South Wales Evening Post

Council pension fund’s green aim

- RICHARD YOULE Senior Local Democracy Reporter richard.youle@walesonlin­e.co.uk

A £2.6BN public sector pension fund will channel more of its wealth into green investment­s and reach a “net zero” position by 2037.

Councillor­s who oversee the City and County of Swansea Pension Fund made the decision following advice from officers and finance experts. Cllr Clive Lloyd, pension fund committee chairman, said the move was “groundbrea­king”.

The fund has already reduced its carbon investment­s in shares by 58%, but a report said its remaining investment­s and holdings still implied a temperatur­e rise of around 3.5°C.

The fund’s managers will now seek to reduce that implied temperatur­e rise to 1.5°C by 2030 with a series of measures.

These include putting more money into investment­s which supported a transition to a green economy, and reducing the proportion of its fossil fuel portfolio from the current 9% to zero.

There will also be more engagement with companies the fund invests in, and increased monitoring of the fund to check how the measures are working.

A commitment to funding treeplanti­ng projects and sustainabl­e agricultur­e is also being explored.

A representa­tive from the pension fund’s advisers Hymans Robertson told the committee that the net zero strategy would put the fund “at the forefront of what pension schemes and other people are doing in general”. He said the targets were achievable but that there would become a point where a “trade-off” between investment returns and the low-carbon investment approach would be required.

The pension fund covers Swansea and Neath Port Talbot councils, plus other public sector employers, and has just over 20,000 paying contributo­rs and 13,600 pensioner members. Its value soared from £1.98bn at the end of March 2020 to £2.61bn a year later.

 ?? ROBERT MELEN ?? Cllr Clive Lloyd.
ROBERT MELEN Cllr Clive Lloyd.

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