These Three Colleges Stopped Investing in Fossil Fuels—One Year Later, Their Endowments Are Doing Ju

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Shilton, A.C. (2015). These Three Colleges Stopped Investing in Fossil Fuels – One Year Later, Their Endowments Are Doing Just Fine. Solutions 6(5): 24–28. https://thesolutionsjournal.com/2015/5/these-three-colleges-stopped-investing-in-fossil-fuels-one-year-later-their-endowments-are-doing-just-fine

Perspectives These Three Colleges Stopped Investing in Fossil Fuels—  One Year Later, Their Endowments Are Doing Just Fine by A.C. Shilton

Light Brigading

Student activists demonstrate in favor of fossil fuel divestment outside of a building at University of Wisconsin Madison in 2014.

Y

ou can hear the sounds of new construction from just about any point on Sterling College’s bucolic Vermont campus. The whir of saws and the plink of hammers ricochet off the nearby Lowell Mountains as students—26 percent more than were enrolled just two years ago—shuffle to class through a carpet of fall leaves. Things have never been better at this small college, which specializes in environmental education. An entire Sustainable Agriculture and Food Systems Center, which will house a new major on the same topic, is in the works. And not a dime of the money

used came from investments in fossil fuels, because the college sold off all their stock in that industry last year. On college campuses nationwide, the key argument against divestment— or removing all investments from oil, coal, and natural gas companies—has been that it is not economically feasible; divesting would be an abdication of fiduciary responsibility. Not “warranted or wise” were the exact words Harvard President Drew Faust used in October 2013, to excuse the Ivy League institution from taking its USD $30 billion endowment out of environmentally devastating corporations.1

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But evidence is mounting against that argument. Several colleges and universities have completed the process of divestment. None have declared financial ruin. In fact, many, like Sterling, are seeing improved returns on their investments. Meanwhile, the call to divest has never been stronger. During the week of the People’s Climate March in September 2014, individuals and institutions pledged to divest more than USD $50 billion from fossil fuels.2 With evidence and enthusiasm on the side of divestment, schools like Harvard may need to rethink their portfolios.


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