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Investment Group: Produced in partnership with “Do More to Fight Climate Change”

By Sustainability Today Staff Report

By all accounts, it’s been a terrible year for the climate.

California’s fatal, destructive wildfires in the Falls of 2018 and 2019 were followed by multimillion acre burns in the Amazon and Indonesian rain forests, and the utter destruction of 20 million acres of Australia. Massive storms fueled by warming waters render places uninhabitable, such as Hurricane Dorian’s devastation of the Northern Bahamas.

The Trump Administration continues to disembowel environmental regulations in the U.S., ignoring the Paris Climate Accord while increasing the release of greenhouse gases and pollutants. On the record, they state it is to cut costs for corporations all too happy for the move.

There’s the rub. The top investors in those corporations are anything but happy about this destructive shakedown of the environment to appease bottom lines.

In mid-September, a group of 515 investors who manage assets totaling $35 trillion (nearly twice the U.S. gross domestic product in 2018) sent a stark message to organizations and governments worldwide: Do more to fight climate change by complying with the goals of the 2015 Paris Climate Accord “with utmost urgency,” according to a statement.

It’s the exact opposite of what the Trump Administration, and leaders in Brazil, Indonesia and other anti-climate change countries have been telling businesses and citizens.

“Much more needs to be done by governments to accelerate the low carbon transition and to improve the resilience of our economy, society and the financial system to climate risks,” the investors said one week before the United Nations Climate Action Summit.

The investors represent a wide swath of the global economy, from pension funds to corporate investment, equity funds and international private investment. A few representative groups include Allianz Global Investors, Nomura Asset Management, UBS Asset Management, and the California Public Employees Management System. They control nearly half of the world’s investment capital.

“With the immense power and influence that investors hold in our global economy, (governments and companies) have a tremendous opportunity and responsibility to act at the urgent pace and scale required,” Mindy Lubber, CEO of sustainability nonprofit Ceres, said in the statement.

In another direct rebuke of the Trump Administration, and other heavy fossil fuel producers, the group has urged governments to set a price on carbon emissions, and to reduce thermal coal power and fossil fuel subsidies. Currently, U.S. taxpayers support fossil fuel producers to the tune of billions of dollars per year.

The goal of the group is the same as that of the U.N. Climate Action Summit and the 2015 Paris Climate Accord: to cut greenhouse emissions by 45% by 2030, and to achieve carbon neutrality by 2050. After years of consecutive reductions, the U.S. reported a 2.8% increase in greenhouse emissions in 2018.

Besides a fundamental shift in U.S. environmental policy back to the pre-Trump era, there is plenty of other work to be done. According to a second group of investors, the Transition Pathway Initiative, only 31 of 109 energy companies are aligned with the Paris pledges — most significantly, to limit global average temperature increase to below 2 degrees Celsius. 

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