Business Insider, AFP, May 28, 2015
Oslo (AFP)
- Norway's state pension fund, the world's biggest sovereign wealth fund, will
have to sell its stakes in companies with a significant exposure to the global
coal sector, a parliamentary committee said.
The fund --
which is valued at 835 billion euros ($885 billion) and fuelled by Norway's
state oil revenues -- will be required to divest its holdings in companies that
generate more than 30 percent of their output or revenues from coal, according
to a proposal unanimously agreed by the finance committee.
The law
still needs to be approved by parliament with the final vote scheduled for June
5.
"Investing
in coal companies poses both a climate risk and a future economic risk,"
said finance committee deputy Svein Flatten.
The
minority right-wing government has previously resisted pressure by opposition
parties to require the fund to divest of all holdings in companies linked to
fossil fuels, instead proposing criteria "to exclude companies whose
conduct to an unacceptable degree entail greenhouse gas emissions".
But
Wednesday's announcement was nonetheless hailed as a victory by the opposition
and environmentalists.
"Coal
is in a class by itself as the source with the greatest responsibility for
greenhouse gas emissions, so this is a great victory in the battle against
climate change," opposition Labour MP Torstein Tvedt Solberg said.
"We
won! Norway divested! Politicians throw coal out of the oil fund," tweeted
Greenpeace's Norway branch.
A report by
experts published in December recommended that the fund act on a case-by-case
basis rather than adopting a blanket ban on fossil fuel-linked companies and
that it use its role as a company shareholder to improve corporate practices.
The sovereign
wealth fund, which at the end of December controlled the equivalent of 1.3
percent of world market capitalisation, has in recent years divested its
holdings in several dozen companies, including coal and cement producers, whose
business models were deemed no longer tenable because of climate change or
environmental costs -- moves that were made for strictly financial reasons.
The fund is
already bound by strict ethical regulations that bar it from investing in
"particularly inhumane" weapons makers, the tobacco industry and
companies that are found guilty of violating human rights, causing serious
environmental damage, or corruption.
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