Tackling climate change is key impact priority
Issue portrayed as both a risk to address, opportunity to invest
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Fiona Reynolds said U.N. PRI’s 4,000 signatories around the world overwhelmingly cite climate as their No. 1 issue.
Impact investing can mean many different things to different asset owners, depending on their investment priorities. For the nearly 4,000 global signatories to the Principles for Responsible Investment, the United Nations-supported organization representing more than half of the world s institutionally managed assets, the No. 1 issue is climate change, said PRI CEO Fiona Reynolds. They see both risk and opportunity, said Ms. Reynolds, who is based in London.
Fiona Reynolds will leave after nearly nine years to return to her native Australia.
Fiona Reynolds has announced she is stepping down as CEO of the United Nations Principles for Responsible Investment (PRI). She said she intends to return to her native Australia after living in the UK for nearly nine years.
The PRI is a United Nations-supported international network of investors working to implement six investment principles that incorporate environmental, social, and governance (ESG) issues into investment analysis and decisionmaking. Reynolds leaves PRI after more than eight years, helping it grow from a staff of just 37 with a little more than 1,000 signatories in 2013, to a staff of 170 and nearly 4,000 signatories, representing in aggregate more than half the world’s institutional assets.
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