National Post

Pensions pledge climate action

- Matthew Green

UNITED NATIONS• Insurers and pension funds managing US$ 2.3 trillion pledged on Monday to shift their portfolios away from carbon- heavy industries in the hope of triggering snowballin­g climate commitment­s from other big investors.

Montreal- based Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec, German insurer Allianz, the California Public Employees’ Retirement System (CALPERS), and Swedish pension fund Alecta were among the founders of the new “Net Zero Asset Owner Alliance” launched at a United Nations climate summit.

“Mitigating climate change is the challenge of our lifetime. Politics, business and societies across the globe need to act as one to rapidly reduce climate emissions,” Oliver Baete, chief executive of Allianz, said in a statement.

As accelerati­ng climate impacts become increasing­ly apparent via heatwaves, wildfires and receding coastlines, the financial sector is under growing pressure from activists, shareholde­rs and regulators to respond.

U. N. Secretary- General Antonio Guterres, who organized Monday’s summit to try to boost stalling internatio­nal efforts to control emissions, sees insurers and pensions funds as a crucial lever to transition the global economy off fossil fuels.

These types of companies — called “asset owners” because they are the principal holders of retirement savings, or are investing customers’ insurance premiums — represent some of the world’s largest pools of capital.

Michael Sabia, the chief executive of the Caisse, one of Canada’s biggest pension funds, said there could be huge opportunit­ies for investors willing to finance a fast transition to clean energy.

“There’s a lot of people who don’t get it, but I do think it’s moving — the issue is whether it’s moving fast enough,” Sabia told Reuters. “It’s speed that matters here.”

Me m b e r s of the n ew grouping pledged to align their portfolios with a goal enshrined in the 2015 Paris Agreement to combat global warming to limit the increase in average temperatur­es to 1.5 degrees Celsius.

The importance of this target was underscore­d late last year when a report by the U. N.- backed Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change spelled out the catastroph­ic consequenc­es for people and nature if the world is allowed to get much hotter.

Under current emissions pledges by government­s, the Earth is on track for well over 3 degrees Celsius of warming by the end of the century — an outcome that scientists say could put the survival of modern industrial societies at risk.

“CALPERS recognizes that climate change poses urgent and systemic risk given our responsibi­lity to protect our members’ financial assets and provide the long- term returns that can pay pensions for this and coming generation­s,” said Marcie Frost, CEO of CALPERS.

The pension funds and insurers said they would rebalance their portfolios to ensure their investment­s were carbon-neutral by 2050, with intermedia­te targets set for 2025, 2030 and 2040. They also pledged to make regular public progress reports.

The nucleus of founding members hope they will influence an ever- growing proportion of the world’s other big pension funds and insurers to push high-carbon companies toward more sustainabl­e economic activities.

But members of the new grouping said they might also have to divest from heavily- polluting industries as a last resort if they proved unwilling to change their business models.

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