Cambridge Uni could cut ties with banks - Telegraph

DaveGrohl

Member
Mixed Farmer
Location
Cumbria
This all getting rather silly now. It comes after the nonsense with the Edinburgh book event wanting to end Baillie Gifford’s sponsorship for the same reason, and the crashing of ESG investments globally in general. The lack of awareness is astonishing. Imagine being a bank; continue with business with BP, Shell and the rest; or Camb Uni? Hmmm, tricky :ROFLMAO:


Cambridge University could cut ties with Barclays and Lloyds over fossil fuel links​

A leaked document claims there is a ‘concerted effort’ to put pressure on institutions to ‘improve their practices’​

Lauren Welsby-Riley 17 June 2024 • 9:27pm
The University of Cambridge is considering cutting ties with Barclays and Lloyds amid concerns over the banks’ investments in fossil fuels, leaked documents have claimed.
Minutes from a recent council meeting at the university’s King’s College, leaked to student newspaper Varsity and shared with The Telegraph, suggested that Cambridge was exploring “alternatives to Barclays and Lloyds”.
The council notes from May 28 included an update from a King’s College’s bursar. It claimed King’s was “part of a concerted effort, with the university and other colleges, that has been engaging with and putting pressure on the major UK banks (particularly Barclays and Lloyds) to improve their practices”.
It said that “to escalate this work, the university launched a tender for cash and money market products that might present alternatives to Barclays and Lloyds”.
The document claimed that “the focus of the tender was on bank financing of fossil fuels in particular – but was a more general warning to the major banks that many institutions might withdraw their business if a more ethical approach was not adopted”.
It suggested that a call-out to find alternatives was “now progressing, with 24 respondents and 14 proposals able to move forward to the next stage of evaluation”.
The document suggested that its aim was to identify potential alternatives “in Michaelmas” – the start of next academic year. It claimed that if alternatives to Barclays and Lloyds were found, “there is likely to be a coordinated action across the collegiate university”.
It said that Cambridge may not actually go through with threats to ditch the banks but instead hoped to bring “reform from within”.
“The main lever held by the university and colleges is reputational impact on corporate institutions; the sums invested or banked are not large in the scale of wider institutional pools,” it said. “This has been one of the reasons why no university or college has withdrawn from Barclays.”

Cash request for proposals​

A Cambridge spokesman said claims made by King’s College were not representative of the wider university.
They said Cambridge was involved in a broader coalition called the Banking Engagement Forum (BEF) that reviews its arrangements.
“The BEF, which includes a number of collegiate Cambridge institutions, has been working with close to 70 higher education peer institutions to carry out a cash request for proposals,” they added.
Anthony Odgers, Cambridge’s chief financial officer, said on the BEF website: “What we and our partners are focused on with this mandate is finding financial services products that do not contribute to the expansion of fossil fuels – in particular, new coal- and gas-fired plants which lock in demand for decades.”
The majority of Cambridge’s 31 colleges are thought to bank with either Barclays or Lloyds, and the university’s relationship with Barclays spans more than 200 years.
Cambridge students have piled on pressure to accelerate efforts to cut ties with fossil fuel-linked companies.The university has pledged to divest its £4 billion endowment from all direct and indirect investments in fossil fuels by 2030.
Barclays was the biggest funder of the fossil fuel sector in Europe between 2016 and 2021, according to a report published in February 2024 by environmental group Rainforest Action Network.
The bank provided just under $16.5 billion (£13 billion ) in 2022, though that was significantly lower than in previous years. Barclays subsequently announced it would no longer provide direct funding for new oil and gas projects.
Lloyds has “minor” links to fossil fuel funders compared with other banks, according to a Which? report from October 2023. Leeds was one of several universities that switched to the bank in 2023, saying it “has the lowest fossil fuel investments of any of the major UK banks”.
Barclays has also come under fire for its ties with companies involved in Israel. A group of Cambridge students staged a “die-in” at a Barclays bank in the city earlier in 2024, accusing it of being complicit in Israel’s killing of thousands of civilians in Gaza.
They claimed the bank also holds more than £1 billion in shares and provides £3 billion in loans to companies whose weapons, components and military technology are being used in Israel’s military operations.
A spokesman for the bank said at the time that Barclays was “committed to respecting human rights as defined by the International Bill of Human Rights and takes account of other internationally accepted human rights standards and frameworks.
“As a universal bank, Barclays provides a range of client services in relation to the shares of publicly listed companies, including those in the defence and security sector,” they added.
The leaked documents appear to show that King’s has commissioned a review of “responsible investment” following pressure from students to axe ties with the arms industry.
The college has asked its governing body to produce a review of investments next term, with recommendations to be implemented by the end of the next academic year.
A Varsity investigation in 2023 claimed that King’s invests £2.2 million in arms and defence and had increased its shares in the industry in recent years.

‘Committed to financial stability’​

Barclays announced last week it had suspended its sponsorship of the Latitude, Download and Isle of Wight festivals after a boycott from bands over the bank’s links to defence companies supplying in Israel.
A spokesman for King’s College said: “We do not comment on draft internal documents. We remain firmly committed to ensuring the college’s continued financial stability in support of our outstanding environment for teaching and research, and will announce any new developments in due course.”
A Barclays spokesman said: “Barclays is committed to financing an energy sector in transition. Alongside financing current energy needs, we are working with energy companies to build the clean energy system of tomorrow, with a target to provide $1 trillion of sustainable and transition finance by 2030. Since 2020, our financed emissions for the energy sector have reduced by 44 per cent, exceeding our 2030 target.”
A Lloyds Banking Group spokesman said: “We are an established lender to the higher education sector and know that clear sustainability goals continue to be important to many of our clients, including universities. We are proud that every university that switched accounts last year decided to switch to Lloyds.”
 

Levelsman

Member
Livestock Farmer
This all getting rather silly now. It comes after the nonsense with the Edinburgh book event wanting to end Baillie Gifford’s sponsorship for the same reason, and the crashing of ESG investments globally in general. The lack of awareness is astonishing. Imagine being a bank; continue with business with BP, Shell and the rest; or Camb Uni? Hmmm, tricky :ROFLMAO:


Cambridge University could cut ties with Barclays and Lloyds over fossil fuel links​

A leaked document claims there is a ‘concerted effort’ to put pressure on institutions to ‘improve their practices’​

Lauren Welsby-Riley 17 June 2024 • 9:27pm
The University of Cambridge is considering cutting ties with Barclays and Lloyds amid concerns over the banks’ investments in fossil fuels, leaked documents have claimed.
Minutes from a recent council meeting at the university’s King’s College, leaked to student newspaper Varsity and shared with The Telegraph, suggested that Cambridge was exploring “alternatives to Barclays and Lloyds”.
The council notes from May 28 included an update from a King’s College’s bursar. It claimed King’s was “part of a concerted effort, with the university and other colleges, that has been engaging with and putting pressure on the major UK banks (particularly Barclays and Lloyds) to improve their practices”.
It said that “to escalate this work, the university launched a tender for cash and money market products that might present alternatives to Barclays and Lloyds”.
The document claimed that “the focus of the tender was on bank financing of fossil fuels in particular – but was a more general warning to the major banks that many institutions might withdraw their business if a more ethical approach was not adopted”.
It suggested that a call-out to find alternatives was “now progressing, with 24 respondents and 14 proposals able to move forward to the next stage of evaluation”.
The document suggested that its aim was to identify potential alternatives “in Michaelmas” – the start of next academic year. It claimed that if alternatives to Barclays and Lloyds were found, “there is likely to be a coordinated action across the collegiate university”.
It said that Cambridge may not actually go through with threats to ditch the banks but instead hoped to bring “reform from within”.
“The main lever held by the university and colleges is reputational impact on corporate institutions; the sums invested or banked are not large in the scale of wider institutional pools,” it said. “This has been one of the reasons why no university or college has withdrawn from Barclays.”

Cash request for proposals​

A Cambridge spokesman said claims made by King’s College were not representative of the wider university.
They said Cambridge was involved in a broader coalition called the Banking Engagement Forum (BEF) that reviews its arrangements.
“The BEF, which includes a number of collegiate Cambridge institutions, has been working with close to 70 higher education peer institutions to carry out a cash request for proposals,” they added.
Anthony Odgers, Cambridge’s chief financial officer, said on the BEF website: “What we and our partners are focused on with this mandate is finding financial services products that do not contribute to the expansion of fossil fuels – in particular, new coal- and gas-fired plants which lock in demand for decades.”
The majority of Cambridge’s 31 colleges are thought to bank with either Barclays or Lloyds, and the university’s relationship with Barclays spans more than 200 years.
Cambridge students have piled on pressure to accelerate efforts to cut ties with fossil fuel-linked companies.The university has pledged to divest its £4 billion endowment from all direct and indirect investments in fossil fuels by 2030.
Barclays was the biggest funder of the fossil fuel sector in Europe between 2016 and 2021, according to a report published in February 2024 by environmental group Rainforest Action Network.
The bank provided just under $16.5 billion (£13 billion ) in 2022, though that was significantly lower than in previous years. Barclays subsequently announced it would no longer provide direct funding for new oil and gas projects.
Lloyds has “minor” links to fossil fuel funders compared with other banks, according to a Which? report from October 2023. Leeds was one of several universities that switched to the bank in 2023, saying it “has the lowest fossil fuel investments of any of the major UK banks”.
Barclays has also come under fire for its ties with companies involved in Israel. A group of Cambridge students staged a “die-in” at a Barclays bank in the city earlier in 2024, accusing it of being complicit in Israel’s killing of thousands of civilians in Gaza.
They claimed the bank also holds more than £1 billion in shares and provides £3 billion in loans to companies whose weapons, components and military technology are being used in Israel’s military operations.
A spokesman for the bank said at the time that Barclays was “committed to respecting human rights as defined by the International Bill of Human Rights and takes account of other internationally accepted human rights standards and frameworks.
“As a universal bank, Barclays provides a range of client services in relation to the shares of publicly listed companies, including those in the defence and security sector,” they added.
The leaked documents appear to show that King’s has commissioned a review of “responsible investment” following pressure from students to axe ties with the arms industry.
The college has asked its governing body to produce a review of investments next term, with recommendations to be implemented by the end of the next academic year.
A Varsity investigation in 2023 claimed that King’s invests £2.2 million in arms and defence and had increased its shares in the industry in recent years.

‘Committed to financial stability’​

Barclays announced last week it had suspended its sponsorship of the Latitude, Download and Isle of Wight festivals after a boycott from bands over the bank’s links to defence companies supplying in Israel.
A spokesman for King’s College said: “We do not comment on draft internal documents. We remain firmly committed to ensuring the college’s continued financial stability in support of our outstanding environment for teaching and research, and will announce any new developments in due course.”
A Barclays spokesman said: “Barclays is committed to financing an energy sector in transition. Alongside financing current energy needs, we are working with energy companies to build the clean energy system of tomorrow, with a target to provide $1 trillion of sustainable and transition finance by 2030. Since 2020, our financed emissions for the energy sector have reduced by 44 per cent, exceeding our 2030 target.”
A Lloyds Banking Group spokesman said: “We are an established lender to the higher education sector and know that clear sustainability goals continue to be important to many of our clients, including universities. We are proud that every university that switched accounts last year decided to switch to Lloyds.”


Just wondering what the price of the little bit of food would be when produced without ANY fossil fuel input?

Is there anything between their 👂👂?
 

Boysground

Member
Mixed Farmer
Location
Wiltshire
The attack on Baillie Gifford has caused much more harm than good. In effect they were bank rolling most of the book festivals in the country. The festivals don’t make any money even with corporate sponsorship. Some have already shut their doors many more will more than likely go.

The result of this is that a forum for authors with a wide range of opinions and influence has gone. Especially those with more niche topics they write about. Many of the festivals also had successful outreach programs to get more children reading, this has now gone.

So the result of a uneducated attack on a company that i understand has a small percentage of its investments in fossil fuels but is an easy target has been a reduction in options for readers who will have to rely more on the mainstream and a loss of opportunity for children.

Cambridge university should be very careful of what they wish for.

Bg
 

Boysground

Member
Mixed Farmer
Location
Wiltshire
It really is getting very silly. One upside is it confirms what many of us suspected : that these folk are not actually very bright despite attending one of the supposed top university’s in the land.

Have to be careful liking that post. BIL is a Cambridge grad, only his masters had to go elsewhere for the phd. He has made very good use of the education and definitely would not be on the side of the protesters 😂

Bg
 

DaveGrohl

Member
Mixed Farmer
Location
Cumbria
The attack on Baillie Gifford has caused much more harm than good. In effect they were bank rolling most of the book festivals in the country. The festivals don’t make any money even with corporate sponsorship. Some have already shut their doors many more will more than likely go.

The result of this is that a forum for authors with a wide range of opinions and influence has gone. Especially those with more niche topics they write about. Many of the festivals also had successful outreach programs to get more children reading, this has now gone.

So the result of a uneducated attack on a company that i understand has a small percentage of its investments in fossil fuels but is an easy target has been a reduction in options for readers who will have to rely more on the mainstream and a loss of opportunity for children.

Cambridge university should be very careful of what they wish for.

Bg
The irony is next level. Book festivals are supposed to increase knowledge and understanding aren’t they?
 

DaveGrohl

Member
Mixed Farmer
Location
Cumbria
2CFF79D8-6522-4D18-8F49-78B4CC4BCEC5.png
 

PSQ

Member
Arable Farmer
More virtue signalling nonsense...

There is a bank that prides itself on being ethical, in fact their Moto is "Ethical Then, Ethical Now, Ethical Always", so it should be the ideal bank for Cambridge University.

Unfortunately that bank is The Co-Op Bank, and those words were coined by Paul Flowers, Methodist minister and the banks Chairman, before he was filmed buying cocaine and methamphetamine and saying that he'd been high as a kite at a government select committee meeting; then caught using work emails to converse with male prostitutes; convicted of having sex in a public toilet; convicted of drink driving, facilitating a £50,000 gift to the Labour Party which led to 'support' and 'appointments' from Ed Miliband, and allegations that:

"Soon after the film of the apparent purchase of illicit drugs was released to the media, it was revealed that, while deputy head of social services at Rochdale Council, Flowers had known about the activities of paedophiles at a residential boys' school, but had not informed parents or taken measures to close the school, was responsible for rejecting allegations of child sex abuse against the late Rochdale MP Cyril Smith,[10] and that, in 2011, while working at Bradford Council, "inappropriate but not illegal adult content was found on a council computer handed in by Councillor Flowers for servicing. This was put to him and he resigned immediately."
On top of all that, he was 'in charge' (in the loosest possible sense) when the bank led the Co-Op group into a £1.5 billion loss.

So, yeah, if Cambridge wants an ethical bank, then there are banks that would facilitate just about everything they would ever need to tick the "ethical" box.
Or they could just carry on being so utterly hypocritical, but that won't wash with the ultra pious students who clearly still have a lot to learn about the world...
 

Bongodog

Member
The original post references Kings College Cambridge, consistently left wing compared to the other colleges. Alumni include most of the UKs most notorious Russian spies. The University is made up of 31 separate colleges plus the central body. They rarely act in unison. The big money is at Trinity and St John's
 

Will you help clear snow?

  • yes

    Votes: 68 31.6%
  • no

    Votes: 147 68.4%

The London Palladium event “BPR Seminar”

  • 12,592
  • 185
This is our next step following the London rally 🚜

BPR is not just a farming issue, it affects ALL business, it removes incentive to invest for growth

Join us @LondonPalladium on the 16th for beginning of UK business fight back👍

Back
Top