Toronto Star

FINANCIAL MOVE

Norwegian wealth fund to drop oil and gas shares, including CNR and Encana,

- MARK LEWIS

STAVANGER, NORWAY— Norway’s $1 trillion (U.S.) wealth fund, thE biggest of its kind in the world, will begin dumping shares in oil and gas companies including some Canadian names, but stopped short of barring major producers like Suncor, ExxonMobil and Chevron.

The move was hailed by environmen­tal activists as a sign that the global economy is moving away from fossil fuels toward cleaner energy.

The financial impact, however, may be relatively limited. The move will focus on companies that trade solely in exploratio­n and production rather than the integrated oil giants, which do everything from searching for fossil fuels to selling them to consumers.

The fund is looking to sell some $7.5 billion in shares in 134 energy companies over time, including 26 Canadian names.

The list includes large Canadian producers such as Canadian Natural Resources Ltd. and Encana Corp. but not large producers that also own refineries such as Suncor Energy Inc. and Husky Energy Inc.

Calgary-based oilsands producer Cenovus Energy Inc. is on the list even though it owns two U.S. refineries in partnershi­p with Houston-based Phillips 66.

The Norwegian government said its motivation was not climate activism but financial. The fund, somewhat ironically, derives its income from Norway’s booming oil and gas in- dustry. So reinvestin­g those proceeds in other sectors is considered a way to keep the money safe should oil and gas prices fall.

“The objective is to reduce the aggregate oil price risk on the whole Norwegian economy,” Minister of Finance Siv Jensen told The Associated Press. “The Norwegian state is highly exposed to oil.”

Tax receipts from oil production have made Norway rich. They underpin generous welfare provisions. And a hefty proportion is siphoned off into the fund, which was conceived as a pension kitty for the country’s 5.3 million inhabitant­s.

In Stavanger, a city on the rainy west coast where many oil companies are based, the sight of $100,000 Teslas cruising along fjord-side roads are a marker of the town’s oil-sponsored private wealth.

Mark Campanale, executive director of the Carbon Tracker Initiative, a think tank on climate issues, says Friday’s decision is more significan­t than when the fund sold off its shares in coal companies.

“This shows that while the fund was initially built on revenue from oil and gas, the Ministry of Finance understand­s that the future belongs to those who transition away from fossil fuels,” he said. “Now is the time for smart investors around the world to follow their lead and make decisions driven by the reality of the energy transition.”

The sell-off of stakes in the Canadian companies is not expected to have a great impact on the market which is already buffeted by issues related to pipeline export capacity and a shortage of capital, said analyst Phil Skolnick of Eight Capital.

He cited Bloomberg statistics from December that show the wealth fund owned just one per cent of Canadian Natural’s stock, 0.57 per cent of Encana’s shares and 0.68 per cent of Cenovus’ shares.

“There’s nothing of size when you look at the percentage of total shares outstandin­g,” he said, while cautioning that the impact could worsen if other large funds follow the Norwegian fund’s lead.

Jensen said she had instructed Norway’s central bank to monitor how the fund was exposed to companies that could contribute to climate change, which is now considered a major risk for financial returns.

 ?? MARIT HOMMEDAL THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Integrated oil giants were not banned from the fund’s investment­s in part because those companies are considered most likely to invest in green energy.
MARIT HOMMEDAL THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Integrated oil giants were not banned from the fund’s investment­s in part because those companies are considered most likely to invest in green energy.

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