The Guardian (USA)

University of Manchester to review fossil fuel shares after student protest

- Nicole Wootton-Cane

The University of Manchester has said it will review its £12m investment in fossil fuel firms after a seven-day protest by students who threatened to go on hunger strike.

Students from the protest group People and Planet had occupied one of the university’s buildings for the past week in a demonstrat­ion against its multimilli­on-pound investment in fossil fuel companies.

The university said it recognised “the urgency of the issue” and committed to bringing forward a review of its investment portfolio.

A freedom of informatio­n request by People and Planet found that the University of Manchester, one of Britain’s biggest academic institutio­ns, owned nearly £12m worth of shares in fossil fuel companies despite claiming it was committed to being a “world leader in sustainabl­e developmen­t”.

The announceme­nt follows divestment pledges by several big universiti­es in recent years, including the University of York last month, Durham University, Cardiff University and Bristol University in 2018. Student pressure has played a key role in these decisions, with many of them coming after significan­t student-led campaigns.

Lizzy Haughton, of Manchester University’s students’ union, said significan­t progress had been made despite the university’s reluctance to commit to full divestment: “They don’t want to say it out loud, but divesting has to be a part of decarbonis­ing the investment portfolio, so it goes beyond divestment.

“We haven’t won yet. There’s very little trust between the students and the university to do all of this, but it’s the biggest shift that we’ve seen since the campaign started.”

In a joint statement, the University of Manchester and the students’ union said: “The university has committed to bring forward by a year the review of its SRIP [socially responsibl­e investment policy] because of the shared recognitio­n of the urgency of the issue.

“This review will be completed before 31 July 2020 for implementa­tion from 1 August 2020. There will be meaningful engagement with the wider student, staff and alumni bodies as part of this review.”

People and Planet called off the week-long demonstrat­ion following the university’s commitment. The group said the decision to end the occupation had “not been taken lightly” but it accepted the university’s statement “because of the enormous potential it offers, which could go far further than simply divestment from fossil fuel companies”.

Speaking to the university’s student newspaper, the Mancunian, immediatel­y after the occupation ended, the students said they felt they were treated badly by the university, who they said had blocked their access to food and other supplies during the course of the week. “I think they forgot we are students of theirs,” said one of the activists, Neriya Ben-Dor.

 ?? Photograph: Peter Byrne/PA ?? A freedom of informatio­n request found that the university owned nearly £12m of shares in fossil fuel companies.
Photograph: Peter Byrne/PA A freedom of informatio­n request found that the university owned nearly £12m of shares in fossil fuel companies.

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