Buckinghamshire Council has been urged to “divest” itself of fossil fuel investments through its Pension Fund, which campaigners have said contributes to climate change.
The Fund has been pooled with those of other local authorities under the Brunel Pension Partnership, which puts the money into investment portfolios.
Environmental activist Rachel Blackmore, 64, told the Local Democracy Reporting Service (LDRS): “Bucks pensions should not be invested in fossil fuels. It should be renewables. It is such a no-brainer.”
The retired midwife, who lives in Weston Turville, Aylesbury, withheld her council tax last year as a form of climate protest before paying it in full after she received a court summons.
She said: “Never mind us being summoned to court, it should be Bucks Council. They say, ‘Oh well we are with Brunel’. But [Brunel] has a portfolio that doesn’t have fossil fuels. It is a choice.”
Campaign group UK Divest claims the Council has invested £63 million into dirty energy through its Pension Fund.
READ MORE: Woman still won't pay £3k council tax over climate change
In September the Council also decided to maintain its banking contract with Barclays, which expires in 2027, following an e-petition that called on the Council to “stop investing in fossil fuels”.
Barclays is one of the largest financiers of fossil fuels of any bank in Europe, according to a report by the Rainforest Action Network and others, although the bank has set a target to achieve “net zero carbon emissions” by 2050.
Activists and councillors have questioned whether the Council’s investments and banking decisions are compatible with its own commitment to achieve “net zero” in Buckinghamshire as a whole by 2050.
Peter Marland, the Leader of Milton Keynes City Council, who recently left Buckinghamshire Council’s Pension Fund Committee, told the LDRS that that divestment from fossil fuels is happening too slowly.
He said: “As a member of the Pension Committee I have pushed for a move away from fossil fuels towards cleaner investments.
“In principle the Committee agrees but in my view the timeframe to do so is too slow and the targets are not ambitious enough.
READ MORE: Bucks Council Barclays contract to remain despite fossil fuel links
“The question for Bucks Council is: ‘Are Barclays doing enough to reduce their financing of carbon intensive industries?’
“I can only say I do not think Milton Keynes City Council would use Barclays unless they made major changes to their operation in the area of climate change.”
Rachel, who has been involved in Extinction Rebellion and Just Stop Oil, has also urged the Council not to make any further investments in fossil fuels.
She said: “The climate situation is so catastrophic. We should have been cutting emissions 50 years ago.
“We had the floods in Libya, wars in Syria over drought. And people dying from heat-caused deaths. Millions of people have died because of extreme weather events.
“I feel really strongly about every fraction of a degree. We should not be investing in new fossil fuels.”
In a statement, Barclays told the LDRS it had provided over £87bn of green finance since 2018 and has achieved a 32 per cent reduction in its financed emissions since 2020.
The bank said that oil and gas companies were critical to the “transition to a low-carbon business model”.
It added: “Where companies are unwilling to reduce their emissions consistent with internationally accepted pathways, they may find it difficult to access financing, including from Barclays.”
John Chilver, Buckinghamshire Council's Cabinet Member for Accessible Housing and Resources said: "Buckinghamshire Council is committed to a greener future, and this is central to the decisions made by the Brunel Pension Partnership, which manages our Pension Fund investments.
“Brunel is a signatory to Climate Action 100+, which works to ensure the world’s largest listed emitters act on climate change, and its target is for the investments it manages on behalf of its clients to be net zero by 2050 at the latest.
“We continue to progress towards this target and, at the same time, ensure that we act in the best interests of our members, both active and those now retired and living on their pension."
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