More funds spurn nuclear arms, financing still strong:
report
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[March 07, 2018]
GENEVA
(Reuters) - The number of pension funds and asset managers that refuse
to invest in nuclear armament makers appears to be growing, although
financing is still abundant, an annual survey by anti-nuclear
campaigners said on Wednesday.
The report, entitled "Don't bank on the bomb", found that 22 financial
institutions comprehensively prevented any involvement in nuclear weapon
producing companies in 2017, up from 18 in 2016 and 13 in 2015.
The new names included Norway's Government Pension Fund, Australia's
Future Super, U.S.-based fund manager Green Century and Denmark's MP
Pension, which manages pensions for Danish academics.
There were a further 41 institutions that excluded nuclear weapon
producers from their investments, but whose policy was not
all-inclusive, up from 36 in 2016 and 40 in 2015.
The report was published by Dutch Christian campaign group PAX and the
Geneva-based International Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons (ICAN),
which won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2017.
"By divesting from nuclear weapon producers, we can make it harder for
those that profit from weapons of mass destruction and encourage them to
cut the production of nuclear weapons from their business strategies,"
ICAN's executive director Beatrice Fihn wrote in the introduction to the
report.
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The report found that 329 banks, insurance companies, pension funds and asset
managers from 24 countries invested significantly in the top 20 firms involved
in nuclear weapons, such as Boeing, Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman and
General Dynamics.
Of the $525 billion invested, $81 billion more than a year previously, more than
half came from the top 10 investors, all U.S.-based, led by Blackrock, Capital
Group and Vanguard, the report said.
The report examined firms involved in producing key components for the nuclear
arsenals of France, India, Britain and the United States.
The maintenance and modernization of nuclear forces in other nuclear-armed
countries, listed as China, North Korea, Israel, Pakistan and Russia, was done
mainly or exclusively by the government, it said.
(Reporting by Tom Miles, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
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