BCI, Shift Analysis Shift Action BCI, Shift Analysis Shift Action

Analysis of BCI's 2022/2023 Annual Report

BCI, the $233 billion pension manager for 725,000 public sector employees, including teachers, health care workers, college and university staff, and provincial and municipal public servants, released its 2022-2023 Annual Report last week. BCI’s lack of a net-zero emissions commitment, failure to implement a fossil fuel exclusion, and continued investment in fossil fuels and related infrastructure demonstrate that the fund is not yet aligned with the goals of the Paris Agreement.

Read More
Shift Action Shift Action

Thames Water - a cautionary tale for “responsible investors” and privatized utilities

The reputation of some of Canada’s largest public pension funds as responsible investors with a record of due diligence, strong corporate governance and environmental oversight is being challenged this summer by the collapse of Thames Water, the United Kingdom’s largest water utility that services 15 million people. Partly owned by OMERS and BCI, Thames Water has become a poster child for a British water industry under fire for its poor environmental record and financial mismanagement.

Read More

Statement on CPPIB-Owned Civitas Resources' $6.2 Billion Oil Acquisition

A company privately owned by the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board (CPPIB) announced this morning that it’s spending CA$6.2 billion to increase its oil production by 60%. Ongoing, reckless investment in fossil fuel expansion by Civitas Resources (Civitas) makes a mockery of the CPPIB’s net-zero emissions commitment and gambles the retirement savings of millions of Canadians on climate failure. 

Read More
Shift Action Shift Action

Climate Pension Quarterly - Issue #8

This quarter saw inspiring actions from pension plan members seeking to hold their pension managers accountable for investing their savings in a safe retirement, which inherently requires a liveable planet. Shift was also pleased to see some Canadian pension managers step up during shareholder season, with two bringing forward climate-related shareholder resolutions. Read on for the full stories in the Climate Pension Quarterly.

Read More
Shift Action Shift Action

How did your pension fund vote on key climate-related shareholder proposals? [post updated July 11, 2023]

Canada’s largest public pension funds claim that they need to stay invested in fossil fuels so that they can use their influence to help companies reduce greenhouse gas emissions. But an analysis of shareholder votes at recent investor meetings for big banks and fossil fuel companies shows most pension funds aren’t even doing the bare minimum. Pension funds are largely voting against climate-related shareholder proposals and allowing company directors to ignore growing climate-related financial risks. Some pension funds won’t even disclose to their members how they’re voting. 

Read More
Shift Action Shift Action

Climate and Energy Analysis of the CPPIB's 2023 Annual Report

Yesterday the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board (CPPIB) released its annual report for the fiscal year ending March 31, 2023. With $570 billion in assets under management, the CPPIB is making big and growing investments in climate solutions and taking a more sophisticated approach to managing climate-related financial risks. But a close read of its 2023 annual report shows Canada’s national pension manager continues to obscure its exposure to and prolongation of the fossil fuel economy while failing to understand that its mandate will be impossible to fulfill without urgent action to avert catastrophic climate change. The CPPIB has considerable work to do to establish a credible climate strategy. Read about the good, the bad and the ugly of the climate and energy highlights from the CPPIB’s 2023 annual report.

Read More
Shift Action Shift Action

Analysis of BCI's 2022 ESG Annual Report

Last month, BCI released its 2022 ESG Annual Report, which provides further evidence that BCI is responding to calls from pension plan members for increased disclosure of how it is handling climate-related financial risks. In some ways, BCI is demonstrating climate leadership in the Canadian pension sector, but a close read shows that BCI’s strategy has an overreliance on false climate solutions like carbon capture, utilization and storage (CCUS) and carbon offsets, a fatally flawed approach to engaging fossil fuel companies, and a lack of a plan to disclose credible, science-based climate plans for its growing portfolio of fossil fuel assets.

Read More
Shift Action Shift Action

Will Canada’s pensions vote for climate transparency from Suncor and Enbridge?

For years now, Canada’s pension plans have told their beneficiaries that their active ownership of companies holds the key to solving the climate crisis and protecting pensions from climate-related financial risks. This year’s Annual General Meeting (AGM) season is an opportunity for them to prove it through their votes on climate-related resolutions brought by shareholders of two of Canada’s biggest climate polluters– Enbridge and Suncor.

Read More
Shift Action Shift Action

Climate Pension Quarterly - Issue #7

This quarter turned up the heat on pension funds and climate, kicking off with Shift’s inaugural Canadian Pension Climate Report Card and winding up with CBC profiling pension fund beneficiaries calling on their pension funds to divest from fossil fuels. In between, pension funds reported annual results, updated proxy voting guidelines, and one released a climate plan. Read on for the full stories in Shift’s Climate Pension Quarterly.

Read More
Shift Action Shift Action

Statement on the 2023 Federal Budget and the decision for PSP Investments to manage the Canada Growth Fund

Shift welcomes measures in the 2023 federal budget to leverage private investment to accelerate the decarbonization of Canada’s economy. But we are concerned that the government’s plans place too much priority on risky, unproven technologies that at best drive incremental emissions reductions while ignoring the need to rapidly transition away from oil and gas to meet Canada’s climate commitments under the Paris Agreement. The government’s decision to mandate the Public Sector Pension Investment Board (PSP Investments) to manage the Canada Growth Fund (CGF) underscores our concerns.

Read More
Shift Action Shift Action

Analysis of PSP’s new Sustainable Investment Policy and Proxy Voting Principles and Proxy Voting Principles

PSP’s updated Sustainable Investment Policy and Corporate Governance and Proxy Voting Principles , and 2022 Green Bond Impact Report are further evidence that PSP is becoming more proactive in managing climate-related financial risks and encouraging portfolio companies to develop credible climate plans, but overall, PSP is not yet treating “systemic climate change risk” like a global emergency that could make it impossible to meet PSP’s financial obligations and invest in the best interests of contributors and beneficiaries. 

Read More
Shift Action Shift Action

Will Canada’s pensions vote to uphold their promises on climate and Indigenous rights?

For years now, Canada’s pension plans have told their beneficiaries that their active ownership of companies holds the key to solving the climate crisis and protecting pensions from climate-related financial risks. This year’s Annual General Meeting (AGM) season is the perfect opportunity for pensions to turn those words into action through their votes on key climate-related shareholder resolutions at Canada’s largest banks.

Read More
Shift Action Shift Action

Statement on the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board’s Purchase of a Major Oil and Gas Producer

The Canada Pension Plan Investment Board’s (CPPIB) announcement last week of its investment in a major oil and gas producer was filled with alarming greenwash claims, but Shift sees a positive development in CPPIB’s public statements that production must wind down. The only credible transition pathway for an oil and gas asset in 2023 is a phaseout trajectory in line with a 1.5°C global heating scenario.

Read More