"SNB, stop financing our destruction," she said. But a move to reprimand the SNB's bank council over the investments failed, with only 0.8% of shareholders supporting the move. SNB Chairman Thomas Jordan said the central bank took climate change seriously but should not be distracted from its primary goal of ensuring price stability. The SNB has already excluded companies that use primarily coal to produce energy, he said, but had not exited oil and gas companies totally because there was no consensus in Switzerland to support such a move. ($1 = 0.8952 Swiss francs) (Reporting by John Revill Editing by Mark Potter)
Messaging: john.revill.thomsonreuters.com@reuters.net)) BERN, April 27 (Reuters) - The Swiss National Bank (SNB)
on Friday rejected requests from environmental activists to
alter its investment policy and quit investments in companies
they say pollute the planet.
Around a hundred campaigners gathered outside the SNB's
annual general meeting in Bern on Friday, triggering tight
security at the event.
Around 170 protesters also bought SNB shares, allowing them
to speak against the central bank's investments in companies
such as Shell, ExxonMobil, Chevron, Duke Energy and
TotalEnergies.
The SNB has stakes in these companies after investing nearly
200 billion Swiss francs ($223 billion) in foreign stocks with
newly created money during a long campaign to weaken the franc.
"The SNB is a big investor in many companies linked to
climate change and can use this to influence them," said Jonas
Kampus, a member of Climate Alliance Switzerland.
"We want them to use its voice or sell its shares. The
climate emergency is real and we cannot afford to ignore it."
Hilda Nakabuye, a Ugandan climate change activist, said a
pipeline project led by TotalEnergies had created a climate
emergency in her country.
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