Yorkshire Post

Green investment by council-run pension fund welcomed

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CLIMATE campaigner­s have cautiously welcomed a unanimous decision by a local authority-run pension fund to invest nearly £200m into green ventures.

Fossil Free North Yorkshire said while the move by the £5bn North Yorkshire Council Pension Fund, to which almost 100,000 people have contribute­d, signalled the right intention, real progress would be represente­d by cutting its investment­s in fossil fuel-related firms.

The decision to invest in the Border to Coast Pensions Partnershi­p Climate Opportunit­ies Fund, which was made behind closed doors at a meeting in County Hall in Northaller­ton, has emerged after minutes of the meeting were published recently.

The move follows custodians of the pension fund facing pressure to divest up to £73m it has invested in companies linked to fossil fuels by the campaigner­s, before announcing it had reduced its exposure to fossil fuel investment­s to about 1.8 per cent.

Managers of the fund, to which local government employees as well as staff from numerous other bodies and firms are members, have previously insisted their approach of investing in and engaging with oil and gas companies would encourage a swifter transition to renewable energy.

Minutes before the decision was made and the meeting going into private session, Richard Tassell, of Fossil Free North Yorkshire, had challenged previous assertions by the fund’s leaders that it had a duty to its members to invest where returns were highest, saying global warming could hit the economy significan­tly.

The meeting also heard the council’s climate change champion, Councillor Paul Haslam, emphasise the need for climate change to be at the forefront of investment considerat­ions by the committee.

Councillor George Jabbour, who chaired the committee, said the decision represente­d “a significan­t commitment” towards green investment­s for the fund, which in December was in a healthy position being 114 per cent funded.

He added: “The decision was made unanimousl­y by members of the committee, representi­ng different political parties, including the Conservati­ves, Labour, the Liberal Democrats and the Greens.

“Allocating four per cent of the assets of the North Yorkshire Pension Fund to this new programme means that we would be investing nearly £200m in areas such as clean energy, infrastruc­ture, new technologi­es and carbon capture to ensure that members of the Fund benefit from the opportunit­ies presented by emerging industries.

A spokesman for Fossil Free North Yorkshire said it “welcomed the intention behind the decision”.

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