Norway's $1.32 trillion wealth fund eyes low-carbon society in energy investments

Norway's sovereign wealth fund proposed in November 2018 that it should remove oil and gas stocks from its equity benchmark index. PHOTO: REUTERS

OSLO (REUTERS) - Norway's US$1 trillion (S$1.32 trillion) sovereign wealth fund, the world's largest, will generally shun investments in energy sources such as coal that are unlikely to be needed in a future low-carbon society, it said on Friday (Feb 23).

In 2016, the Norwegian parliament mandated the fund, which invests Norway's revenues from oil and gas production in stocks, bonds and real estate abroad, to sell out of firms that derive more than 30 per cent of their activities or revenues from coal.

"This divestment from coal means that the fund does not generally invest in an energy source that will probably not survive the transition to a low-carbon society," the fund said in a letter to the Norwegian Ministry of Finance dated Feb 21.

The letter, signed by fund CEO Yngve Slyngstad and Chief Corporate Governance Officer Carine Smith Ihenacho, was published on the fund's website on Friday.

"The fund's exposure to climate risk therefore differs from that of a general, market-weighted portfolio," it added.

The fund proposed in November that it should remove oil and gas stocks from its equity benchmark index, which would mean cutting investments in those companies over time. At the time, the news sent the value of oil and gas firm worldwide lower.

The proposal is under review at the finance ministry and will be voted on by the Norwegian parliament at a later stage.

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