14
colleges demand university shouldn't invest in companies that are fuelling the
climate crisis
Students and dons at 14 Oxford
colleges have urged
the university to purge its £3.3bn endowment fund of all investments in fossil
fuel companies. The move follows 64 Oxford professors and other senior academics
signing an open letter and a petition by over 800 students, staff and alumni.
The University of Oxford is believed to have the largest
investments in fossil fuel companies of any UK university. It is now consulting
business, academics and others on whether it should follow some US universities
which have committed to sell off their fossil fuel investments. The results of
the Oxford consultation will be considered by the university's socially
responsible investment review committee in July and a formal recommendation
made to the university council later this year.
In their open
letter, academics argue that Oxford has a "responsibility to
show leadership in tackling one of the greatest challenges we as a society
currently face." Signatories to the letter include Lord Robert May, former
chief scientific adviser to the UK government, Lesley Gray, professor of
atmospheric physics, and Gordon Clark, current director of Oxford University's
Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment.
"We at Oxford
like to claim the mantle of intellectual leadership," said Henry Shue,
professor of politics and international relations. "Here is our
opportunity to display genuine leadership when it counts."
"We can only burn 20% of the carbon in the proven fossil
fuel reserves. We'll have reached that limit in 16 years at present rates of
consumption. Now we have a carbon bubble, of unreal value. It is too risky to
own shares in this bubble. It has to burst, and will burst if we are sane and
want to avoid dangerous climate change," said
Brenda Boardman, emeritus Oxford fellow at the Environmental Change Institute.
According to student pressure group People and
Planet, 46 UK universities are now being pressed by their staff,
students and alumni to divest themselves of about £5.2bn in fossil fuel
investments. Edinburgh and Glasgow universities are expected to make a decision
later this year.
The moves by UK universities follow an escalating global
campaign to push universities to sell off their holdings in fossil fuels. Earlier this
year 129 Harvard professors accused
the world's richest university of a "failure of leadership" on
climate change and called on it to purge its nearly $33bn (£20bn) endowment of
all holdings in fossil fuel companies. Nine US colleges have so far committed
to selling off their stocks.
"Continuing to
invest in companies fuelling the climate crisis is not only morally bankrupt
but also financially imprudent and Oxford should heed the warnings of its own
respected academics. Ultimately, ignoring the growing student-led Fossil Free
campaign will put the university on the wrong side of history and damage its
hard-earned reputation and its £3.3bn endowment," said James Farndon,
Fossil Free campaign coordinators, at People & Planet.
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