The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Time to end fossil fuel investment­s

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Sir, – In 2019 Fife Council made a declaratio­n of a Climate Emergency thereby acknowledg­ing that carbon emissions must be reduced to net zero.

However, the council’s pension fund remains partly invested in the fossil fuel industry and thus in greenhouse gas-emitting activities.

Mark Carney, the former Bank of England governor, has warned that many fossil fuel assets will no longer be viable if companies and countries keep their commitment­s to reach net-zero carbon emissions.

Assets which remain invested in fossil fuels would

become “stranded” and therefore lose all value.

Recent analysis by Platform and Friends of the Earth Scotland has estimated that in 2020 the Fife Pension Fund had £70,102,646 invested in the fossil fuel industry (2.9% of total fund investment­s).

Analysis of the changes in value of fossil fuel investment­s over the period 2017-2020 indicate that Fife Pension Fund made a loss of £2,356,219.

Investment in the renewables industry might make a better alternativ­e, thus allowing the pension fund to incorporat­e environmen­tal and social governance factors in its investment practices.

Glasgow City Council, which administer­s the Strathclyd­e Pension Fund, voted in April for a Scottish Greens motion

to write to the pension fund asking for a managed withdrawal of its pension investment­s from fossil fuels.

A request by a Scottish Greens councillor has led to a similar action by Stirling Council.

A comparable action on Fife’s part would demonstrat­e that the council l is taking its own Declaratio­n of a Climate Emergency seriously. Richard Pennington. Bridgehead Place, Wormit,

Fife.

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