[Partner Post] Myth-Busting Larry Fink’s Annual Letter: BlackRock CEO Drags His Feet On Climate Change
This piece originally appeared here and was authored by Jessye Waxman, Senior Climate Campaigner, Fossil-Free Finance, Sierra Club
On March 15th, BlackRock CEO Larry Fink released his annual letter, in which he held firm that climate risk is investment risk. In light of political efforts to crack down on climate action this was a reassuring signal. However, Fink failed to assert the leadership necessary for the world’s largest asset manager to properly meet and manage those investment risks.
This piece originally appeared here and was authored by Jessye Waxman, Senior Climate Campaigner, Fossil-Free Finance, Sierra Club
On March 15th, BlackRock CEO Larry Fink released his annual letter, in which he held firm that climate risk is investment risk. In light of political efforts to crack down on climate action this was a reassuring signal. However, Fink failed to assert the leadership necessary for the world’s largest asset manager to properly meet and manage those investment risks.
BlackRock cannot talk about hope for the future without addressing climate in the same breath.
BlackRock cannot navigate the next critical decade of decarbonization by changing course as political winds shift. BlackRock needs to forge a new path that follows the science and the will of the majority of its investors.
Last week, New York City Comptroller Brad Lander sent a letter to BlackRock raising his concerns that the firm is backtracking on its climate commitments.
Despite BlackRock’s position as a self-proclaimed ESG leader, the firm disappointingly submitted comments encouraging the SEC to implement weaker regulations.
BlackRock has been put at the center of a growing campaign against climate action and ESG investing.
We applaud BlackRock’s call for private companies to be required to disclose climate risk and approve of its agreement with the broad outlines of the SEC’s initiative. However, the asset manager’s proposed amendments would allow BlackRock and other Wall Street titans to continue concealing the enormous risks posed by their continued financing of fossil fuel industry expansion.