The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Norway wealth fund blacklists commodity giants

- GWLADYS FOUCHE TERJE SOLSVIK REUTERS

OSLO — Norway’s $1 trillion wealth fund is excluding some of the world’s biggest commoditie­s firms from its portfolio for their use and production of coal, including Glencore and Anglo American.

Underlinin­g the growing role of climate considerat­ions for long-term investors, the fund is also excluding German utility RWE, South African petrochemi­cals firm Sasol and Australian company AGL Energy over their use of coal.

Norway’s parliament agreed in June 2019 to toughen existing limits on coal investment­s by the world’s largest wealth fund by excluding companies that mined more than 20 million tonnes of coal a year or generated more than 10 gigawatts of power from coal.

The fund held stocks worth $1.6 billion in such companies at the end of 2019, according to fund data. Wednesday’s announceme­nt is the first to show the tougher rules being applied.

The fund, set up in 1996 to save Norway’s oil revenues for future generation­s, now holds about 1.5 per cent of globally listed shares and its decisions are often followed by other investors. It sells holdings before announcing any exclusions to avoid excessive market moves.

The fund put another set of companies — BHP, Uniper, Enel and Vistra Energy - under observatio­n for possible exclusion later if they did not address their use or production of coal.

The value of holdings in this group stood at $3.9 billion at the end of last year.

“This is good news that the biggest producers of coal in absolute terms are finally out of the fund,” Else Hendel, acting environmen­tal policy leader at green group WWF Norway, told Reuters.

CANADIAN COMPANIES EXCESSIVE EMISSIONS

The fund, which operates under ethical guidelines set by parliament, also said it was excluding four Canadian oil companies for producing excessive greenhouse gas emissions, the first time it has used that reason to blacklist firms.

Canadian Natural Resources, Cenovus Energy, Suncor Energy and Imperial Oil were excluded for “acts or omissions that on an aggregate company level lead to unacceptab­le greenhouse gas emissions”, it said.

The fund, which held stock worth $1.15 billion in these companies at the end of 2019, said the companies were excluded for their carbon dioxide emissions “from production of oil to oil sands”.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said, in response to the fund’s exclusion of the four, that many oil companies understood the investment climate was changing because of concerns about climate change.

Excessive greenhouse gas emissions became a criterion for exclusion four years ago. But the central bank, the fund’s ethics watchdog and the finance ministry took time to agree on what constitute­d an unacceptab­le amount of emissions.

The announceme­nt opens the way for more companies to be excluded on those grounds.

 ?? REUTERS ?? The logo of commoditie­s trader Glencore is pictured in front of the company’s headquarte­rs in Baar, Switzerlan­d.
REUTERS The logo of commoditie­s trader Glencore is pictured in front of the company’s headquarte­rs in Baar, Switzerlan­d.

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