ABP plans to dispose of fossil fuel shares
Pension fund ABP no longer wants to invest in oil, gas and coal. In the coming year and a half the pension fund is going to sell all its shares in the fossil fuel industry.

Image by: Bas van der Schot
ABP announced this policy change on Tuesday. Action groups have been trying for years to influence the pension fund for the public and education sector, and the universities themselves got involved too.
Shares in fossil fuels are good for roughly three percent of ABP’s total securities portfolio, representing a value of 15 billion euros. According to ABP, the sale will not have an adverse effect on pensions.
For many decades climate scientists and activists have warned of global warming caused by the combustion of fossil fuels. However, only the most recent climate assessment reports are said to have given the decisive impulse for the change of course.
Read more
-
Academics want ABP to stop investing in fossil industry
Gepubliceerd op:-
Sustainability
-
Discussion
Previously, the pension fund hoped to remain in discussion with oil and gas companies as a shareholder to persuade them to adopt a greener course, but that policy has been abandoned. “We do not believe that our influence as a shareholder is sufficient to get these companies to switch from fossil fuels to renewable energy”, is the explanation. “We are also complying with the request by a number of groups of pension fund participants and employers to withdraw from the fossil fuel industry.”
The pension fund is, however, continuing to invest in major consumers of fossil energy and aims to encourage them to switch more quickly from fossil fuels to renewable sources, a list of questions and answers reveals. “In that respect we are looking mainly at companies in the automotive, aviation and power generation industries.”
Read more
-
Universities help ABP with sustainable investing
Gepubliceerd op:-
Sustainability
-
ABP also has shares in “fossil fuel production and storage facilities”, according to an interview with Board Chair Corien Wortmann. “We want to divest those as well, but that will take more time.”
ABP is Europe’s largest pension fund and one of the largest anywhere in the world. It is compulsory for employees in the public and education sectors in the Netherlands to join the fund. One in six Dutch people receives a pension from ABP or will do so in the future, says the fund.
Rendement
The previous target was a fully climate-neutral investment portfolio by 2050. The explanation at the time was that ABP did not want to take any big financial risks. “If we impose too many restrictions on our investors, it could be to the detriment of the yield.”
Climate action group Fossielvrij (Fossil free) is among those that are happy with the news. “We owe this mega-victory to years of campaigning by teachers, civil servants, water board officials, scientists, police officers and young people”, the group tweeted.
De redactie
Latest news
-
University calls on people to remind smokers, security guards don’t send smokers off campus
Gepubliceerd op:-
Campus
-
-
What do the new European housing plans mean for students?
Gepubliceerd op:-
Campus
-
-
Makeover for Erasmus Magazine: new and more accessible website is live
Gepubliceerd op:-
Campus
-
Comments
Comments are closed.
Read more in staff
-
Ellen van Schoten brings cityscapes, half-timbered houses and cathedrals to life
Gepubliceerd op:-
Staff
-
-
How Krish Raghav turned his frustrations with the housing market into a disorienting game
Gepubliceerd op:-
Staff
-