The Board, which up to 2022 led engagement with Shell on behalf of the CA100+ climate-focussed investor group, has around 1.35 million pounds ($1.72 million) invested in Shell of its total 3.2 billion pounds in investments.
“The Church will follow not just the science, but our faith – both of which call us to work for climate justice,” Justin Welby, the Archbishop of Canterbury, said in a statement.
The Pensions Board said in its statement it would no longer prioritise engagement with the oil and gas sector on climate change and would instead refocus its efforts on reshaping the demand for oil and gas from sectors such as the auto industry.
Shell aims to reduce carbon emissions to net zero by 2050 and has set several short and medium-term emission intensity targets, but has so far rejected calls to set 2030 goals to reduce absolute emissions.
A Shell spokesperson said the Church funds’ decisions were “disappointing, but not surprising”, adding Shell believed it was Paris-aligned.
“At the same time, we are clearly focused on capital discipline, enhanced performance and delivering shareholder value,” the Shell spokesperson said.
This year, the Board voted against Shell’s chair and directors over climate concerns and in favour of an activist shareholder resolution asking Shell to set Paris-aligned emissions targets for 2030, which received 20% support.
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