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Superannuation funds are leaving investments on nuclear weapons

Disarmament treaty drops bomb on super funds investing in nuclear weapons, Michael West Media , by Margaret Beavis | Nov 2, 2020  Many superannuation funds exclude investment in “controversial weapons” but astoundingly this definition does not include nuclear weapons. However, this will change once the Nuclear Disarmament Treaty becomes international law, writes Dr Margaret Beavis. With two of the largest pension funds in the world already having divested, Australian funds are on notice.

It would probably come as a surprise, and a disappointment, to most Australians to hear that some of their superannuation is invested in nuclear weapons. Especially given the strong community backing for nuclear disarmament, with two surveys in 2018 and 2020 (IPSOS) showing that between 71 and 79% of respondents supported Australia signing and ratifying the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons.

Yet the vast majority of superannuation funds have holdings in companies involved in the manufacture and maintenance of nuclear weapons. While many funds exclude investments in “controversial weapons”, astoundingly this definition often still allows nuclear weapons investment.

But this is about to change. With the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons (TPNW), which was endorsed by 122 countries at the United Nations in 2017, having just reached the milestone of 50 countries ratifying it, the treaty becomes international law in less than three months. Nuclear weapons, the worst of the weapons of mass destruction, will finally be on the same illegal footing as chemical and biological weapons.

This means assistance of any sort, including financial assistance, towards nuclear weapons becomes illegal under international law.

Only 26 companies support these weapons. Boeing, for example, the second largest weapons producer in the world, has contracts worth more than US$1.7 billion: building new nuclear weapons for the US, key components for the long-range nuclear Minuteman Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles system, sustaining the UK Trident II system and making tail-kit assemblies for the new B61 bombs.

Divestment is accelerating.   Globally, major investors are already ceasing their exposure to nuclear weapons activities. This includes two of the top five pension funds in the world, the Norwegian Government Pension Fund and ABP, which have divested from the 26 companies tied to nuclear weapons. Deutsche Bank and KBC are also divesting.

In Japan, 16 banks (including three mega banks) have flagged ceasing investment in nuclear weapons companies. With accelerating divestment, the risks of holding nuclear weapons stocks increases.

Superannuation funds in Australia are starting to consider the financial risks, reputational risks and ethical imperatives surrounding investments in nuclear weapons.

Some, like Australian Ethical, Future Super and Bank Australia have already acted………

As with climate change, there is little point accumulating funds on behalf of the community if they contribute to the deaths of billions and a severely damaged future.

Quit Nukes, an Australian-based campaign launched late last year, is working to get super fund portfolios out of the financing of nuclear weapons. The campaign members have met with senior executives at more than a dozen funds, the regulator APRA, several banks, index setters and a number of industry bodies.

Blackrock, MSCI and other index setters have recognised the increasing demand from the public for ethical funds and have created products to suit.

The full list of funds that have already acted is on the Quit Nukes website.

Consumers are increasingly concerned about their funds being invested in destructive and unethical industries and super funds need to respond.  https://www.michaelwest.com.au/disarmament-treaty-drops-bomb-on-super-funds-investing-in-nuclear-weapons/

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November 2, 2020 - Posted by Christina MacPherson | AUSTRALIA - NATIONAL, business, weapons and war

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1.This month

For international nuclear news go to   https://nuclear-news.net   

Please come along to this webinar discussing the Fukushima disaster which is an ongoing disaster that Japan is still pretending to the world is under control.

9 March – WEBINAR.

7 pm Eastern time AAEDT

6.30 pm  Central rime South Australia

6 pm. Weatern Australia

Tuesday, March 9 at 10am Ramallah | 1:30pm Delhi | 3pm Jakarta | 5pm Tokyo | 7pm Melbourne
Language: English
 
Guest Speakers: Ayumi Fukakusa, Climate Change and Energy campaigner,
FoE Japan, Kirsten Blair Gundjeihmi Aboriginal Corporation,, and Dr. Philip White,
Friends of the Earth Adelaide and author of the PhD thesis ‘Fukushima disaster and Japan’s energy policy.’
Register  http://bit.ly/2OdUwEs

 

 

 

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26 Feb – 24 April The Image is not Nothing (Concrete Archives)  is a group exhibition that explores the ways in which acts of nuclear trauma, Indigenous genocide and cultural erasure have been memorialised by artists and others. It comes as the result of research by curators Lisa Radford and Yhonnie Scarce whose fieldwork has encompassed sites of significance including Auschwitz, Chernobyl, Fukushima, Hiroshima, Maralinga, New York, Wounded Knee and former Yugoslavia.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Submissions to the  Senate Committee Inquiry into National Radioactive Management Amendment Bill.   2020.  Go to our summaries of significant submissions, conveniently listed in alphabetical order at Kimba waste dump submissions   or see all submissions listed at Read the Submissions

 

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