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Asset Managers Team Up to Pressure Governments on Climate Change

Institutional investors increasingly concerned about climate change have teamed up to ask governments to set tougher policies.

Asset Managers Team Up to Pressure Governments on Climate Change
A commuter carries a soft briefcase while walking through the central business district in Sydney, Australia. (Photographer: Brendon Thorne/Bloomberg)  

(Bloomberg) -- Institutional investors increasingly concerned about climate change have teamed up to ask governments to set tougher policies.

A group of 415 investors overseeing $32 trillion in assets has signed a letter asking governments to phase out thermal coal, set a price on carbon emissions and end fossil-fuel subsidies. The signatories, including Allianz SE, HSBC Global Asset Management and Schroders Plc, are presenting it in conjunction with the COP24 global-climate conference in Poland.

The fund managers said climate change could cause economic damage that threatens their holdings, and that government policy was key to reducing risk. Schroders estimated that if no action is taken and the world warms by 4 degrees Celsius (7.2 degrees Fahrenheit), that could cause $23 trillion in global economic losses over the next 80 years.

“This is permanent economic damage three or four times the scale of the impacts of the 2008 Global Financial Crisis, while continuing to escalate,” the group said in a statement Monday. “Much more needs to be done by governments to accelerate the low-carbon transition.”

While letters don’t usually lead to immediate change, the combined efforts of asset managers have already stirred the private sector. Last week, Royal Dutch Shell Plc said it would set new public goals around cutting carbon emissions after months of pressure from some of the same investors who signed the new letter.

The investor group also wrote a briefing paper for policy makers that says governments need to update and strengthen their commitments to the Paris climate accord. Among the recommendations are that nations put a price on carbon -- in effect a tax on greenhouse gas emissions -- between $38 and $100 a ton. Currently, three-quarters of emissions are covered by carbon prices of less than $10 a ton, the paper said.

The COP24 conference is in its second week and will end on Dec. 14.

To contact the reporter on this story: Kelly Gilblom in London at kgilblom@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: James Herron at jherron9@bloomberg.net, Michael Winfrey, Amy Teibel

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