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Hello again from the Swiss Alps. Hereâs the second installment of Bloombergâs âDavos Diaryâ from the World Economic Forumâs annual meeting.
The gathering has truly gone green this year with multiple panels, speeches and studies devoted to threat of climate change and what businesses should be doing about it.
Greta Thunberg
Photographer: Jason Alden/Bloomberg
For activist Greta Thunberg, the concern is that talk isnât being [matched by action](.
âPretty much nothing has been done, since the global emissions of CO2 have not reduced,â the 17-year-old said in Davos.Â
She will have been disappointed albeit unsurprised to hear President Donald Trump speak later in the day. He had arrived by helicopter to be greeted by the words âact on climate,â carved into a snowy mountainside.
While he spent most of his speech highlighting his management of the U.S. economic expansion, Trump also touted the benefits of soaring American oil and gas production and made a [thinly veiled attack]( on those like Thunberg who warn about looming environmental catastrophe.
âWe must reject the perennial prophets of doom and their predictions of the apocalypse,â Trump said. âThey are the heirs of yesterdayâs foolish fortune tellers.â
Donald TrumpÂ
Photographer: Jason Alden/Bloomberg
Trump aside, part of the dilemma for those in Davos is they donât yet know how much economic growth they are willing to sacrifice to deal with the risks of rising temperatures, according to a Deutsche Bank report being promoted at the meeting.
And a survey of CEOs by PricewaterhouseCoopers found only 24% are âextremely concernedâ about climate change. Tellingly, Thunbergâs panel drew only a handful of the energy executives chiefly responsible for warming the planet.
Still, Davos regular Marco Dunand, the head of Mercuria Energy Trading, one of the largest oil traders, says the delegates are up to meeting Thunbergâs challenge.
âI have come to Davos for well over a decade and I see behind the scenes, among top executives, a huge change in perception of the risk of climate change,â he said. âItâs not just talk: itâs translating into billions of dollars in investments in the energy transition.â
And BlackRockâs Chief Executive Officer Larry Fink told a Bloomberg Live event that companies do need to [step up]( and develop âreal long-term planning.â
â[Simon Kennedy](Â in Davos
My colleagues Josh Wingrove, Javier Blas and Alan Crawford deliver the full story of the [Trump-Thunberg showdown](.Â
Bloomberg Green
Tuesday marks the launch of [Bloomberg Green](, changing the way we cover climate change. Our editor-in-chief, John Micklethwait, [explains why]( â and donât forget check our [live climate scoreboard]( for the world.Â
Who Is Talking Wednesday
[Temperatures]( predicted to be between -7°C and 6°C; depth of [snow](: 51 centimeters.
All times are local in Davos. [Click here]( to watch the live broadcast.
- 10:30 a.m. | Finance Panel with U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, UBSâs Axel Weber, IMFâs Kristalina Georgieva
- 11:00 a.m. | Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez gives special address
- 11:30 a.m. | European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen gives special address
- 2:15 p.m. | Hong Kongâs Chief Executive Carrie Lam addresses WEF
- 6 p.m. |Â Iraqi President Barham Salih gives special address
- Be on the lookout for Bloomberg Televisionâs interviews with
- UBS Chairman Weber
- Barclays CEO Jes Staley
- Credit Suisse CEO Tidjane Thiam
- Morgan Stanley CEO James Gorman
- Saudi Finance Minister Mohammed Al-Jadaan
- U.S. Secretary of Transportation Elaine Chao
- China Securities Regulatory Commission Vice Chairman Fang Xinghai
Catch UpÂ
- [Trumpâs victory lap]( | Trump boasted about his handling of the U.S. economy in a speech to business and political leaders in Davos, hours before his impeachment trial started in Washington.
- [Opening doors]( | Chinese Vice Premier Han Zheng said his countryâs trade deal with the U.S. wonât hurt rival exporting nations as complaints mount from governments that were left out of the agreement.
- [Vowing to stay]( | Hong Kong Chief Executive Officer Carrie Lam told Bloomberg she has no plans to step aside to help resolve protests that have racked the city: âI will do my utmost to stay in this position to help arrest the current situation.âÂ
- [Austerity bashing]( | The co-leader of Germanyâs Greens sided with the U.S. in demanding more spending from Berlin, saying that Chancellor Angela Merkel should drop her balanced-budget âfetishism.â
- [Flight shame]( | Would you take a 12-hour train instead of a 1 hour 40 minute flight to lower your carbon footprint? Our Quicktake team went by rail from London to Davos to find out how concern over global warming is changing travel habits.
- Speed read | Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella told Bloomberg that countries which fail to [attract immigrants]( will lose out as the global tech industry continues to grow  Nokia CEO Rajeev Suri predicted â[massive productivity growth](â from 2028 | Huawei founder Ren Zhengfei played down the threat that the U.S. will impose even [stricter sanctions]( against his company | Charles Li, CEO of Hong Kong Exchanges & Clearing, shrugged off concerns about the outbreak of a [deadly virus]( | Joseph Stiglitz says â[significant haircuts](â are coming for Argentine debt | SAPâs co-CEO Jennifer Morgan says companies will see [stakeholder activism]( spread to consumers and employees | Citigroup CEO Michael Corbat said many branch jobs are still safe from machines| Guggenheimâs Scott Minerd likened the inflation of asset prices caused by loose monetary policy to a â[ponzi scheme](â
Davos Data DownloadÂ
Davos is cloaked in white, but its agenda is green:Â Environmentalism â fighting climate change in particular â has emerged as one of the [biggest priorities]( of this yearâs meeting.
Quote of the Day
Trump âloves it here,â Eurasia Group founder Ian Bremmer said. âThe delegates here may not like Trump, but they like his policies. They like the regulatory rollback, they like his Cabinet, they like his tax policy.â
One Last Thing...
This is the 50th time World Economic Forum founder Klaus Schwab has convened an annual meeting. The gathering was initially called the European Management Forum and the first in 1971 drew around 450 participants versus the 3,000 official delegates of today. It ran far longer â two weeks â with the first few days assigned to discussing âThe Challenge of the Future.â Economist John Kenneth Galbraith was among the speakers. The only year the meeting left the slopes was in 2002 when the it moved to New York in solidarity with that city after 9/11. Aside from Schwab and his wife, Hilde, thereâs at least one person who was present at the inception and scheduled to attend again this year. Thatâs Wilfried Stoll of Germanyâs Festo Holding GmbH.
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