Charities urged to take part in consultation to tackle corporate air pollution

Charities are being urged to take part in a consultation on ways corporate air pollution can be tackled through investor action.

The consultation is being launched by investment management firm CCLA and Guy’s & St Thomas’ Foundation, which is also calling on academics and businesses to take part.

Their views will be used to produce a report with recommendations for corporate action on air pollution.

This includes developing a benchmark for corporates on pollution “aimed at creating transparent comparisons of companies managing of air pollution, alongside a structured investor engagement initiative”, say the hospital charity and investment management firm.

The consultation opens this week and runs until mid-December.

CCLA and Guy’s & St Thomas’ Foundation cite recent research into the impact of air pollution including Health Effects Institute findings that air pollution is the second leading global risk factor for death after high blood pressure. It is now more of a risk than tobacco use and poor diet, the Institute found.

Also, around 3.8bn working days will be lost due to air pollution by 2060, according to the World Economic Forum.

Guy’s & St Thomas’ Foundation’s endowment investment engagement director Matt Lomas said: “The air we breathe matters for all of us. Air quality should be a concern for investors given the impact poor air quality has on people, planet and increasingly businesses as companies’ contributions become more understood.

“We know that by working together as investors we can work with companies to reduce their negative impacts on the environment and health.

“Alongside CCLA we are calling on investors and businesses to come together to put air pollution on their sustainability agendas.

“We believe that via collaboration we can take meaningful action, and in doing so, have a significant positive impact for people and planet as well as business resilience.”



Share Story:

Recent Stories


Charity Times video Q&A: In conversation with Hilda Hayo, CEO of Dementia UK
Charity Times editor, Lauren Weymouth, is joined by Dementia UK CEO, Hilda Hayo to discuss why the charity receives such high workplace satisfaction results, what a positive working culture looks like and the importance of lived experience among staff. The pair talk about challenges facing the charity, the impact felt by the pandemic and how it's striving to overcome obstacles and continue to be a highly impactful organisation for anybody affected by dementia.
Charity Times Awards 2023

Mitigating risk and reducing claims
The cost-of-living crisis is impacting charities in a number of ways, including the risks they take. Endsleigh Insurance’s* senior risk management consultant Scott Crichton joins Charity Times to discuss the ramifications of prioritising certain types of risk over others, the financial implications risk can have if not managed properly, and tips for charities to help manage those risks.

* Coming soon… Howden, the new name for Endsleigh.