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05-Feb-2018<br />

Investors Urge Funding for Green Finance Education<br />

Institutional Investor (Online)<br />

Click to open<br />

Investors are calling for the U.K. government to put education at the top of its new green<br />

finance agenda, as members of parliament prepare to hear evidence from the industry on<br />

Tuesday.<br />

Pension trustees and asset managers will appear before the Environmental Audit<br />

Committee this week as part an inquiry to inform the priorities of the government's Green<br />

Finance Taskforce. The task force was formed to support the U.K.’s Clean Growth Strategy<br />

, an initiative to cut carbon dependency and establish the U.K. as a world leader in green<br />

finance.<br />

Russell Picot, trustee chair of HSBC Bank’s U.K. pension fund, Will Fox-Robinson, director<br />

of U.K. institutional business at Natixis Investment Managers, and Diandra Soobiah, head of<br />

responsible investment at the National Employment Savings Trust, are among those giving<br />

evidence.<br />

Other asset managers that have engaging with policymakers include Aviva Investors,<br />

Hermes and Schroders.<br />

[ II Deep Dive: U.K. Government Pensions Told to ‘Go Green’ ]<br />

Steve Waygood, Aviva Investors’ chief responsible investment officer, said his firm is urging<br />

the task force to focus on financial literacy and global leadership, among other themes.<br />

According to Waygood, there is currently around £2 billion ($2.8 billion) in unclaimed assets<br />

– forgotten pools that insurers and asset managers hold onto when they cannot trace the<br />

owners. Aviva believes this cash should be used to improve financial literacy in the U.K.,<br />

which would, in turn, stimulate demand for sustainable finance products.<br />

“The U.K.’s existing green finance infrastructure means that we are incredibly well-placed to<br />

lead on the international stage,” he said. “What could be more relevant than using the<br />

assets that sit dormant within the financial system to shine a light on its inner workings and<br />

encourage and empower public engagement to shape a more sustainable future?”<br />

Meanwhile, Morphic Asset Management co-CIO Chad Slater believes the government’s<br />

focus should be on encouraging investment in innovation funds partnering with colleges and<br />

universities. Slater, a portfolio manager of the Trium Morphic ESG Long-Short Fund, said<br />

the U.K. government’s early-stage investment fund has shown an appetite for backing<br />

research innovation.<br />

“We’d advocate that they should allocate directly to universities in research grants,” he said.<br />

“The U.K. has some of the best universities in the world – use them. True innovation,<br />

perversely, happens at the public level, not the private level.”<br />

Last week, a separate report from the European Commission’s High Level Expert Group on<br />

Sustainable Finance suggested that the cost of meeting the trading bloc’s green targets,<br />

including a 40 percent cut in greenhouse gas emissions, would cost around €180 billion<br />

($224.4 billion) of addition investment each year. The financial sector, the group concluded,<br />

“has a key role to play.”

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