The Standard (St. Catharines)

World’s biggest wealth fund puts oil firms under ethical review

- LARS ERIK TARALDSEN AND OTT UMMELAS

Norway’s $1.3-trillion wealth fund (U.S.) is set to take a critical look at the stakes it holds in national oil companies, as its ethics council expands scrutiny of corruption in its latest set of guidelines.

The Oslo-based fund, the world’s biggest of its kind, has already steered away from areas such as tobacco, weapons, coal and palm oil following recommenda­tions from the ethics council. The investor last year excluded Petrochina Co. for gross corruption on the council’s recommenda­tion, although the advice focused mainly on human rights violations and excessive emissions.

The council’s latest list suggests a broader approach will be applied going forward. “If accusation­s are made against many companies in a particular sector, the Council on Ethics often reviews the sector as a whole and examines the companies that are the subject of the most serious accusation­s,” according to a business plan by the council seen by Bloomberg. “As there are many corruption cases related to national oil companies, this is a sector the Council on Ethics will look into in 2021.”

Norway’s sovereign wealth fund returned $123 billion on its investment­s last year. Its biggest gains came from technology stocks, while it lost money on its U.K. and oil investment­s. The fund revealed last month in an interview that its portfolio of oil exploratio­n and production companies, valued at around $6 billion in 2019, was sold last year.

Before providing guidelines to the fund, the council focuses its review on companies that have been involved in “very serious” or several cases. It collects informatio­n on the company’s compliance systems and assesses the future risk of corruption based on the company’s response to previous corruption cases.

A list of companies under observatio­n will be published next month as part of the council’s next report. Norges Bank publishes exclusions and observatio­ns continuous­ly throughout the year. There are currently companies being investigat­ed under the corruption criterion in the industrial services, transport, constructi­on and oil and gas sectors.

According to the plan seen by Bloomberg, the ethics council also plans to look into human rights breaches among shoe manufactur­ers. Other areas include investigat­ions to identify environmen­tal and worker rights risks at companies involved in ship dismantlin­g and a review of the mining sector. It will “probably” continue probing “several companies” amid reports they are using endangered species in the production of medicines.

 ?? MARIT HOMMEDAL SCANPIX VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? A gas platform run by the Norwegian oil giant Statoil stands above the North Sea. Norway’s $1.3-trillion wealth fund plans to take a critical look at the stakes it holds in national oil firms.
MARIT HOMMEDAL SCANPIX VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO A gas platform run by the Norwegian oil giant Statoil stands above the North Sea. Norway’s $1.3-trillion wealth fund plans to take a critical look at the stakes it holds in national oil firms.

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