Stop insuring carbon projects 'immediately', activists tell bosses
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[March 29, 2023]
By Tom Sims and Simon Jessop
FRANKFURT/LONDON (Reuters) -A group of climate activists has called on
30 insurance company bosses to "immediately" stop underwriting new
fossil fuel projects in the wake of a stark climate warning from U.N.
scientists, a letter seen by Reuters showed.
Insure our Future, a global consortium of activists, said it sent the
letter dated March 21 to companies including Munich Re, Zurich Insurance
and AXA.
The six-page letter, signed by 23 climate groups, including
non-governmental organisations (NGOs), said the insurance industry had
failed to do enough to meet the world's climate goal of limiting global
warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius.
Other demands included stopping insurance for new fossil fuel customers
not aligned with the goal, and adopting binding targets to reduce
insured emissions by July 2023.
"Insurers, as society's risk managers, have a special responsibility to
act and the power to drive change: without insurance most new fossil
fuel projects cannot go ahead and existing ones cannot continue to
operate," it read.
The letter follows last week's warning from U.N. Secretary General
Antonio Guterres that the "climate time bomb is ticking" and urged rich
countries to cut emissions sooner after a new assessment from scientists
said there was little time to lose in tackling climate change.
While some insurers have tightened underwriting and investment policies
to exclude some polluting industries from their business, the most
stringent policies have focused primarily on coal rather than oil and
gas.
"Numerous loopholes in policies and standards allow insurers to continue
underwriting the expansion of fossil fuel production," the letter said.
Peter Bosshard, one of the letter's authors with The Sunrise Project,
said in an interview that climate-related resolutions were already on
the agenda at U.S. insurers, and more could follow.
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The coal is unloaded from a vessel in
Port Gdanski Eksploatacja, Gdansk, Poland, December 5, 2022.
REUTERS/Kacper Pempel
U.S. insurers Chubb, Hartford and Travelers are among companies
facing climate-focused shareholder resolutions at upcoming annual
shareholder meetings.
"We are considering doing the same with Japanese insurers for next
year. And also with the European insurers if they don't get more
serious," Bosshard said.
Neither Munich Re nor Zurich Insurance responded specifically to
questions about the letter but both said they were in regular
contact with NGOs.
Munich Re said it was "in a constant process" in its path to
net-zero carbon emissions. Zurich said it was "not a major insurance
provider" to the fossil fuel industry and had reduced its market
share, a trend it expected would continue.
AXA said its commitment to financing the energy transition was
"ambitious", but it did not plan to stop investing in oil and gas
"which are now essential for households and businesses, and
therefore for our economies".
Some industry executives have argued that if they sever ties too
quickly with polluting industries unemployment would rise, and
activists were too focused on stopping activities rather than on
transformation.
(Reporting by Tom Sims and Simon Jessop; Editing by Jane Merriman
and David Holmes)
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