Church of England Fund Drops Remaining Fossil Fuel Investments

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One of the Church of Englandโ€™s three investing bodies has quietly sold its last remaining shares in fossil fuels, worth an estimated ยฃ8.4 million, DeSmog UK hasย learned.

CCLA, a leading fund manager which invests on behalf ofย charities includingย Anglican dioceses, said it had dropped its investmentsย in oil giants Shell and Total earlier in the year for financial reasons.ย 

The move puts dioceses at odds with the national church, which stillย remains invested in oil and gas companies through its two other National Investing Bodies,ย the Church Commissioners and the Church of England Pensionsย Board.

An estimated 39 out of 42 dioceses invest in one or more of CCLAโ€™s six Church of England funds, with the recent divestment leaving up to 20ย dioceses without any fossil fuelย investments.

A spokesperson for the Diocese of Coventry explained the funds no longer invested in fossil fuel companies โ€œon the basis of the financial risks posed by the short to medium term outlook for the oil and gas markets.โ€ CCLA confirmed that they shared this view, telling DeSmog the decision was made for investment, rather than ethical,ย reasons.

CCLA said it was unlikely to re-invest in Shell and Total through its CBF Church of England funds, but that the companies were still eligible under the Church of Englandโ€™s ethical investmentย guidelines.

The Churchโ€™s guidelines currently rule out investments in thermal coal and tar sands companies, but not oil and gas.ย In 2018 its governing body, the General Synod, voted to divest by 2023ย from all oil and gas companies not on trackย to meet the Paris Agreement targets of keeping average global temperature increases to โ€œwell belowโ€ 2ยฐC, beginning the divestment process thisย year.

CCLA said it defined fossil fuel companies as those which derive more than 10 percent of their revenue from the extraction, production and/or refining of oil andย gas.


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Shares in Shell and Total were held through the ยฃ1.5 billion CBF Church of England Investment Fund, the largest of the six funds, and a smaller UK Equity Fund. The other four funds were already โ€œfossilย freeโ€.

CCLAโ€™s Church of England funds also previously invested in Chevron, but a spokesperson for the asset manager told DeSmog it had sold these holdings over concerns about the companyโ€™s approach to climate change, as well as a proposed acquisition of US oil company Anadarko, which was involved in the Deepwater Horizon disaster and is now owned by Occidentalย Petroleum.

CCLAโ€™s Church of England funds are the investment fund of choice for most of the 42 Church of England diocesesย and have a combined value of ยฃ2.6 billion. The dioceses had an estimated ยฃ1.8ย million invested in Shell and Total through these funds by the time the shares wereย sold.ย 

James Buchanan, Bright Now Campaign Manager for Christian climate change charity Operation Noah welcomed the move, tellingย DeSmog: โ€œFossil fuel investments are not only unethical, they are also a growing financial risk that investors are increasingly unwilling toย accept.โ€

โ€œWe urge CCLA to make this decision permanent by ruling out future investments in fossil fuel companies. Now is the time for Churches to support the green recovery by divesting from fossil fuels and investing in the clean technologies of the future,โ€ heย said.

A Church of England spokesperson reiterated that it would begin to divest from fossil fuel companies that are โ€œnot taking seriously their responsibilities to assist with the transition to a low carbon economyโ€ thisย year.

โ€œWe will divest by 2023 from fossil fuel companies that under the Transition Pathway Initiative assessments suggest the company is not prepared to align with the goals of the Paris Agreement,โ€ theyย added.ย 

CCLA did not respond to a request for further details about itsย decision.

Update 09/07/2020: this article originally stated that dioceses’ investments in Shell and Total had an estimated value of ยฃ1.9 million when these shares were sold and up to 23 dioceses estimated to be without fossil fuel investments.ย This has been corrected to ยฃ1.8million andย 20.ย 

Photo credit: Arpingstone/Good Free Photos/CC0

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