UK Investment Guides Loader

CofE Pensions Board 10 years ahead on 2050 net-zero target

written by Bella Palmer
pensions

The board's Stewardship Report revealed that these changes resulted in holdings in oil and gas companies being reduced to 0.28 per cent of the fund

The Church of England (CofE) Pensions Board is around 10 years ahead on its 2050 net-zero target despite ‘ongoing challenges’, after significantly reducing or excluding companies that are not aligned to the transition.

The board's Stewardship Report revealed that these changes resulted in holdings in oil and gas companies being reduced to 0.28 per cent of the fund.

In particular, the report highlighted the creation of the FTSE TPI Climate Transition Index, in which the board invests its passive portfolio, as the most significant contribution to progress.

More broadly, the report also drew attention to the board's use of engagement over the past year, including co-leading engagement for the global engagement initiative Climate Action 100+ with Shell.

However, it confirmed that the board will be shifting its focus going forward to industry sectors that demand energy from oil and gas companies, stepping down from leading engagement with Shell, to instead begin co-leading engagement with some of Europe’s largest car manufacturers: BMW, Mercedes-Benz, Renault and Volkswagen.

Indeed, the board already filed a climate lobbying shareholder proposal against VW earlier this year, although VW voted to reject this proposal at its recent annual general meeting.

This shift in focus was one of a number of priorities for the year ahead, alongside co-leading with BT Pension Fund and investor networks the development of the first public framework to assess government bonds on climate criteria through the ASCOR Project.

The report also confirmed that the board will consider how it and other pension funds can invest in support of the transition in emerging economies, and work in partnership with the United Nations to establish the first independent Global Tailings Institute to support implementation of the Global Industry Standard on tailings management.

This was in addition to plans to launch a Global Standard on Corporate Climate Lobbying, and chairing the Global Paris Aligned Investor Initiative (with Dutch fund APG) to oversee further evolution of the Net Zero Investment Framework for pension schemes.

Commenting on the report, CofE Pensions Board chief responsible investment officer, Adam Matthews, said: As an investor in most sectors of the global economy, we take a universal view of our ownership of assets which means driving systemic change in the real economy that can impact whole sectors.

He said: We are willing to take a lead and establish global collaborations of investors to see the creation of global standards where they do not exist and drive alignment to those standards where they do exist.

Disclaimer:

The opinions expressed by our writers are their own and do not represent the views of UK Investment Guides. The information provided on UK Investment Guides is intended for informational purposes only. UK Investment Guides is not liable for any financial losses incurred. Conduct your own research by contacting financial experts before making any investment decisions.

Share this post with friends!