WOOD PILE
Investment fund drops Brazil's JBS over environment
by Staff Writers
Rio De Janeiro (AFP) July 28, 2020

The asset management division of the Nordic region's largest bank said Tuesday it has divested from the world's biggest meat processing company, Brazil's JBS, over destruction of the Amazon rainforest and other scandals.

Nordea Asset Management, a 230-billion-euro fund, said the decision was taken by its "responsible investments committee," and applies to around 40 million euros in all.

The Helsinki-based fund said the divestment was decided earlier this month.

But it was only made public after an investigative journalism consortium published a report Monday accusing JBS of illicitly sourcing cattle from ranches blacklisted for destroying the Amazon.

It was the fifth time in just over a year that JBS, which exports around the world, has been accused of "cattle laundering," in which animals from a blacklisted ranch are transferred to another to dodge a ban on sales.

JBS's response to outbreaks of the new coronavirus at its slaughterhouses, past corruption scandals and "poor engagement" were also factors in the decision, Nordea Asset Management said in a statement.

"After a period of engagement with the company... we did not feel that we were seeing the response that we were looking for" on "numerous" issues, said Nordea's head of responsible investment, Eric Pedersen.

"As JBS shares have not been a preferred investment of ours for a long time... we did not have very much left at the end."

Notably, he said, the decision applies not only to Nordea's "ESG" funds -- Environmental, Social and Governance funds, which pursue socially responsible investments -- but to all its products.

"JBS does not comment on decisions by investors, but regrets it had not recently been approached by the fund in question to directly present all the measures and actions demonstrating its full committment to transparency and sustainability," the Brazilian company said in a statement sent to AFP.

Brazil faces mounting pressure to slow surging deforestation after massive fires devastated the Amazon last year -- often set to clear land for ranching and farming.

Nordea is one of 29 global investment firms managing close to $4 trillion in assets that last month wrote an open letter to far-right President Jair Bolsonaro urging him to change government policies blamed for accelerating the destruction of the world's largest rainforest.

jhb/ch

JBS SA

NORDEA BANK


Related Links
Forestry News - Global and Local News, Science and Application

WOOD PILE
Brazil's Bolsonaro under pressure to protect Amazon
Rio De Janeiro (AFP) July 18, 2020
Faced with investors demanding "results" in the fight against Amazon deforestation, Brazil's government seems to be performing something of an about-face, although it will have to work to convince skeptics. The simple fact that Vice President Hamilton Mourao committed on Wednesday to cutting deforestation and forest fires "to an acceptable minimum" was a mini-revolution in the administration of far right President Jair Bolsonaro. Less than a year ago the international community watched in horror ... read more

Comment using your Disqus, Facebook, Google or Twitter login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle

WOOD PILE
Japan will reorient missile defense posture as Aegis Ashore is suspended

Raytheon Missiles and Defense awarded $2.3B production contract for missile defense radars

Lockheed Martin PAC-3 MSE Achieves Test Success

NGC and US Army team up for combined missile defense test

WOOD PILE
AFRL tests cruise missile prototype Gray Wolf

Senate offers more funding for hypersonic weapons tracking

Sweden tests new ground-to-air defense missile

Trump invokes Defense Production Act for hypersonic missile production

WOOD PILE
Oversight gap leaves Pentagon unsure if Afghan drone project has helped, IG says

Firebird completes successful multi-day capability demonstration flights

Britain buys General Atomics' Protector drone in $81M deal

Northrop Grumman Short Range Air Defense System to counter aerial threats

WOOD PILE
South Korea's first military satellite launched

Alion to provide support to USAF for spectrum management

SpaceX launches South Korean communications satellite

Airbus signs contract with UK Ministry of Defence for Skynet 6A satellite

WOOD PILE
Marines begin deactivation of all tank battalions

U.S. Army requests design proposals to replace M-2 Bradley tank

US Air Force Orders Latest Northrop Grumman LITENING Targeting Pod Upgrade

British army to cut armored vehicles acquired for war in Afghanistan

WOOD PILE
US Senate passes $740.5 bn defense bill that would rename bases

Pentagon issues two contracts under DPA Title III to sustain workforces

Okinawa governor demands action after COVID-19 outbreak at U.S. bases

Pentagon appoints Kratsios to top technology office

WOOD PILE
China orders closure of US consulate in Chengdu

Tensions soar as US orders China consulate shut

US calls on India to reduce dependence on China

Pompeo to meet UK PM in heat of China standoff

WOOD PILE
The smallest motor in the world

Crystalline 'nanobrush' clears way to advanced energy and information tech

Transporting energy through a single molecular nanowire

To make an atom-sized machine, you need a quantum mechanic