Climate activists: higher education should only do business with sustainable banks
Academics and students call on all Dutch research universities and universities of applied sciences to only do business with sustainable banks. They say that the banks and insurers currently used by the higher education sector do not act in accordance with the Paris climate agreements.

Image by: Markus Spiske/Unsplash
The activist group Scientists for Future, Students for Tomorrow, the Young Academy and the local Young Academies jointly urge their research universities and universities of applied sciences to switch to more climate-aware financial service providers. They make this appeal in a letter they sent to all institutions of higher education this Tuesday.
Paris Agreement
According to the signatories to the letter, who emphasise the scientific consensus about the need to take action on climate change, the institutions should take the lead on sustainability. “If global heating is limited to 1.5°C, the climate risks for human and natural ecosystems will be substantially less”, they write. In 2015, countries adopted the Paris Agreement to slow the rate of global heating. At the time, all Dutch research universities and universities of applied sciences confirmed their commitment to the Paris Agreement and described what they would do to help achieve its targets.
But according to the activists, seven years after the adoption of the Paris Agreement, all banks and insurers used by Dutch knowledge institutions ‘are still major lenders to the fossil fuel sector, a sector whose plans are contrary to the Paris target’.
Read more
-
Erasmus Trust Fund does invest in fossil industries
Gepubliceerd op:-
Sustainability
-
Fossil fuels
The letter cites the example of ING, which invested 10.7 million dollars in the fossil fuel sector in 2021. Other Dutch banks invested smaller but still substantial amounts in the sector. Only Triodos Bank, Volksbank and Bunq invest mainly in sustainable energy. The signatories write that Dutch insurers also invest in fossil fuel companies, and they claim that none of the nine biggest insurers in the Netherlands exclude investments in the fossil fuel sector.
By contrast, Dutch pension fund ABP in 2021 already took the decision to cease all investments in the fossil fuel sector in response to persistent criticism from research universities and universities of applied sciences.
Read more
-
Erasmus Trust Fund does invest in fossil industries
Gepubliceerd op:-
Sustainability
-
Occupations
This Monday, students occupied a building of the University of Amsterdam to protest against the university’s alleged ties with oil company Shell. At the end of last year, similar occupations took place at Eindhoven University of Technology and Erasmus University Rotterdam.
This Wednesday, the Minister of Education, Culture and Science and the Minister of Economic Affairs were asked questions about this in parliament by GroenLinks. This party asked, among other things, for stricter rules to be introduced for financial support for research offered by companies from the fossil fuel sector.
Read more
-
Police clears UvA building within a day
Gepubliceerd op:-
Campus
-
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 sustainability
-
Campus food companies aim for 50 per cent plant-based by 2030
Gepubliceerd op:-
Sustainability
-
-
Students cut, cook and compost correctly during Sustainability Days
Gepubliceerd op:-
Sustainability
-
-
Committee on fossil industry: Collaboration must meet ‘moral minimum’ or stop
Gepubliceerd op:-
Sustainability
-