Close X
Monday, November 11, 2024
ADVT 
National

Pension Managers Must Consider Climate-Change Risks: Legal Study

The Canadian Press, 08 Sep, 2015 11:51 AM
    A legal study says climate change is one of the biggest risks faced by Canadian pension plans and trustees will be increasingly forced to take it into account.
     
    One of Canada's leading pension law firms says plan managers may be forced into advocating public policy changes to fulfil their legal duty to keep plans growing.
     
    The Toronto-based firm of Koskie and Minsky concludes that climate change is an especially big issue for fund managers because they need to plan more long-term than other investors.
     
    Increasing temperatures are expected to create profound changes in the global economy and an uncertain regulatory environment.
     
    The report concludes managers may have a duty to speak out on greenhouse gases to protect the pensions they oversee.
     
    The report was commissioned by SHARE, a non-profit environmental investment consultancy that advises on about $14 billion worth of assets.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Court Hears Robert Pickton Sex Assault Victim Called Liar Deserves Costs

    B.C. Court Hears Robert Pickton Sex Assault Victim Called Liar Deserves Costs
    Jason Gratl says David Pickton offered the woman $50,000 about six weeks before trial, but she continued the court action because he also denied the attack.

    B.C. Court Hears Robert Pickton Sex Assault Victim Called Liar Deserves Costs

    London Diver's Body Found In B.C. Waters More Than 7 Weeks After He Went Missing

    London Diver's Body Found In B.C. Waters More Than 7 Weeks After He Went Missing
    Timothy Chu was vacationing in the Victoria area when he went on a charter dive in a marine ecological reserve at Race Rocks, in Juan de Fuca Strait, southwest of Victoria.

    London Diver's Body Found In B.C. Waters More Than 7 Weeks After He Went Missing

    Stock Markets Continue To Recover From Big Declines, Loonie Up Sharply

    Stock Markets Continue To Recover From Big Declines, Loonie Up Sharply
    The positive news had a major spillover effect on commodity markets, sending oil and base metals prices skyrocketing and providing a major boost to the resource-heavy Toronto Stock Exchange.

    Stock Markets Continue To Recover From Big Declines, Loonie Up Sharply

    All Sides Await Outcome In Battle Over B.c. Law School Accreditation

    The university wants the court to overturn a law society decision denying accreditation to graduates of the university's proposed law school.

    All Sides Await Outcome In Battle Over B.c. Law School Accreditation

    Boy, 10, Catches 486-Pound Bluefin Tuna Off Prince Edward Island's Northeastern Shore

    Boy, 10, Catches 486-Pound Bluefin Tuna Off Prince Edward Island's Northeastern Shore
    A 10-year-old boy from Prince Edward Island is hoping he landed a world record when he reeled in a 220-kilogram bluefin tuna off the province's northeastern shore.

    Boy, 10, Catches 486-Pound Bluefin Tuna Off Prince Edward Island's Northeastern Shore

    Harper, Trudeau Spar Over Liberal Plan To Rebuild Infrastructure, Run Deficits

    OTTAWA — Justin Trudeau is out to build some campaign momentum with a big-ticket, multibillion-dollar infrastructure plan — and Stephen Harper is wasting no time in trying to tear him down.

    Harper, Trudeau Spar Over Liberal Plan To Rebuild Infrastructure, Run Deficits