U-M shifts strategy for natural resources investments

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The University of Michigan will immediately shift its natural resources investments to focus more on renewable energy, stop investing in funds primarily focused on certain fossil fuels and discontinue direct investments in publicly traded companies that are the largest contributors to greenhouse gases.

The new investment strategies are part of a commitment approved by the Board of Regents on  March 25 to ensure the university’s investment portfolio reaches a “net-zero” carbon footprint by 2050, likely making it the first public university in the country to take this step to address climate change.

In conjunction with the announced shift in strategy, the Board of Regents also voted to approve a $140 million investment in three funds directed toward renewable energy development and sustainable infrastructure development.

“Endowments by their very nature are future looking,” President Mark Schlissel said. “Today we position our investment strategies to meet the challenges of the future.”

While a number of universities have focused on one tactic or another, U-M is the first American university to publicly commit to this combined set of strategies designed to mitigate the financial risks of global climate change.

“A net-zero endowment strategy considers the greenhouse gas emissions from all of the university’s investments,” Schlissel said. “Substantial greenhouse gas emissions occur outside of the energy sector, and net zero applies broadly rather than targeting a single industry.”

The president and regents outlined the new approach as a part of a supplemental action item to modify the university’s existing portfolio of natural resources investments and approve a new investment strategy designed to mitigate climate change-related financial risk.

Regent Mark J. Bernstein argued that a commitment to a net-zero investment portfolio is an “essential” step for the university.

“Carbon is used and greenhouse gas emissions are created throughout the economy,” Bernstein said. “It’s not just isolated to traditional fossil fuel investments. In fact, these investments account for only 7.5 percent of our endowment and 18 percent of total greenhouse gases emitted in the global economy.”

He added: “So while discontinuing investments in fossil fuel companies is necessary — and we are doing this — we need to do more to get the job done. We can’t afford to only solve 18 percent of the problem.”

Regents unanimously approved the recommended action, which commits the university to doing the following:

  • Transition its endowment — valued at $12.5 billion as of June 30 — to net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050 while maintaining its fiduciary duty to manage risks and maximize risk-adjusted returns.
  • Shift its natural resource investment to renewable energy investments, including infrastructure and services that support energy efficiency, and emerging technologies that support the transition to a carbon-neutral economy.
  • Discontinue directly investing in companies that are the largest contributors to greenhouse cases, currently defined as the top 100 public coal companies and top 100 public oil and gas companies as compiled in the Carbon Underground 200 list. U-M does not currently hold any direct investments in these companies.
  • Discontinue investing in funds whose primary focus is oil reserves, oil extraction or thermal coal extraction.
  • Continue a strategy of not investing in companies that extract thermal coal or extract oil from tar sands. U-M has not invested in such companies for the past decade.

Achieving net-zero emissions for the university’s endowment means balancing greenhouse gas emissions linked to U-M assets with emissions reductions.

With this action, U-M joins a small group of universities — including Harvard University, Stanford University and the University of Oxford — that have pledged to transition their endowments to net-zero emissions by 2050, according to data compiled by the non-profit Intentional Endowments Network.

Regent Jordan Acker credited the hard work and advocacy of students who “recognized the importance of this issue and … saw the impact our institution could have in this fight.”

“Your activism matters, your voice matters, you passion matters and, yes, your viewpoint matters.” Acker said. “Through your advocacy today you have made our campus a better place and the world a better one.”

The $140 million in new investments aligned with the transition to a more sustainable economy and approved by regents included:

  • Up to $30 million to D. E. Shaw Renewable Investments, a solar and wind developer and operator that has built more than 40 utility-scale projects across the country, including in Michigan.
  • Up to $50 million to Aplomado Partners, which partners with solar developers to put together the land rights necessary to develop utility-scale solar projects.
  • Up to $60 million to Cresta Energy Sustainable Infrastructure, which invests in energy infrastructure across the United States and will focus on investments to reduce carbon emissions, sequester carbon dioxide, and develop and support renewable power.

Announcement of the new investment strategy builds upon the university’s efforts to address sustainability through academic research across disciplines and by limiting its own carbon footprint.

Last week, the President’s Commission on Carbon Neutrality delivered its final report, including 50 recommendations to help the university achieve net-zero greenhouse gas emissions across the Flint, Dearborn and Ann Arbor campuses, including Michigan Medicine.

Recommendations pertain to direct U-M emissions, purchased electricity, and indirect emissions sources, like commuting and food procurement. Proposed actions include converting heating and cooling infrastructure on all campuses to a more efficient system, transitioning university vehicles to a fully decarbonized fleet and incentivizing commuter electric vehicle use.

The commission designed recommendations to be scalable, transferable, financially responsible and environmentally just.

Schlissel praised the PCCN report and said he will respond with initial action steps in the next month or so.

In addition, the university continues its progress toward meeting its 2025 sustainability goals, established in 2011. The Ann Arbor campus is expected to meet its goal of cutting greenhouse gas emissions by 25 percent, relative to a 2006 baseline, later this year on an annualized basis.

It is expected to fully meet its annual goal during the next fiscal year — three years ahead of schedule. This will mean a net reduction of nearly 200,000 metric tons of carbon dioxide per year — equivalent to removing 43,000 cars from the road each year.

“This is a big and complicated problem, and the University of Michigan is in the business of solving big, complicated, consequential problems,” Bernstein said. “Leaders don’t shy away from hard challenges. We must do this. As President Kennedy once said about a different daunting challenge, ‘We have to do this not because it is easy, but because it is hard.’ If we want to be the leaders and best, then we need to act like leaders and best.”

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Comments

  1. William Schultz
    on March 26, 2021 at 6:34 am

    It is noteworthy how similar this investment action is to that requested by CSG (Central Student Government) in a 2015 petition that was supported the Faculty Senate. At that time, the administration stated that “politics” shouldn’t play a role in the investment portfolio selection. Thoughtful investment at UM has played and should play that role. Once again, students were out in front of the rest of us in this effort.

  2. Ember McCoy she-her
    on March 26, 2021 at 8:02 am

    U-M’s partial divestment and commitment to reinvestment in renewable energy are crucial steps toward toppling this malignant industry, and one driven by almost a decade of student activism, during which the administration arrested and charged peaceful students rather than meet to address U-M’s inaction on climate. This is a hard-won victory on the road to a more just and equitable society. However, the lack of a rapid timeline for selling its existing fossil fuel holdings and continued allowance of investments in so-called natural gas is utterly unacceptable, at a time when we must do everything we can to halt all extraction of fossil fuels.

    Read the Climate Action Movement’s full statement here: https://docs.google.com/document/d/e/2PACX-1vQ6sFMdzDzwbPEOpJhnc9YZtoRlvOraaQaw89rSOiWbGvFSvFZzT90uwPwOIupw-IpTq4PUEYuOrvUr/pub

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