Industry Voice: ESG story - Turning climate change talk into action
A closer look at what Aviva Investors is doing to help tackle climate change.
Aviva Investors Right now we are facing a man‐made disaster of global scale, our greatest threat in thousands of years: climate change. David Attenborough
More people than ever are realising how serious climate change is, as well as understanding the role we all play in finding solutions. It is no surprise then that investors are asking how asset managers are addressing the issue; both as a company and in terms of the assets that they manage.
Author of the article: Calgary Herald
Publishing date: May 17, 2021  â¢Â 4 hours ago  â¢Â 3 minute read  â¢Â Workers walk between solar cell panels over the water surface of Sirindhorn Dam in Ubon Ratchathani, Thailand on April 8, 2021. Canada has the potential to be a world leader in renewable energy, says Nigel Topping, UN High-Level Champion for Climate Action for the COP26 climate summit in Glasgow in November. Photo by PRAPAN CHANKAEW /REUTERS
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Like the rest of the world, Canada faces a choice: ramp up the race to a healthy, resilient zero-emissions economy and drive a faster recovery from COVID-19, or stick with the same tenuous economic system that led us into this global health and economic crisis.
Author of the article: Calgary Herald
Publishing date: May 17, 2021  â¢Â 4 hours ago  â¢Â 3 minute read  â¢Â Workers walk between solar cell panels over the water surface of Sirindhorn Dam in Ubon Ratchathani, Thailand on April 8, 2021. Canada has the potential to be a world leader in renewable energy, says Nigel Topping, UN High-Level Champion for Climate Action for the COP26 climate summit in Glasgow in November. Photo by PRAPAN CHANKAEW /REUTERS
Article content
Like the rest of the world, Canada faces a choice: ramp up the race to a healthy, resilient zero-emissions economy and drive a faster recovery from COVID-19, or stick with the same tenuous economic system that led us into this global health and economic crisis.
Like the rest of the world, Canada faces a choice: ramp up the race to a healthy, resilient zero-emissions economy and drive a faster recovery from COVID-19, or stick with the same tenuous economic system that led us into this global health and economic crisis. The answer, in hockey terms: go where the puck is going rather than where it has been. That’s the route to competitive advantage. Prime Minister Justin Trudeau took a step forward in.