Aviva adds human rights to ethical investment drive

The Aviva logo sits outside the company head office in the city of London, Britain March 7, 2019. REUTERS/Simon Dawson

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  • Aviva Investors aims to hold company directors to account
  • Wants boards to focus on ‘whole picture’ of sustainability
  • Biodiversity also added to investment criteria

LONDON, Jan 24 (Reuters) – Leading British asset manager Aviva Investors plans to push boards for greater action on biodiversity and human rights so that companies consider “the whole picture of sustainability”.

Alongside climate change, a core focus for most investors, the move reflects growing concern over the corporate world’s impact on nature and the treatment of stakeholders, including workers, across often lengthy supply chains.

Insurance group Aviva’s (AV.L) asset-management arm, which handles 262 billion pounds ($354.62 billion) of assets, will now rank human rights and biodiversity alongside climate and executive pay when it selects investments.

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Bonuses awarded to company executives should also reflect how well sustainability targets have been met, Aviva Investors CEO Mark Versey wrote in his annual letter to 1,500 companies in 30 countries, warning that laggard boards will be held accountable.

“Simply cutting emissions but allowing the destruction of the rain forest to continue will do little to reverse global warming,” Versey said. “Companies need to adopt an integrated approach for maximum benefit.”

On climate change, all companies would be asked to develop a climate transition plan “and companies in higher-impact sectors should present these for shareholder approval”, Versey said.

Companies should begin making voluntary disclosures based on climate-related standards being drawn up by the new International Sustainability Standards Board, which was launched at the COP26 global summit last November, he added.

“We recognise the standard is still to be fully developed and would support a phased approach to reporting, with full compliance by 2024,” Versey said.

Company executive bonus plans should include “robust, stretching and externally validated sustainability targets” that are clearly linked to commercial strategy, he added.

Separately on Monday, the European arm of fellow investor BMO Global Asset Management, part of United States-based Columbia Threadneedle, a unit of Ameriprise Financial (AMP.N), said it, too, would push companies on issues including human rights.

“The events of the past year, including the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic and extreme weather events, have reinforced the importance of creating a more resilient future,” said Claudia Wearmouth, co-head of the company’s Responsible Investment team.

“Climate change, biodiversity loss and human rights are all issues that require urgent action.”

Last June Axa Investment Managers said it was expanding its palm oil investment strategy to exclude companies involved in major land use controversies or in causing biodiversity loss due to soy, cattle and timber.

($1 = 0.7388 pounds)

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Reporting by Huw Jones
Editing by David Goodman

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

source: reuters.com