The University of Cambridge has said it will fully divest from fossil fuels by 2030, and achieve 鈥渘et zero鈥 carbon emissions from its investments by 2038.
The university also said that it would build up 鈥渟ignificant investments鈥 from its 拢3.5聽billion Cambridge University Endowment Fund, the largest higher education endowment in Europe, in renewable energy by 2025.
The changes will mean that the university will be the first to balance out its greenhouse gas emissions from its investment activities to zero, which will coincide with its goal to reach zero emissions across the institution in 2038.
Cambridge vice-chancellor Stephen Toope made the announcement at his annual address to the university and said that the university was responding 鈥渢o a pressing environmental and moral need for action with an historic announcement that demonstrates our determination to seek solutions to the climate crisis鈥.
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鈥淲e will approach with renewed confidence our collaborations with government, industry and research partners around the world as together we work for a zero-carbon future,鈥 he said.
The move follows significant campaigns in recent years for universities to divest, but although Cambridge had committed to have no direct holdings in the most polluted industries, it had yet to fully divest from fossil fuels, such as through indirectly managed funds.
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As part of the announcement, the university recognised the contributions that students and staff made to the decision 鈥渂y keeping the issue on the agenda鈥.
The new targets include withdrawing investments with conventional energy-focused public equity managers by December 2020 and to then have fully redeployed those investments into renewable energy by 2025. It will divest from all meaningful exposure in fossil fuels, such as through investments with general fund managers that occasionally have an energy in their portfolio, by 2030.
Currently, 2.8 per cent of Cambridge鈥檚 investment portfolio is invested in the energy industry, which amounts to just under 拢100 million.聽
Cambridge鈥檚 chief investment officer, Tilly Franklin, admitted that it would 鈥渂e really difficult to implement, as at the moment there aren鈥檛 that many companies that operate with a net zero emissions profile鈥.
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鈥淭he economy as a whole will have to change, but we want to be an influencer and at the cutting edge of working with those companies that are, in turn, leaders in their field in the race to zero,鈥 she told聽糖心Vlog.
At the same time, the university also announced that from now on all research funding and other donations will 鈥渂e scrutinised to ensure that the donor can demonstrate compatibility with the university鈥檚 objectives on cutting greenhouse gas emissions before any funding is accepted鈥.
Cambridge came under fire last year for accepting a multimillion-pound donation from Shell to fund a team researching oil extraction technology, though the university said at the time that the 鈥渞esearch related to the gift is on supporting the transition to a zero-carbon economy鈥, and has previously accepted previous donations from oil companies such as BP and ExxonMobil.
The Cambridge Zero Carbon campaign said it was 鈥渁 historic victory for the divestment movement. After decades of close collaboration with the fossil fuel industry, Cambridge University has been forced to concede to divestment demands put forward by student and staff campaigners.鈥
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Robert Macfarlane, author and fellow of Emmanuel College, Cambridge, said that 鈥渇inally, the voices of those speaking out for climate justice have been listened to and acted on鈥, while naturalist David Attenborough said it was 鈥渉ugely encouraging that Cambridge University, home of the Cambridge Conservation Initiative, should now be making this important contribution towards the restoration of the health of the natural world鈥.
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