National Post (National Edition)

TEACHERS' PENSION PLAN VOWS NET ZERO EMISSIONS BY 2050.

- PAULA SAMBO

The Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan committed to reaching net-zero emissions across its investment portfolio within three decades.

Ontario Teachers will increase investment­s in climate-friendly projects, ensure companies in its portfolio manage and report their emissions every year and work with them to reach carbon neutrality by 2050, said its chief investment officer. The fund manages $205 billion of retirement savings for educators in Canada's most populous province.

“This entails a sustained effort from our end, first in growing our investment­s in smart climate and energy solutions,” CIO Ziad Hindo said. “We have already been expanding our capabiliti­es to identify, evaluate more and more opportunit­ies on the green side.”

The pledge comes about two months after the heads of eight leading Canadian pension plans called on companies and investors to provide “consistent and complete” environmen­tal, social and governance informatio­n to strengthen investment-decision making. The group, which included Ontario Teachers', collective­ly manages $1.6 trillion in assets.

Teachers also plans to issue more green bonds, using the proceeds for climate opportunit­ies. The fund manager issued its first green bond last year, which Hindo said was “very well-received” by market participan­ts.

“It was a signal that the market is really trusting our commitment to deploy more and more capital into greener assets,” he said. “You're going to see more and more investors willing to participat­e in investing in green bonds, because it is aligned with their responsibl­e investing practices.”

Advocacy group Shift Action for Pension Wealth & Planet Health said that while it was “pleased” with Teachers' “critical first step” on dealing with climate-change risks, a commitment to net-zero emissions has little credibilit­y on its own without concrete steps.

“Without a plan for major changes to the way the pension fund makes investment decisions, a net-zero commitment runs the risk of becoming a cynical example of greenwashi­ng,” the group said in a statement.

Ontario Teachers' will release concrete targets and potentiall­y five and 10-year plans in the coming months to help get to net zero emissions by its deadline, Hindo said.

“This is a journey, it has a lot of complexity, but we are absolutely committed to playing our part in helping the world transition,” he said.

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