Current:Home > ScamsNew York’s Giant Pension Fund Doubles Climate-Smart Investment -AssetTrainer
New York’s Giant Pension Fund Doubles Climate-Smart Investment
View
Date:2025-04-18 09:42:47
Stay informed about the latest climate, energy and environmental justice news by email. Sign up for the ICN newsletter.
America’s third-largest public pension fund is ramping up its climate-savvy investments, New York State Comptroller Thomas P. DiNapoli announced to global finance leaders on Wednesday.
The fund, a huge and influential investor, plans to double its stake to $4 billion in a portfolio of companies that disclose and seek to lower their emissions of global warming pollution.
“We’ve particularly been concerned about how we can address the issue of climate risk and benefit our portfolio,” DiNapoli said, speaking at the Investor Summit on Climate Risk, where money managers called for investors to face up to the risks of climate change and to accelerate action to fight global warming.
As the summit was underway at the United Nations on Wednesday, the UK Government’s Met Office published an ominous new five-year forecast that adds urgency to the investors’ climate concerns: Annual global temperatures could reach 1.5 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels within the next five years, the Met Office warned. The aim of the Paris climate agreement is to prevent warming from getting much beyond that level.
The $2 billion in additional investment DiNapoli announced will go into a low-emissions index fund that New York’s Common Retirement Fund created in 2016. While the low-emissions index fund—which has had an annualized investment return of 16.5 percent—represents just a fraction of the pension fund’s more than $200 billion in assets, DiNapoli said he hopes to continue to grow the low-carbon portfolio.
The special climate fund is based on a traditional index fund made up of leading corporations, except that it weights its investments by considering whether the companies disclose their carbon footprints and act to reduce them.
Shareholders Push for Risk Disclosure
DiNapoli is one of several powerful officials from the city and state of New York who have sought to pressure fossil fuel companies and influence their investment and risk management practices. The city has launched litigation seeking to recover climate damages and pledged to divest its pensions funds from fossil fuel producers, and the state’s attorney general has been in a long fight with ExxonMobil on its climate record.
Corporations have come under increasing pressure in recent years to better disclose the risks they face in a future of rising temperatures and greater restrictions on greenhouse gas emissions. DiNapoli’s office helped lead a resolution approved last year by Exxon shareholders that requires the oil giant to report on those risks annually.
Disclosure was a common theme at the summit, which was hosted by the United Nations Foundation, the UN Office for Partnerships and Ceres, a nonprofit that promotes sustainable investment.
“If you are not a climate-aware investor, then you are fundamentally not doing your job,” said Brian Deese, global head of sustainable investing for BlackRock, a leading investment firm. As the world works toward achieving the Paris climate agreement goals, he said, companies that are already grappling with this challenge are better positioned for long-term growth. The only way for investors to assess this, he said, is with better disclosure.
In December, BlackRock called on about 120 corporations in energy, transportation and other industries to report on climate risk. Earlier this month, the investment firm’s chief executive, Larry Fink, reminded corporate leaders that social responsibility has become a critical element of any company’s financial success.
Enabling Clean Energy Growth
Much of the discussion on Wednesday focused on the key role that finance will play in enabling nations to slash greenhouse gas emissions in line with the Paris climate pact.
“Governments need to know that their financing element, if they really engage in the Paris Agreement, is going to be delivered,” said Patricia Espinosa, executive secretary of the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change.
Lisa Jackson, who led the EPA under President Obama and now heads environment, policy and social initiatives for Apple, spoke about the role of private money in expanding renewable energy. Apple, whose servers use lots of electricity, has committed to powering all of its operations from renewables.
Even as many leaders spoke optimistically about this clean energy transition and the financial sector’s growing role, Sharan Burrow, general secretary of the International Trade Union Confederation, called it “a disgrace” that few governments are helping to retrain workers in the fossil fuel industry who stand to lose their jobs.
“So your work is critical. If we don’t get that right in fossil fuels as the shift is now on,” she said, “then we’re going to leave a lot of stranded workers and communities.”
veryGood! (968)
Related
- 'Most Whopper
- Matthew Perry mourned by ‘Friends’ cast mates: ‘We are all so utterly devastated’
- Venezuela’s high court has suspended the opposition’s primary election process, including its result
- Fantasy Football Start 'Em, Sit 'Em: Players to start or sit in Week 9
- Small twin
- Judge dismisses Brett Favre defamation suit, saying Shannon Sharpe used hyperbole over welfare money
- Prosecutor takes aim at Sam Bankman-Fried’s credibility at trial of FTX founder
- Afghans in droves head to border to leave Pakistan ahead of a deadline in anti-migrant crackdown
- Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
- Police investigating alleged robbery after Colorado players say jewelry taken at Rose Bowl
Ranking
- A Mississippi company is sentenced for mislabeling cheap seafood as premium local fish
- Zoos and botanical gardens find Halloween programs are a hit, and an opportunity
- Actor Robert De Niro tells a jury in a lawsuit by his ex-assistant: ‘This is all nonsense’
- 5 Things podcast: Israel expands its Gaza incursion, Maine shooting suspect found dead
- Man can't find second winning lottery ticket, sues over $394 million jackpot, lawsuit says
- What makes 'The Real Housewives' so addictive? (Classic)
- Lionel Messi, with 8th win, becomes first MLS player to earn soccer's Ballon d'Or award
- Montenegro, an EU hopeful, to vote on a new government backed by anti-Western and pro-Russian groups
Recommendation
Moving abroad can be expensive: These 5 countries will 'pay' you to move there
Army said Maine shooter should not have gun, requested welfare check
Iranian teen Armita Geravand, allegedly assaulted by police for flouting strict dress code, has died
Singapore defense minister calls on China to take the lead in reducing regional tensions
Bill Belichick's salary at North Carolina: School releases football coach's contract details
Supreme Court to weigh fights over public officials blocking constituents on social media
Tarantula crossing the road blamed for crash that sent a Canadian motorcyclist to the hospital
Dead man found with explosives, guns at Colorado adventure park: Sheriff