A record number of 587 investors with US$46 trillion in assets under management are urging governments to rapidly implement five priority policy actions that will allow them to invest the trillions needed to respond to the climate crisis.
Signatories to the 2021 Global Investor Statement to Governments on the Climate Crisis
are issuing the strongest-ever unified call from investors for
governments to raise their climate ambition and implement meaningful
policies — including mandatory climate risk disclosure, strengthened
national commitments, ending fossil fuel subsidies, and phasing out
thermal coal — or risk missing out on the enormous investment
opportunities in tackling the climate crisis.
“Full implementation of the Paris Agreement will create significant
investment opportunities in clean technologies, green infrastructure and
other assets, products and services needed in this new economy,” the
statement reads.
Following a month that brought more catastrophic weather events
around the world, and the alarming predictions of the Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change that without immediate, rapid, and large-scale
emissions reductions, limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius
will be beyond reach. The risks this brings to the portfolios of asset
managers and owners are enormous.
Investor signatories to the statement are calling on all governments
to undertake five priority actions before the 26th United Nations
Climate Conference in Glasgow in November (COP26):
- Strengthen their NDCs for 2030 before COP26, to
align with limiting warming to 1.5-degrees Celsius and ensuring a
planned transition to net-zero emissions by 2050 or sooner.
- Commit to a domestic mid-century, net-zero emissions target and outline a pathway with ambitious interim targets including clear decarbonization roadmaps for each carbon-intensive sector.
- Implement domestic policies to deliver these targets,
incentivize private investments in zero-emissions solutions, and ensure
ambitious pre-2030 action through robust carbon pricing, the removal of
fossil fuel subsidies by set deadlines, the phase-out of thermal
coal-based electricity generation by set deadlines in line with credible
1.5-degrees Celsius temperature pathways, the avoidance of new
carbon-intensive infrastructure(e.g. no new coal power plants) and the
development of just transition plans for affected workers and
communities.
- Ensure COVID-19 economic recovery plans support the transition
to net-zero emissions and enhance resilience. This includes
facilitating investment in zero-emission energy and transport
infrastructure, avoiding public investment in new carbon-intensive
infrastructure and requiring carbon-intensive companies that receive
government support to enact climate change transition plans consistent
with the Paris Agreement.
- Commit to implementing mandatory climate risk disclosure requirements
aligned with the Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures
(TCFD) recommendations, ensuring comprehensive disclosures that are
consistent, comparable, and decision-useful.
The second wave of signatories to the statement are being announced
during the United Nations General Assembly, which will be followed by
Climate Week 2021 in New York, when countries will be in the spotlight
to demonstrate their climate ambition. The initial signatories to the
statement, which included 457 investors with $41 trillion assets under
management, were announced in June 2021, before the G7 Summit.
Signatories to date
include some of the world’s largest institutional investors and asset
managers and asset owners. The combined assets under management of the
587 signatories is more than US$46 trillion, representing an estimated
40 percent of all global assets under management. This is the largest
collective assets under management to sign on to a global investor
statement to governments on climate change since the first statement in
2009.
The statement remains open for additional investors to sign before COP26 in November 2021.
Many nations are already improving their climate policies, including
2030 emissions reduction targets, through updated NDCs ahead of COP26.
However, significant climate and finance policy gaps remain in almost
all nations, and the world is currently not on a trajectory to limit
global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius, underscoring the need for further
ambition....
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