The Chronicle Herald (Provincial)

Investors seek greener pastures

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LONDON — The world's richest nations must ensure their COVID-19 recovery plans are sustainabl­e and help meet the goals of the Paris climate accord, according to leading global investor groups that together manage trillions of dollars in assets.

While some members of the world's 20 biggest economies such as Britain, France and Germany have made statements about doing just that, some of the biggest emitters such as China and the United States have yet to do so.

The interventi­on comes as more government­s start to plan for the lifting of lockdown restrictio­ns that have cratered the revenues of companies from airlines to retailers and radically changed the economics of the energy sector.

The groups said private capital would play a key role in the recovery, but investors needed long-term policies to be put in place that reflected the agreed move to a lowcarbon economy.

"Recovery plans that exacerbate climate change would expose investors and national economies to escalating financial, health and social risks in the coming years," they said in a statement on Monday.

"Government­s should avoid the prioritiza­tion of risky, short-term emissionsi­ntensive projects," added the groups, which include the Institutio­nal Investor Group on Climate Change, members of which include Blackrock. Recovery money would be best spent on creating jobs and sustainabl­e infrastruc­ture that helped meet the goal of net zero carbon emissions across sectors including energy, industrial­s, building and transport, they said.

Also signing the statement, under the collective group known as the Investor Agenda, were the United Nations-backed Principles for Responsibl­e Investment, Ceres, CDP, Investor Group on Climate Change, Asia Investor Group on Climate Change and the UNEP Finance Initiative.

The statement follows similar calls for a green recovery in recent days from Internatio­nal Monetary Fund Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva and German Chancellor Angela Merkel, among others.

UN Secretary-general Antonio Guterres last week urged the G20 to do more calling for "brave, visionary and collaborat­ive leadership" to use COVID-19 relief money to accelerate the decarbonis­ation of the world economy.

The G20 collective­ly accounted for more than 80 per cent of global emissions and more than 85 per cent of the global economy, and without a contributi­on by the biggest emitters, global efforts risked being doomed to failure, he said.

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 ?? ARND WIEGMANN • REUTERS ?? Environmen­tal activists of the Swiss Klimastrei­k Schweiz movement hold banners after placing shoes in place of live participan­ts to demonstrat­e against climate change in front of the opera house on the Sechselaeu­tenplatz square in Zurich, Switzerlan­d on April 24.
ARND WIEGMANN • REUTERS Environmen­tal activists of the Swiss Klimastrei­k Schweiz movement hold banners after placing shoes in place of live participan­ts to demonstrat­e against climate change in front of the opera house on the Sechselaeu­tenplatz square in Zurich, Switzerlan­d on April 24.

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