Investment Strategies
BlackRock Puts Weight Behind Climate Change Agenda

The world's largest asset management firm is joining an international group pledged to use financial firepower to make businesses and other organizations tackle man-made climate change. BlackRock has sometimes been accused in the past of not doing enough in this space.
BlackRock has joined the world’s largest group of investors
putting pressure on companies to tackle climate change, the
US-listed firm that holds $6.963 trillion of assets (as at Sept.
30 2019) has confirmed to this news service.
The Wall Street Journal reported January 9 that the
firm, which is the largest asset management house in the world,
has joined Climate Action 100+, and acted after it was criticized
for not doing enough to push for change. Given its size,
BlackRock is larger than any sovereign wealth fund run by a state
government.
“BlackRock has become a signatory to Climate Action 100+. This is
a natural progression of the work our Investment Stewardship team
has done to date. We believe evidence of the impact of climate
risk on investment portfolios is building rapidly and we are
accelerating our engagement with companies on this critical
issue,” a spokesperson told Family Wealth Report.
The devastating forest fires in Australia, stories of plastic
waste in oceans, melting glaciers and last September’s Hurricane
Dorian that smashed the Bahamas have helped fuel further
concern over whether the human race is affecting the climate
in damaging ways. Environmental, social and governance
(ESG)-themed investing has gone from being a fringe issue to
an
ever-present topic of wealth management
conversation.
Launched in 2017, Climate Action 100+ is a group of more than 370
institutional investors, including the money management arms of
HSBC and UBS, which now represents around $41 trillion in assets
thanks to BlackRock’s membership, up from $35 trillion.
The WSJ noted that Climate Action+ has successfully
pressured oil giants Royal Dutch Shell and BP PLC to set targets
to reduce emissions and disclose more data.
“BlackRock is responding to the demands of its asset owner
clients and other groups globally that they take meaningful
action to address climate change,” Fiona Reynolds, member of the
Climate Action 100+ Steering Committee and chief executive of the
Principles for Responsible Investment, was quoted as saying.
In 2017, BlackRock and Vanguard, the two biggest US-based
fund managers, voted to require Exxon Mobil to produce a report
on climate change (CNBC, October 16, 2019). That move
was seen as a watershed moment, but climate change activists have
been disappointed by an alleged lack of action since.