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United States House committee targets another financier environment group

The Republicanled U.S. Home of Agents Judiciary Committee is seeking information from some 60 U.S. asset managers about their participation with an financier environment group, adding pressure against environmental efforts by big financiers.

Letters sent out on Friday to members of the Net No Property Managers effort, or NZAM, were signed by committee Chairman Jim Jordan and Agent Thomas Massie. They made claims in line with a committee report launched on Dec. 13 that Republican politicians state revealed fund firms colluded to cut emissions. The committee's Democrats have dismissed such claims, and huge fund companies have denied similar charges.

Representatives for companies that received the letter including BlackRock, State Street and JPMorgan Asset Management did not immediately comment when called late on Friday.

Republicans formerly have actually taken credit for prompting those three fund managers to go back from another financier group, the Climate Action 100+.

NZAM says it is an international group with more than 325 signatories managing $57.5 trillion, according to its site. Members pledge to support the goal of net zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050, utilizing influence such as how they vote their proxies at corporate conferences.

The letters from Jordan and Massie state that business' efforts with NZAM and the affiliated Glasgow Financial Alliance for Net No may break U.S. antitrust law, mentioning the earlier report. They ask for information such as how business' participation in NZAM changed their stewardship strategies.

Mindy Lubber, CEO of Boston-based ecological advocacy group Ceres, an organizing partner of NZAM, said in an interview that the letters were consistent with other efforts to suggest that financiers ought not to think about climate threat, when of course they should be aware of environment risk as part of their fiduciary responsibility.

(source: Reuters)