Divestment

Extinction Rebellion calls out J.P. Morgan’s sponsoring of Docklands 5K as an exercise in image-laundering

The climate rebels embarrass the company by pointing out to event attendees the title sponsor’s status as #1 financier of fossil fuels since the Paris Agreement

Dublin docklands, 16th June 2023: Extinction Rebellion Ireland (XRI) activists made things uncomfortable for J.P. Morgan - title sponsor of the annual docklands 5K run - throughout yesterday evening’s event. About 20 activists wearing bibs saying “JP Morgan, Climate Chaos Champion” and “JP Morgan, Divest from Fossil Fuels" engaged with participants and onlookers about the sponsor’s status as the number one financier of fossil fuels since the signing of the Paris Agreement, with financing totalling $434.1 B from 2016 to 2022 and its huge investments ($17.9 B) in the top 12 major oil and gas expansion companies. Their large, colourful “J.P. Morgan - sponsoring 5Ks and Climate Chaos” banner drew a lot of attention from the runners as they waited for the race to kick off. The slogan contrasted the resources the company pumps into fossil fuels - the main source of the greenhouse gas emissions driving the climate crisis - against sponsorship of a community event as an attempt to launder their image.

Taking care not to impede any runners, the activists handed out leaflets headed “J.P. Morgan sponsoring the escalating climate crisis”. They also chanted “J.P. Morgan pick a side - Divest now or ecocide”. Jeffrey Seathrún Sardina, PhD researcher, XRI activist who competed in the 5K said "Our demand that JP Morgan divest from fossil fuels is, at its core, an act of self-defence. All of nature is under threat, and every euro they put into dirty energy is another attack on the natural world. This needs to stop."

The latest (March 2023) United Nations IPCC report states that “Human-caused climate change is already affecting many weather and climate extremes in every region across the globe” and that “Risks and projected adverse impacts and losses and damages from climate change escalate with every increment of global warming”. 

It states that greenhouse gas emissions from existing fossil fuel infrastructure is already more than enough to push the world beyond 1.5°C of global heating compared with pre-industrial times. This means that no more fossil fuel sources can be opened if we’re to avoid a significantly worsening climate crisis. Three billion people live in areas that are “highly vulnerable” to climate breakdown and half of the global population now experiences severe water scarcity for at least part of the year. It warns that in many areas, “we are already reaching the limit to which we can adapt to such severe changes”. 

Activists requested event-goers sign XRI’s petition calling on the Irish Funds Industry Association to expel J.P. Morgan and 13 other major global banks and asset management companies that are among the top funders of fossil fuels. These include Amundi, BlackRock, BNY Mellon, Invesco, LGIM, State Street, UBS, Vanguard, Bank of America, BNP Paribas, Citi Bank and RBC.

All the proceeds from the event went to Crusaders Athletic Club. XRI will be communicating with the club to ask them to revise their sponsorship policy to exclude companies with ties to development of fossil fuels.  Semi-retired EFL teacher, Art Ó Laoghaire, currently on remand facing charges related to a climate protest in 2019 said, “I ask Crusaders to think in the future, do they want to be part of the solution to the crisis, or part of greenwashing the problem. And with the climate crisis escalating, how long before it gets too hot for athletes to compete in these 5Ks?”

XRI’s Docklands 5K action follows protests earlier this year demanding divestment from fossil fuels at the Dublin offices of BlackRock, J.P. Morgan and Citi bank and at the Irish Funds Global Funds Investment Conference.

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XRI banner displayed as runners approach the finish line

As runners wait to get going, activist holds up “JP Morgan Sponsoring Climate Chaos” sign.

XR activist with her athlete cousin before the race

Getting ready for the 5K - with a message for J.P. Morgan!

Extinction Rebellion stage a die-in outside Irish Funds conference urging the association to expel fossil fuel funders

The funds and asset management industry was established in Ireland over 30 years ago. According to Irish Funds, Ireland is the domicile for 5.9% of world-wide investment fund assets, making it the 3rd largest global centre and the 2nd largest in Europe. Their  website states “To provide European citizens with better opportunities to create a more secure future and enjoy long-term financial well-being, we must unlock and facilitate the flow of capital to empower businesses throughout Europe”. But their members include nine of the ten top investors in major companies in oil and gas expansion - companies like Exxon, Chevron, Conoco and Glencore. Also among Irish Funds members are four of the banks labelled the “Dirty Dozen” in the 2023 Banking on Climate Chaos report. This label is due to their outsized financing of fossil fuels in the years following the Paris Agreement to limit rising global temperatures. These investment companies and banks include Amundi, BlackRock, BNY Mellon, Invesco, J.P. Morgan, LGIM, State Street, UBS,Vanguard, BNP Paribas, Citi Bank and RBC, most of which have offices in Dublin. XRI says that by allowing these tainted companies to continue as members, Irish Funds is legitimising their cannibalisation of the planet.


“No 'Women in Tech' on a Dead Planet” - Extinction Rebellion Ireland disrupts J.P. Morgan networking event

Interrupting a Women in Technology event the activists underscored the bank’s hypocrisy in promoting equality while endangering billions of lives with their fossil fuel investments. 

Video of the protest available to download here

Dublin, 24th March 2023: Yesterday evening, five climate activists with Extinction Rebellion Ireland interrupted the proceedings of J.P. Morgan’s Women in Technology event in their offices at Sir John Rogerson's Quay to highlight the company’s guilt in escalating the climate crisis through J.P. Morgan Chase’s role as the world’s top banker in fossil fuels. They demanded that J.P. Morgan divest from all fossil fuel companies and declared that “There are no women in tech on a dead planet”.

With about 40 mostly young women in attendance and panelists seated on-stage ready for the panel discussion to begin, the five female activists seated around the room stood up in sequence, interrupting the host’s introduction. Each activist made a succinct speech, building the case for why attendees should reject J.P. Morgan as a potential employer. They described J.P. Morgan as “part of the machinery that is funding climate chaos and driving the destruction of our planet”, and emphasized the disproportionate effect of climate disasters on women. They also urged existing employees of the company to demand that their employer divest from all fossil fuel companies. 

After their speeches they chanted “J.P. Morgan pick a side, divest now or ecocide” and made their way to the front of the room where they displayed flags with the Extinction Rebellion logo and signs bearing “Women for Climate Action” and “J.P. Morgan Divest”. Eventually the organisers had no choice but to guide attendees out of the room, relocating the event upstairs. The activists remained to talk to staff about their responsibility in the company, before leaving peacefully.

This week saw the release of the 6th United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Assessment Report (AR6) containing the stark warning that “There is a rapidly closing window of opportunity to secure a liveable and sustainable future for all”. The AR6 Summary for Policymakers states “The choices and actions implemented in this decade will have impacts now and for thousands of years.” It adds that “public and private finance flows for fossil fuels are still greater than those for climate adaptation and mitigation”. 

One of the five activists, UCD student Sineaid Whelan, stated “The message from the world's climate scientists couldn’t be clearer. We must immediately slash emissions if we’re to avoid apocalyptic scenarios of climate catastrophe. With our outbursts at this J.P. Morgan event, we jolted the hosts and attendees out of business as usual. Every one of us can and must stand up to the forces of evil that are driving the climate crisis forward. And J.P. Morgan is one of those forces. More of us must demand that they divest from fossil fuel companies.”

According to the Banking on Climate Chaos 2022 report, J.P Morgan invested USD 382.4 billion in fossil fuels in the period 2016-2021, beating out the next biggest financier of fossil fuels by 35%. Their financing in that five year period included USD 225.71 million in the Adani Group which owns the Carmichael coal project - an enormous fossil fuel project violating Indigenous Rights in central Queensland in Australia. In that period they also financed Gazprom, the Russian majority state-owned energy corporation and fossil fuel giant Exxon Mobil Corporation to the tune of USD 4.6 billion and USD 15.3 billion respectively. 

Yet sustainability features prominently on J.P. Morgan’s website. Their stated sustainability commitments include a goal of “transitioning to a low-carbon economy”. However, the company increased their fossil financing by $10 billion between 2020 and 2021. In her speech at the event, Emer Connolly of Drumcondra highlighted the company’s greenwashing. In a statement she said “J.P. Morgan claim they’re taking climate action, but this is pure greenwashing because, of all the banks, they are by far the biggest funder of fossil fuels.“

Other activists at the event pointed out the double-standard of J.P. Morgan trying to attract women to the company, when women make up the majority of the world’s poor and are disproportionately impacted by climate change that is driven in large part by the company’s investments in fossil fuels. They also pointed out estimates that 80% of people displaced by climate change are women - which leads to violence, sexual violence & human trafficking.

Student Síofra Byrne, Dublin said “This is what we know. Fossil fuel emissions are causing climate change. Climate change is endangering the lives of billions of women. J.P. Morgan is funding those fossil fuels. And their answer is to hire more women? If you want the world to be a better place for women then stop setting it on fire.”

Extinction Rebellion Blocks Entrance To Blackrock Asset Management Offices In Action Demanding Fossil Fuel Divestment

Says the company’s fossil fuel investments are escalating the climate crisis


Ballsbridge, Dublin, Mon 27th February, 12pm: As the first step in its nonviolent civil-disobedience 2023 campaign, Extinction Rebellion Ireland (XRI) have taken action against the world's largest asset management company, BlackRock, at the Ballsbridge offices of its Irish subsidiary - to demand that BlackRock stops all new investment in fossil fuels. Activists blocked the main entrance of the building and displayed a banner with the message “BlackRock Divest from Fossil Fuel Ecocide”. 


As of December 2021, BlackRock, a New York Stock Exchange-listed company manages a staggering $10 trillion of other people's money. That’s more than the gross domestic product of every country in the world, except for the US and China. Among the 30 major global asset management companies active in Europe, BlackRock has the largest holdings ($133,466,000) in major oil and gas companies engaged in expansion projects. The company is also the joint biggest bondholder of coal companies with expansion plans.

To coincide with this action, Extinction Rebellion Ireland (XRI) have released an ‘Address to the Nation’. In this video, the group calls on the public to join them in the fight against the climate crisis and demand the change needed.


“The fact that new investments are still being made in fossil fuels at this stage of the climate crisis is obscene. BlackRock is actively profiting from a business that is destroying our collective future. Millions of people are already suffering from extreme weather events & food and water scarcity caused by their greed and short-sightedness. Meanwhile, BlackRock's profits have been rising year on year” said UCD student and XRI activist Sineaid Whelan.

“Every tenth of a degree of warming matters in this climate crisis” said Manuel Salazar from XRI, adding, “We are in a critical time window now where we must urgently act to avoid a level of warming that leads to the worst case scenarios of climate catastrophe. And we can’t just stand by and allow giant, wealthy corporations like BlackRock to jeopardise our chances.”


The activists also wanted to draw attention to “BlackRock’s blatant greenwashing and hypocrisy”, as Sineaid Whelan put it. Blackrock is a member of the Institutional Investors Group on Climate Change (IIGCC) and Climate Action 100+, an investor-led initiative to ensure the world’s largest corporate greenhouse gas emitters take necessary action on climate change. It is also a member of  Glasgow Financial Alliance for Net Zero. However, as recently as October, 2022, in a statement to a British parliamentary committee, the company blatantly stated that it will not stop investing in coal, oil and gas. When asked by the committee about its policy on its fossil fuel holdings, BlackRock told the UK committee that it “expected to remain long-term investors on behalf of clients in carbon-intensive sectors”. A recent ShareAction report found that BlackRock voted against 88% of shareholder resolutions on climate change and climate-related lobbying in 2019/2020. BlackRock has the second worst voting record on climate proposals among the 37 CA100+ companies included in this report.

“Their membership of these groups would lead you to believe that BlackRock cares about stopping the funding of the fossil fuels that are driving climate change. But no, they are trying to have their cake and eat it - appearing on the one hand to care, but when it comes right down to it, refusing to pull the plug on fossil fuel investments. We must stand up to this duplicity.” said protestor Angela Deegan, a retired I.T. worker. 

Protest participant and TCD student, Emer Connolly, stated “With this action, we are demanding a stop to the madness that is investing in fossil fuels”, adding “Governments, fossil fuel companies, and investors in fossil fuel companies must all be held to account if we’re to succeed in slashing greenhouse gas emissions. Extinction Rebellion regularly protests the Irish Government’s lack of adequate climate policies and poor enforcement of climate regulations and demands that fossil fuel companies change their business models away from fossil fuel extraction. With this action today, we’re now holding the biggest investor in fossil fuels to account.” Indeed, following pressure from protests by environmental groups around the world, in 2020, BlackRock agreed to dump certain thermal coal shares from its actively managed portfolios. 


XRI demands the following of BlackRock Asset Management:

  • Make fossil fuel expansion a redline in your investment and engagement policies and strategies.

  • Establish time-bound demands for fossil fuel companies to stop developing new coal, oil and gas projects, phase down production and adopt short term absolute emission reduction targets.

  • Announce sanctions and exclusions for companies that choose not to respond to these demands. 


XRI appeal to BlackRock employees:

“Investment in fossil fuels is not only short-sighted but also misses investment opportunities in the renewable energy sector,” said activist and Administrative Assistant, Cría Barry, “If you have savings or pension investments, make sure you ask questions about where they are invested. Asset management companies like BlackRock must stop bankrolling the climate and biodiversity crises. We cannot allow greed for short term profits to be prioritised over the planet’s viability for human and non-human life. There’s no life on a black rock”

XRI rebels Pavels and Sineaid block the front doors of BlackRock, Ballsbridge

XRI rebels Pavels and Sineaid block the front doors of BlackRock, Ballsbridge


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