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Multi-trillion-dollar investors call for climate action
Governments urged to undertake five priority policies to accelerate investment before UN summit
The Asset   14 Sep 2021

In the run-up to the most consequential United Nations climate change conference in years, and on the heels of another urgent warning from the world’s leading scientists, a record number of 587 investors with US$46 trillion in assets under management ( AUM ) are urging governments to rapidly implement five priority policy actions that will allow them to invest the trillions needed to respond to the climate crisis.

Signatories to the 2021 Global Investor Statement to Governments on the Climate Crisis are issuing the strongest-ever unified call from investors for governments to raise their climate ambition and implement meaningful policies – including mandatory climate risk disclosure, strengthened national commitments, ending fossil fuel subsidies and phasing out thermal coal – or risk missing out on the enormous investment opportunities in tackling the climate crisis.  

“Full implementation of the Paris agreement will create significant investment opportunities in clean technologies, green infrastructure and other assets, products and services needed in this new economy,” the statement reads. 

Following a month that brought more catastrophic weather events around the world, and the alarming predictions of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change that without immediate, rapid and large-scale emissions reductions, limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius will be beyond reach. The risks this brings to the portfolios of asset managers and owners are enormous. 

Investor signatories to the statement are calling on all governments to undertake five priority actions before the 26th United Nations Climate Conference in Glasgow in November ( COP26 ):

The second wave of signatories to the statement are being announced during the United Nations General Assembly, which will be followed by Climate Week 2021 in New York, when countries will be in the spotlight to demonstrate their climate ambition. The initial signatories to the statement, which included 457 investors with US$41 trillion AUM, were announced in June 2021, before the G7 Summit. 

Signatories to date include some of the world’s largest institutional investors and asset managers and asset owners. The combined AUM of the 587 signatories is more than US$46 trillion, representing an estimated 40% of all global AUM. This is the largest collective assets under management to sign on to a global investor statement to governments on climate change since the first statement in 2009.

The statement remains open for additional investors to sign before COP26 in November 2021.