Yorkshire Post

Shares setback for oil giants as Norway sovereign wealth fund to sell stock

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NORWAY’S TRILLION-DOLLAR sovereign wealth fund is to sell its oil and gas stocks in a move that is likely to have far-reaching implicatio­ns for the energy sector.

The world’s largest fund holds 37 billion US dollars (£28.3bn) in oil and gas holdings and the move sent shares in oil giants BP, Royal Dutch Shell lower on Friday. The fund has a 6 billion-dollar (£4.6bn) stake in Shell alone.

In a statement, Norway’s finance ministry said: “The Government is proposing to exclude companies classified as exploratio­n and production companies within the energy sector from the Government Pension Fund Global to reduce the aggregate oil price risk in the Norwegian economy.”

It maintained that the oil industry will be an “important and major industry in Norway for many years to come” and that the measure was about diversifyi­ng its fund to make it less vulnerable to a permanent fall in the price of oil.

The sell-off in oil stocks will be “phased out from the fund gradually over time”. Norway has the largest oil industry in Western Europe.

The proposal was first revealed two years ago when Norges Bank, the country’s central bank which manages the fund, advised the Government to exclude the oil and gas sector from the benchmark index for the fund.

Charlie Kronick, of Greenpeace UK, said: “This partial divestment from oil and gas is welcome, but not enough to mitigate Norway’s exposure to both global oil and gas prices and the wider financial ramificati­ons of climate change.

“However, it does send a clear signal that companies betting on the expansion of their oil and gas businesses present an unacceptab­le risk, not only to the climate but also to investors.”

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