Climate pledge signed by six sovereign wealth funds in Paris
Sign charter to push firms to integrate the risk of climate change into their business plans
PARIS:
Six sovereign wealth funds including four Gulf states have pledged to boost efforts to fight climate change at a Paris meeting called by Emmanuel Macron, the French presidential office announced on Friday.
The state funds of Kuwait, Norway, New Zealand, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates - global finance heavyweights mainly fueled by domestic oil and gas revenue - promised to encourage the companies they invest in to tackle the rising threat of a warming planet.
Global warming will make veggies harder to find: study
The heads of the funds, which together are worth more than $3 trillion, signed a charter to be unveiled on Friday evening at the Elysee palace.
In it they agree to push firms to integrate the risk of climate change into their business plans and publish information on strategies to reduce carbon use.
"The transition to a low-carbon economy creates new investment opportunities," the six funds said in the charter, adding that long-term investments could help finance the shift to greener energy sources.
They expressed hope that the agreement would help "tilt the trajectory of the world economy towards sustainable growth and avoid catastrophic risks for the planet".
Study reveals worst-case global warming scenarios not credible
The funds first agreed to work together on environmental issues at the "One Planet Summit" in France in December, organised by Macron after the United States pulled out of the Paris climate accord.
US President Donald Trump faced condemnation when he announced in June last year that the United States was abandoning the climate pact, painting the accord as a "bad deal" for the US economy.
Six sovereign wealth funds including four Gulf states have pledged to boost efforts to fight climate change at a Paris meeting called by Emmanuel Macron, the French presidential office announced on Friday.
The state funds of Kuwait, Norway, New Zealand, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab Emirates - global finance heavyweights mainly fueled by domestic oil and gas revenue - promised to encourage the companies they invest in to tackle the rising threat of a warming planet.
Global warming will make veggies harder to find: study
The heads of the funds, which together are worth more than $3 trillion, signed a charter to be unveiled on Friday evening at the Elysee palace.
In it they agree to push firms to integrate the risk of climate change into their business plans and publish information on strategies to reduce carbon use.
"The transition to a low-carbon economy creates new investment opportunities," the six funds said in the charter, adding that long-term investments could help finance the shift to greener energy sources.
They expressed hope that the agreement would help "tilt the trajectory of the world economy towards sustainable growth and avoid catastrophic risks for the planet".
Study reveals worst-case global warming scenarios not credible
The funds first agreed to work together on environmental issues at the "One Planet Summit" in France in December, organised by Macron after the United States pulled out of the Paris climate accord.
US President Donald Trump faced condemnation when he announced in June last year that the United States was abandoning the climate pact, painting the accord as a "bad deal" for the US economy.