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Dutch insurer NN Group expects to bring forward coal investment exit

By:
Reuters
Published: May 26, 2022, 15:52 UTC

By Jessica DiNapoli DAVOS, Switzerland (Reuters) - NN Group NV expects to accelerate its deadline to exit coal investments, now set at 2030, due to fears about Europe reverting to burning the fossil fuel, the Dutch insurer's CEO David Knibbe said on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum.

General view of Wujek Coal Mine is seen during sunset in Katowice

By Jessica DiNapoli

DAVOS, Switzerland (Reuters) – NN Group NV expects to accelerate its deadline to exit coal investments, now set at 2030, due to fears about Europe reverting to burning the fossil fuel, the Dutch insurer’s CEO David Knibbe said on the sidelines of the World Economic Forum.

“We do run the risk because of a lack of gas and oil that it is being replaced by coal produced in other European countries,” Knibbe told Reuters in Davos on Wednesday.

“Geopolitically we understand the sanctions, but from a carbon footprint, that is not a good thing,” Knibbe said.

Knibbe said the insurer had not yet decided on the new deadline for phasing out its coal investments.

World leaders gathered in Davos this week worried that market gyrations would disrupt the transition to green energy and that companies would fail to meet their goals to reach net zero in the coming decades. Some countries have already turned to coal to meet their energy needs.

NN Group, with roughly 200 billion euros in assets under management ($214 billion), is also making its definition of a company involved in coal stricter, Knibbe said, so that even those with small exposure could be subject to divestment.

Climate activists have long lobbied investors to back away from supporting the heavily polluting coal industry.

“We cannot engage on everything, but coal is high on our list as an engagement topic,” Knibbe said, adding that the longer it takes to reduce carbon footprints, the more the insurance industry would have to charge for insurance.

“The longer it takes … we will see the premiums increase,” he said.

(Reporting by Jessica DiNapoli in Davos; Editing by Alexander Smith)

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