgeois told the Times, referring to the French Revolution of 1789.

Consumers are enduring supermarket sticker shock not only across Europe, but also in the U.S., where inflation remains elevated and where the price of bread has soared 15 percent from a year ago.

Such jumps are by no means limited to bread — they’re hitting other food producers too. Swiss-based Nestlé announced Wednesday it had increased prices 9.5 percent in the third quarter compared to the same period last year.

And although Nestlé also cited its highest quarterly growth in 14 years, the company may face what The Wall Street Journal described as “a balancing act.” 

Pushing up prices further could cause customers to turn to cheaper brands, especially as Europeans — who make up 20 percent of Nestlé’s sales — feel the impacts of high energy bills this winter, the Journal noted.

Welcome to Equilibrium, a newsletter that tracks the growing global battle over the future of sustainability. We’re Saul Elbein and Sharon Udasin.

Today we’ll start with President Biden’s decision to release more oil from the country’s Strategic Petroleum Reserve. And we’ll also look at a collaborative call for climate justice in Africa from the world’s biggest health journals.

Plus: Why big insurance companies are turning away from fossil fuels. 

Biden touts petroleum reserve release

President Biden announced on Wednesday that the U.S. will release 15 million barrels of oil from its Strategic Petroleum Reserve, our colleague Brett Samuels reported for The Hill.  

The move is the latest step the administration is taking to lower the price of gas, which has hampered the economy this year.   

Biden dismisses criticism: Biden rejected criticism that his latest oil release was politically motivated, with just a few weeks left until the midterm elections, Samuels reported. 

What is the Strategic Petroleum Reserve? It’s the world’s biggest supply of emergency crude oil, created to decrease the impact of supply disruptions, according the Department of Energy. 

How much of it is being used? About 165 million barrels of crude oil has been delivered or has been put under contract since the spring, when the president said that he would tap up to 180 million barrels.

The 15 million barrels allocated Wednesday constitute the remaining portion of that total disbursement.

When can a president release oil? A president can withdraw all the oil when a “severe energy supply interruption” poses a threat to the economy, Bloomberg reported, citing the 1975 Energy Policy and Conservation Act

By contrast, a limited withdrawal — up to 30 million barrels — can occur during “a domestic or international energy supply shortage of significant scope or duration,” according to Bloomberg. 

Some noted historic releases: 

Insurance companies react to rising climate risk 

More powerful climate-induced storms like Hurricane Ian are slashing insurance company profits. 

That’s causing a growing number to take a more cautious view of the role that climate risk should play in underwriting policies for vulnerable homes. But it’s also causing a re-evaluation of the fossil fuel projects that are primarily responsible for climate change. 

Big damage: Property insurer Travelers Co posted a nearly one-third drop in incomes for its third quarter — declines for which Ian was partly responsible, The Wall Street Journal reported. 

Global context: The World Bank estimated that the devastating summer floods in Pakistan — a country with real estate far less expensive than South Florida — cost the country roughly $40 billion in damages, according to The Associated Press.  

Treasury worries: As damage from Hurricane Ian was tallied up across the Southeast, insurance regulators from the Department of the Treasury took steps to lessen future risk, as our colleague Rachel Frazin reported on Tuesday.

Big picture: A region where insurance becomes unaffordable faces a potential economic death spiral, as we reported. 

“The recent impacts in Florida from Hurricane Ian demonstrate the critical nature of this work and the need for an increased understanding of insurance market vulnerabilities in the United States,” Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said in a statement.  

Passing on risk: The losses that hit the insurance conglomerate Travelers are unusually high for a large insurer in Florida, because most such companies have been careful to avoid writing policies for the state’s most-exposed homeowners, according to the Journal.  

Passing on risk: These smaller outfits seek coverage from large reinsurers — insurers for insurers — like Swiss Re, as Reuters reported. 

REINSURERS TURN FROM FOSSIL FUELS

A growing number of global reinsurance companies are moving away from covering fossil fuels, according to a report published on Tuesday by advocacy group Insure Our Future. 

The move is fueled by accumulating climate change-driven losses by the insurance companies they underwrite, the group found. 

Reducing risk: The move makes financial sense because the production and burning of coal, oil and gas are the primary drivers of damage — and insurance payouts — from climate change, insurance experts told the AP. 

Score card: Insure Our Future rated Axis Capital, Allianz and AXA best for their coal exit strategy, and Aviva, Munich Re and Hannover Re best for their plan to move off petroleum.

“Fossil fuel projects that don’t get insured, don’t get built,” Risalat Khan of Insure Our Future said in a statement.  

Global health journals want climate justice for Africa

More than 250 health journals have joined forces in publishing an editorial aimed at convincing world leaders to deliver climate justice for Africa.  

The editorial — which was authored by 16 editors of Africa’s leading biomedical journals — argues that the continent has suffered disproportionately from a climate crisis it has done little to cause. 

Coming together: Ahead of next month’s United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP-27) in Egypt, the writers urged wealthy nations to strengthen their support for vulnerable nations in addressing the effects of climate change. 

Death, migration, disease: In both west and central Africa, flooding has resulted in increased deaths and forced people to migrate due to loss of housing and cultivated land, the authors stressed.  

Meanwhile, changing environmental conditions have led to surges in diseases — like malaria, dengue fever, Lyme disease, Ebola virus and West Nile virus — across sub-Saharan Africa, according to the editorial.  

Economic impacts: The authors estimated that the climate crisis has destroyed about a fifth of the gross domestic product of those countries most vulnerable to climate shock.  

Call for action: The authors urged wealthy nations to fulfill a previous commitment they made — but have thus far failed to carry out — to invest $100 billion annually in poorer countries.  

To read more about their recommendations, please click here for the full story.  

Waste Wednesday

New York City won’t cave to the rats, legacy pollution haunts U.S. waterways and waste from nuclear weapons is found beneath a Missouri elementary school. 

NYC asks residents to take out the trash later 

Much work remains on Clean Water Act anniversary: report 

Cold War nuclear contamination closes Missouri school 

Please visit The Hill’s Sustainability section online for the web version of this newsletter and more stories. We’ll see you tomorrow.