The Manila Times

Big firms with $7T exit Climate Action 100+

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NEW YORK CITY: A pair of large investment companies with nearly $7 trillion in assets said Thursday they exited a climate change investor initiative that aims to pressure companies to quickly cut carbon emissions.

JPMorgan Asset Management, which manages $3.1 trillion in assets, has not renewed its membership in Climate Action 100+, saying through a spokesman that it will oversee its stewardshi­p on climate change with companies with its bank staff.

A second-large asset manager, State Street Global Advisors, with $3.7 trillion, also dropped out, saying Climate Action’s approach “will not be consistent with our independen­t approach to proxy voting and portfolio company engagement,” according to a statement.

BlackRock, the world’s biggest asset manager, is also scaling back its work with the group, a spokesman confirmed.

Launched in 2017, Climate Action 100+ aims to work with companies to halve their greenhouse gas emissions by 2030, through governance reforms, the eliminatio­n of emission through the value chain and enhanced disclosure. Its website boasts $68 trillion in assets under management.

The moves come as Republican officials in Washington and some state government­s criticize financial companies for prioritizi­ng climate change, in some cases blocking the firms from state contracts.

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton applauded the news, saying financial companies had undertaken an “unlawful” campaign to force environmen­tal, social and corporate governance on customers.

“I’m pleased JPMorgan has exited the Climate Action 100+,” Paxton said on X, the former Twitter.

“This is a critical step toward putting customers’ financial wellbeing first.”

JPMorgan said in light of its 40 “dedicated sustainabl­e investing profession­als” and other staff, the asset manager “has determined that it will no longer participat­e in Climate Action 100+ engagement­s,” according to a company statement.

“We believe that climate change continues to present material economic risks and opportunit­ies to our clients, and our analysts will continue to factor this into engagement with companies around the world.”

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