Thread regarding ExxonMobil Corp. layoffs

Harvard University Pledges to End Investment in Fossil Fuels - Who is Next?

Harvard President Lawrence Bacow said the school’s endowment had no direct investments in fossil fuel exploration or development companies as of June and will not make such investments in the future.

Ross Kerber, Reuters
Fri, 09/10/2021 - 04:10 AM

Harvard University is ending its investments in fossil fuels, the school’s president said on Sept. 9, drawing praise from divestment activists who had long pressed the leading university to exit such holdings.

In a letter posted on Harvard’s website, President Lawrence Bacow said the school’s endowment had no direct investments in fossil fuel exploration or development companies as of June and will not make such investments in the future, “given the need to decarbonize the economy.”

The university’s indirect investments in the fossil fuel industry “are in runoff mode,” he added. The indirect investments, made through private equity funds, make up less than 2% of the endowment, Bacow wrote.

Recently valued at about $42 billion, the most of any university, the school’s endowment has been under pressure for years from students, alumni and other activists to sell off its fossil fuel holdings as a way to slow climate change.

Others have called such moves only posturing. In May an activist fund took a different tack and won three seats on ExxonMobil Corp.’s board, vowing to reform the leading oil company’s climate record.

Representatives for the Cambridge, Massachusetts school did not immediately provide further details.

For most of the past decade previous Harvard officials had resisted calls to sell fossil fuel stocks but more recently changed course under new leaders including Bacow, president since 2018.

Internal pressure for divestment has also grown, including from young members elected to one of Harvard’s leadership boards last year on a divestment platform.

Divest Harvard, one of the activist groups, on Twitter described the move as “a massive victory for our community, the climate movement, and the world—and a strike against the power of the fossil fuel industry.”

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Post ID: @OP+1cLziksM

8 replies (most recent on top)

Awesome. Instead of paying Dividends to Harvard, Pay them to me

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Post ID: @5luy+1cLziksM

Awesome. Instead of paying Dividends to Harvard, Pay them to me

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Post ID: @5dqp+1cLziksM

This ain't no corporate boycott - it's divesting stock.
I'd advise you do the same next time XOM gets above 60.
Bad investment - doesn't take a TAMU grad to understand that.

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Post ID: @2dwy+1cLziksM

PIP every Harvard graduate in EM.

Seems as legal as their Corporate Boycott.

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Post ID: @1dcj+1cLziksM

Hmmm, I’m pretty sure we all learned in ExxonMobil business practice review class that corporate boycotts are against antitrust laws. Curious how they can put a policy like this in writing?

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Post ID: @1ild+1cLziksM

Harvard is overrated

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Post ID: @1zev+1cLziksM

He-l, the Anglicans and CoJCoLDS pulled out of XOM a year ago.
It's all Blackrock or stone or whatever now. Probably shorting.
So - to Veritas and Harvard. You be late to the table.

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Post ID: @1oka+1cLziksM

These are the same guys that took covid relief money while they were sitting on billions. They are as corrupt as they come and people will see them for exactly who they are, We can do without Harvard and other woke schools before ever doing without fossil fuels.

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Post ID: @rne+1cLziksM

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