Boycott of coal-fired projects worldwide looms

More than 100 institutional major investors called on major banks to fight harder against global warming, in particular by cutting funds to projects that involve coal.

The deep-pocketed asset managers warned that they might back resolutions at banks’ shareholder meetings that push management to do more or vote not to reelect company directors.

In all, 115 investors with $4.2 trillion in holdings, including Aviva Investors, Fidelity and M&G, wrote to 63 banks, including Standard Chartered, Deutsche Bank and JP Morgan Chase, according to a statement released by the nongovernmental organization ShareAction.

The investment groups called for stronger measures to safeguard the planet’s climate and biodiversity, given the leverage that banks have via financing, ahead of the COP26 conference scheduled for November in Glasgow, Scotland.

The main measure would be to halt financing for coal-related projects by 2030 in countries that belong to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, and by 2040 for the others.

The investors hope that banks might announce before the COP26 takes place that they will no longer finance new coal projects.

The letter calls on banks to work toward limiting increases in global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius, a target that has prompted the International Enegery Agency to recommend energy companies halt all further oil exploration.

As for biodiversity, the investors want banks to set targets related to the issue by 2024. Any lack of progress “may be taken into consideration within investors’ 2022 AGM voting action,” the letter warned in reference to annual general meetings.

“The message from investors is clear: distant net-zero targets and warm words about the importance of biodiversity are not enough,” warned Jeanne Martin, a campaign manager at ShareAction.

“Investors want concrete action now and those banks, which fail to respond, can expect serious challenges at their next AGMs.” In May, Exxon Mobil and Chevron shareholders voted to force the oil majors’ directors to step up the fight against global warming.

An activist investment fund also managed to have a representative named to Exxon’s board of directors.

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