Australia’s second largest superannuation fund has completely divested from thermal coal and ploughed $1 billion into renewable and low-emission technology in the year since it declared it would reshape its business in line with climate targets.
Aware is aiming to reduce emissions across its entire portfolio
by 45 per cent by 2030. Credit: Quinn Rooney
|
Chief executive Deanne Stewart said more needed to be done to achieve Aware’s goal to reduce emissions across its entire portfolio by 45 per cent by 2030 in line with the Paris Agreement targets, on the way to net zero by 2050.
She said Aware started moving towards a divestment from carbon intensive investment as far back as 2015 when it became clear not only that climate change presented a direct risk to the retirement savings of fund members, but that there were significant opportunities for growth in emerging and growing renewable and low-carbon technologies.
She said momentum was growing across the sector as the impact of climate change became more real and immediate to the broader community.
Group of 20 nations fails to agree on phasing out coal by 2025 |
"Whether it’s here in Australia with record floods and bushfires, whether it’s in China, whether it’s floods in Northern Europe, the fires in the US, [climate change] is unavoidable, inescapable … you can see it, it is a present danger.”
Aware is a member of the Investor Group on Climate Change, a collaboration of Australian and New Zealand institutional investors focused on the impact of climate change on investments.
The group this week issued a report calling for an orderly transition from a carbon-intensive economy as global action on climate change intensified.
It said while institutional investors had a significant role to play in ensuring communities were supported through transition, government action was needed to ensure mining, oil and gas communities such as those in the Hunter Valley, Bowen-Surat, Pilbara and Gippsland basins, were not disproportionately hit by abrupt economic changes.
Ms Stewart said state governments were setting policy to assist a transition, but that the federal government could help do more with climate targets and energy policy that ensured certainty for business and investment.
Links >
- (AU Bloomberg) A $213 Billion Investor Targets Whole Nation Over Climate Change
- (AU Business Insider) APRA Has Doubled Down On Its Climate Warnings, Urging The Business Community To Take Stock Of The 'Unprecedented' Risks
- (USA) Climate Change Will Reshape Silicon Valley As We Know It
- Bill Gates: Here's A Formula That Explains Where We Need To Invest In Climate Innovation
- (AU) Net Zero Emissions Target For Australia Could Launch $63bn Investment Boom
- (AU) Investors Are Trying To Shut Down Fossil Fuel Companies From The Inside — This Is What They're Doing
- The Economic Theory That Could Fuel A Climate Change Revolution
- It’s Been A Landmark Year For Investor Action On Climate Change
- (AU) Top Super Fund Dumps Coal Miners As Emissions Cuts Intensify
No comments:
Post a Comment