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CCLA and Guy’s charity seek to exert pressure over air pollution

A NEW benchmark that might enable investors to evaluate how firms are tackling urban air pollution has been proposed by Guy’s and St Thomas’ Foundation and CCLA Investment Management.

A public consultation on the proposal was launched on Tuesday, accompanied by statistics setting out the impact of air pollution on public health. In 2019, the burden of long-term exposure to air pollution within the UK was an effect corresponding to between 29,000 to 43,000 deaths for adults aged 30 and above, the UK Health Security Agency says. The Health Effects Institute reports that air pollution is the second leading global risk factor for death, after hypertension, and above tobacco use and poor food regimen.

CCLA, which began because the Church of England Investment Fund, is now the UK’s largest charity fund manager. It is working in partnership with the south-London health charity Guy’s and St Thomas’ Foundation. The consultation is an element of a ten-year philanthropic programme to tackle poor air quality in large urban areas.

The two partners say that firms in sectors corresponding to energy, construction, and agriculture are “major contributors to air pollution”. The latest consultation will initially deal with firms involved in on-road transport.

“The air we breathe matters for all of us,” Matt Lomas, the Foundation’s engagement director, said. “Air quality ought to be a priority for investors given the impact poor air quality has on people, planet and increasingly businesses as firms’ contributions grow to be more understood.”

Amy Browne, director of stewardship at CCLA, said: “Healthy businesses, and by extension strong investment returns, require healthy communities and a thriving environment. Air pollution threatens each human and planetary health and is a sustainability blind spot for a lot of investors.

“Our aim is to mobilise the investment community into motion and to bring down the extent of toxic pollution within the air that we breathe, the communities through which we live and within the habitats that produce our food and protect nature’s bounty.”

The press release includes an appeal to self-interest: “Organisations that reduce their air pollution footprint and embrace cleaner technologies could position themselves higher for future growth and regulatory changes. Companies that fail to actively address air pollution impacts could increasingly face regulatory penalties, rising costs, shareholder activism, and declining consumer trust.”

Forthcoming regulations include the UK and EU bans on the sale of recent petrol and diesel cars and vans by 2035 — a transition that has been urged by the Bishop of Oxford, Dr Steven Croft (News, 25 October).

Earlier this yr, Chronos Sustainability was commissioned by the 2 partners to interview various bodies to explore why investors ought to be concerned about air pollution and what actions they might take. The Church of England Pensions Board was amongst them. Among the findings was “a generalised ignorance and understanding of corporate air pollution amongst investors and plenty of firms” and “an absence of standardised metrics for measuring and reporting on air pollution across corporate reporting frameworks”.

It is proposed that the brand new benchmark would cover global listed firms, each of which can be assessed on information that’s publicly available.

Last month, the Bishop of St Albans, Dr Alan Smith, asked the Government whether it might consider reinstating funding for the Air Quality Grant Scheme, which provided funding to eligible local authorities to assist improve air quality. The previous month he warned that, in some areas, “air quality is so bad that it’s materially affecting the health of many young people and causing huge additional costs to the NHS”. A study by the Education Policy Institute published earlier this yr reported higher levels of air pollution in additional deprived areas.

The launch of the consultation on the benchmark is available in the identical week as an announcement that the mother of Ella Adoo-Kissi-Debrah, a nine-year-old girl whose death certificate was the primary within the UK to cite air pollution, would receive an undisclosed settlement from government. Ella had a fatal asthma attack in 2013. She lived near the South Circular Road in Lewisham.

ccla.co.uk/consultation-proposed-corporate-air-pollution-benchmark

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