Scottish Daily Mail

Aviva turns £10bn pension cash green

- By Lucy White

AViVA is set to funnel £10bn of workers’ pension money into climate-friendly investment­s by the end of next year as it unveils an ambitious plan to become net zero by 2040.

The pensions and savings giant is committing a ‘substantia­l’ portion of the money it collects from autoenrolm­ent pension funds to investment­s which tackle climate change.

Every employee over the age of 22 who earns more than £10,000 per year pays into an auto-enrolment pension, unless they opt out.

And Aviva serves 3.5m of those workers, who will now be helping to fund the uK’s green recovery from the pandemic as £10bn of their retirement savings are used to fund projects from nuclear power sites to energy-efficient housing.

Following the example of other institutio­ns, such as insurance marketplac­e Lloyds of London and government-backed pension fund Nest, Aviva will also ditch its coal investment­s.

By the end of 2022, it will sell off all its shares in companies which make more than 5pc of their revenue from coal – unless they have signed up to the science Based Targets initiative which helps cut emissions. And it will also stop offering insurance for any companies making more than 5pc of their revenues from coal.

Aviva’s chief executive Amanda Blanc said: ‘Aviva is taking bold steps to help tackle the climate crisis. As the uK’s leading insurer, we have a huge responsibi­lity to change the way we invest, insure and serve our customers.

‘For the world to reach net zero, it’s going to take leadership and radical ambition. And it is going to take Aviva to play our part.’ under Blanc’s plan, the carbon dioxide emissions from Aviva’s own operations and supply chain will hit net zero by 2030.

This will involve buying in 100pc renewable electricit­y for all its offices, which total 230,231 square metres, and swapping the leases on its 1,540-strong vehicle fleet from diesel-guzzling cars to all electric and hybrid models. By 2040, Aviva’s entire investment portfolio will be net zero on carbon dioxide emissions.

Business and Energy secretary Kwasi Kwarteng said: ‘Business have a huge role in tackling climate change.

‘it is fantastic that Aviva is taking radical action across its business, which will help the uK eliminate its contributi­on to climate change.

‘We must work with companies like Aviva to harness the strength of the uK’s financial sector to unleash the private capital necessary to reduce carbon emissions and support new jobs as the uK builds back greener.’

Aviva’s policy comes just weeks after its rival M&g announced a new £5bn fund to invest in private firms which are pioneers in creating green technology.

in the medium term, Aviva is aiming to cut the carbon intensity of its investment­s – or how much carbon dioxide a firm produces relative to the intensity of its work – by 25pc in the next four years and 60pc by 2030.

To do this, its asset management arm Aviva investors – which looks after more than £350bn of savers’ money – will plough £6bn into green assets by 2025.

And it will commit £2.5bn to low carbon and renewable energy infrastruc­ture, which is slightly broader than the strict ‘green’ definition and includes areas such as nuclear power.

 ??  ?? Amanda Blanc
Amanda Blanc

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