SA PHILANTHROPIES DIVEST

There’s a global climate/ecological emergency, and SA philanthropies must divest from fossil fuels

The climate crisis threatens every area of human development that philanthropies seek to build. Which is why philanthropies have been amongst the leaders of the multi-trillion dollar global divestment movement.

PHILANTHROPIES SHOULD BE DIVESTING FROM FOSSIL FUELS

In South Africa, warming twice as fast as the global average

Our philanthropies should be divesting from fossil fuels, the biggest cause of human-induced climate change, for three key reasons: 

  • To protect your beneficiaries’ human rights, or rights to life,
  • to ensure that your own reputations are not battered by continuing to profit from a global human rights crisis, 
  • and to protect your finances from the financial effects of climate change, declines in the value of carbon-intensive assets, stranded assets and a possible carbon bubble.

A responsible investment strategy that covers other environmental, social and governance (ESG) issues besides climate is very important, but we believe fossil fuel divestment should be the first step for philanthropies pursuing a responsible investment strategy, for two reasons:

  • Climate is now so urgent an issue that responsible trustees cannot wait any longer to act. Every moment that capital is invested in carbon-intensive assets rather than renewable energy pushes Earth’s climate closer to irreversible tipping points.
  • Establishing the fossil-free funds needed in South Africa to facilitate divestment can to some degree ‘automate’ other ESG decisions, as any credible fossil-free fund should screen for a range of ethical/ESG issues besides climate. (We sometimes call this ‘fossil-free ethical plus’.)

IEEFA

The financial case for fossil
fuel divestment

This detailed 2018 report from the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis, co-authored by former New York state comptroller Tom Sanzillo, makes the financial case for divestment. It does not present a specific case for divestment in South Africa, but many of the arguments hold true for SA, and are of course directly relevant to any offshore investments held by SA philanthropies.

FOSSIL FREE SA

Our presentation to philanthropies
in Johannesburg

In February 2020,  together with various partners including Just Share, we put the argument for fossil fuel divestment to a small group of representatives of four philanthropies and the Independent Philanthropies Association of South Africa. See our slides from that occasion.

CROATAN INSTITUTE

Philanthropies that have divested
are benefiting

The Croatan Institute recently published a report ‘Divest Invest Philanthropy: Five Years After Launch’ that summarised the experiences of 200 philanthropies that have chosen to divest. Most respondents (94%)  indicated that their financial performance since taking the divest pledge has been positively or neutrally affected.

“People of conscience need to break their ties with corporations financing the injustice of climate change.”

Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu

Archbishop Desmond Tutu addresses a crowd in Durban during the lead-up to the 2011 COP 17 global climate summit.

“People of conscience need to break their ties with corporations financing the injustice of climate change.”

Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu

Archbishop Desmond Tutu addresses a crowd in Durban during the lead-up to the 2011 COP 17 global climate summit.
Need to know more?
Watch Wallace Global Fund director Ellen Dorsey make the case for divestment at the 2019 Mission-Aligned Investment seminar we co-hosted with Just Share and 350 Africa in Cape Town. (And here’s a 2-minute summary.)