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Sunday, 24 May 2015
Leading health charities should divest from fossil fuels, say climate scientists
Gates Foundation and Wellcome Trust risk losing moral authority, say
researchers including ‘hockey stick’ graph originator Michael Mann
NEW YORK, NY - MAY 18: Honoree Melinda Gates speaks onstage as Helen
Keller International celebrates their centennial anniversary with the
2015 Spirit Of Helen Keller Gala on May 18, 2015 at The New York Public
Library in New York City. (Photo by Bryan Bedder/Getty Images for Helen
Keller International)topicstopixbestoftoppicstoppix
Photograph: Bryan Bedder/Getty Images for Helen Keller In
Senior scientific figures, including influential climate researcher
Michael Mann, have called on the world’s two leading health charities to
review their fossil fuel investments in light of a series of Guardian
investigations published this week.
The Big Carbon investigations uncovered examples of industry misinformation campaigns, legal transgressions and alleged human rights abuses.
Mann, along with other senior scientists and commentators, said the immense moral authority of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and the Wellcome Trust was in danger of being undermined by their continued investments in companies with such questionable corporate practices.
Protesters in Seattle where the Polar Pioneer oil drilling rig and other
equipment to be used by Royal Dutch Shell for Arctic oil drilling is
currently stationed. Photograph: Ted S. Warren/AP
The series of investigations revealed:
According to internal documents, oil company Royal Dutch Shell assumes a rise in global temperatures of 4C,
twice the 2C limit widely considered the threshold for dangerous
climate change – in contrast to public pronouncements from Shell’s chief
executive that the company is committed to tackling climate change.
Oil giant BP pursued and signed a partnership
with Russian state oil and gas giant Rosneft, which is currently
subject to sanctions for its actions in Ukraine and the Crimea. Rosneft
has also been characterised as one of the most expansionist fossil fuel
extractors in the world, and is aggressively pursuing Arctic oil
extraction.
BP is also accused of serious human right breaches
in Colombia. A trade union leader, Gilberto Torres, is bringing a high
court action in London against the company over its alleged complicity
in his kidnap and torture for organising a strike to try and close a
major oil pipeline there. He was held for 42 days in 2002. BP denies the
claims and said it will “vigorously” defend the case.
US coal giant Peabody Energy was accused by international health experts of exploiting the Ebola health crisis in order to justify the continued extraction of coal.
A Guardian analysis
of the $43bn (£27.5bn) Gates Foundation’s most recent tax filing in
2013 found that it held $1.4bn of investments in the world’s biggest
fossil fuel companies, including $372m in BP, $5.5m in Shell and $1.7m
in Peabody Energy. Wellcome’s $28bn endowment holds $229m in Shell,
$191m in BP and $185 in Schlumberger. It does not hold any direct
investment in Peabody Energy.
The investigations are part of the Guardian’s Keep it in the Ground campaign
which is calling on both charities to divest from fossil fuels. Both
have made a huge contribution to human wellbeing through their work on
health research and development.
Professor
Michael Mann, who produced the hugely influential “hockey-stick graph”
report on global temperature warming that was published by the UN’s
Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) report in 2001, said he
was disappointed that the asset trust that holds the Gates Foundation
endowment had declined to review its investments in light of the
stories. “Gates has done so much good work in other areas, but on
climate he disappoints,” he said.
“I do indeed support the Keep it in the Ground campaign. Preserving
the environment for future generations is a moral imperative, and if we
are to achieve that goal, we must rapidly ramp down our burning of
fossil fuels. Continuing to finance fossil fuel corporations, including
through stock ownership, is inconsistent with that goal.”
Martin McKee, professor of European public health at the London
School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, said the transgressions
revealed by the Guardian were odious, yet they paled against the
existing moral imperative to stop the fossil fuel industry further
destabilising the climate.
“These are clearly horrendous activities and do add to the argument
for divestment from fossil fuels. But this is not new and not restricted
to the fossil fuel industry. Human rights violations don’t change the
fundamental arguments for divestment. Firstly, that investment by
scientific organisations fails to send out a consistent message on
action on climate change and secondly, it’s actually a bad investment,”
he said.
Professor Anne Glover, former chief scientific adviser to the
European commission, said maintaining a safe climate was becoming an
increasingly distant goal.
“I cannot see how we can achieve this by business as usual so we must
persuade fossil fuel companies to adjust their future business plans.
Discussion doesn’t seem to be having much impact, with Shell announcing
plans to drill for oil in the Arctic. Major investors have an
opportunity to demonstrate global leadership and exert the pressure that
fossil fuel companies may find it easier to respond to,” she said.
Tom Burke, an environmental policy adviser for Rio Tinto (one of the
companies from which the Guardian is arguing the charities should
divest), said the Guardian’s investigative series “certainly does
increase the pressure”.
“The Wellcome and the Gates Foundations are very big players,” he
said. “They also claim a moral authority by acting for the public good.
And you are raising questions about whether their ability to act for the
public good with one hand is being undermined by what they are doing
with the other hand.”
Professor Danny Harvey, convening lead author for the IPCC, said: “To
invest in fossil fuels is to promote action that will eventually lead
to catastrophic global warming, and will be profitable in the long run
only if the world utterly fails to respond to the greatest threat that
exists to the future wellbeing of the human race.”
Dr Kevin Trenberth, who was a lead author on the 2001 and 2007 IPCC
reports which won a Nobel Prize, said: “Climate change is a serious
problem in the longer term, and the best way to address it is to limit
fossil fuel use: keep the fossil fuels in the ground. It is important
for foundations to take a responsible view of this problem.”
Activists occupy the Wellcome Trust. Photograph: 350.org
A spokesman from Bill Gates’s personal office did not comment on the
Guardian investigations but added: “Bill is privately investing
considerable time and resources in this effort. We respect the passion
of advocates for action on climate change, and recognise that there are
many views on how best to address it.”
The Wellcome Trust also declined to comment on the corporate
practices of the companies it has a stake in. A spokeswoman said: “When
managing the investment portfolio that funds our mission, we consider
companies’ social and environmental responsibilities carefully and
engage to encourage them to take these seriously. We do not comment on
individual companies.”
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