COP21: Allianz and ABP join climate investment group

Madeleine Cuff
clock

Two of the world's biggest institutional investors join the Portfolio Decarbonisation Coalition

Institutional investment giants Allianz and ABP have joined a group of investors committed to tackling climate change by decarbonising their assets and integrating carbon information into portfolio designs.

The news was announced yesterday at a fringe event during the UN climate change conference in Paris. The group, dubbed the Portfolio Decarbonisation Coalition (PDC), now consists of 25 investors with $600bn under management - far more than the Coalition's original target of $100bn.

PDC members have all committed to withdraw capital from carbon-intensive companies, projects and technologies in each sector, reinvesting the money into carbon-efficient assets. They have also committed to mapping the carbon footprint of their assets and incorporating this information into their portfolio structures.

Oliver Bäte, chief executive of Allianz, said climate change requires collective action and continued commitment. "Our knowledge of risk, our financial resilience and long-term investment horizons enable us to offer effective support for climate protection while making the most out of long-term opportunities for our clients," he said in a statement. "Delaying action will be costly and will damage growth prospects."

The news follows Allianz's pledge late last month to move €4bn from coal assets into wind power as part of its ambition to divest completely from the dirtiest fossil fuels.

Corien Wortmann-Kool, chair ABP's board of trustees, said providing investment managers with carbon budgets alongside risk and return budgets will allow the investor to cut its carbon footprint while delivering good returns for its clients.

The success of the PDC project is one of a growing number of signals that climate change is becoming critical to shareholder interests. Last week, Mark Carney, chair of the Bank of England and the global Financial Stability Board, announced the creation of a new task force on climate-related financial disclosures in a move designed to help investors better assess the climate risk faced by listed companies.

This article is part of BusinessGreen's Road to Paris hub, hosted in association with PwC.

More on Carbon Accounting

Study: UK could be 'global capital' for carbon credit industry

Study: UK could be 'global capital' for carbon credit industry

New research by BeZero Carbon suggests UK carbon markets could generate £1bn of tax revenue for the exchequer by 2035

clock 13 May 2025 • 3 min read
'Sustainability remains a priority': Bosch beefs-up 2030 supply chain emissions target

'Sustainability remains a priority': Bosch beefs-up 2030 supply chain emissions target

Tech and engineering giant doubles down on its Scope 3 emissions reduction ambitions for 2030, while acknowledging wider economic and geopolitical challenges

Michael Holder
clock 08 May 2025 • 3 min read
'Businesses can't do this on their own': Government urged to make emissions reporting mandatory for food sector

'Businesses can't do this on their own': Government urged to make emissions reporting mandatory for food sector

New research reveals how supermarkets are falling short of voluntary climate commitments

clock 08 May 2025 • 3 min read