Showing posts with label biggest investors. Show all posts
Showing posts with label biggest investors. Show all posts

08 May, 2017

Investors worth $20 trillion call for climate change action

Some of the world's biggest investors have pleaded with governments of the world's largest economies, including Australia, to stick with their commitments to tackle climate change and to introduce carbon pricing to help achieve them.
Barack Obama in Paris in 2015 with other leaders
who signed onto the Paris climate accord. 
There is strong speculation that American President Donald Trump could renege on his country's commitments under the Paris Accord signed in 2015, which aimed to hold temperature rises well below 2 degrees Celsius.

Now a group of investor organisations, committed to encouraging action on climate change has written to member nations of the G7 and G20 calling on all participants to move to implement the Paris agreement. The G7 is due to meet in Italy later this month and includes America, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan and Britain.

Current signatories to the letter manage $20 trillion and in their letter also call for measures to encourage investments that will reduce climate change including carbon pricing, phasing out fossil fuel subsidies and introduce standardised international reporting rules for companies to disclose their climate risks. 


Read Mathew Dunckley’s story in today’s Melbourne Age - “Investors worth $20 trillion call for climate change action.”

21 February, 2017

Investors with $2.8 trillion in assets unite against Donald Trump’s climate change denial

The world’s biggest investors are joining forces to unite against Donald Trump in the fight against climate change.
Donald Trump - faces a fight with
biggest investors over climate change.

The US President has repeatedly denounced climate change as a hoax peddled by China and has pledged to relax environmental regulations, spur investment in fracking and sack half of the staff at the US Environmental Protection Agency.

But as G20 foreign ministers meet on Thursday to prepare for a climate change summit in Hamburg in July, managers of funds with assets totalling more than $2.8 trillion - more than the entire annual GDP of the UK - called for leading economies to phase out fossil fuel subsidies within the next three years to avert a catastrophe.