Consider Climate-driven Investments

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Activism & Education

Impact

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Free

Do your financial investments align with your values? Are your investments or other financial actions supporting activities that contribute to the climate emergency (such as extractive activity of fossil fuel companies), or are your investments supporting the clean energy transition?

First, some relatively new terms:

• ESG = a system to measure the sustainability of a company or investment in three categories: Environmental, Social, and Governance. ESG is also referred to as socially responsible (SR) investing, sustainable investing, or impact investing. 

• ETF = an exchange-traded fund; “ETFs are similar to mutual funds, except that ETFs tend to have lower expenses, have no minimum holding period, and are bought and sold at any point during a trading session — not just at the end of the day.” (Investopedia).

• Green Bond = a type of sustainable fixed income investment that provides funds for climate and environmental projects undertaken by governments, utilities, or others (i.e., not for company equity purposes). Green bonds can have similar credit ratings to other bond issues (Investopedia). Green bonds, and funds that specialize in them, are a relatively new development.

A large and growing number of mutual funds and ETFs with environmentally and/or socially responsible investing mandates are now available, in addition to individual stocks that may qualify as ESG investing vehicles.

Like all financial investments, sustainable investments come with risks and are not guaranteed as bank accounts are (to the limits of FDIC provisions). It is important to research climate-friendly investing options (read each prospectus, weigh the risks, evaluate fees) before investing.

Disclaimer: Energize Acton and MassEnergize are not investment advisers, nor do we provide financial planning, legal, or tax advice. Nothing in our communications or materials shall constitute or be construed as investment advice or investment recommendations.

Steps to Take

1. Learn about sustainable investing and find out which mutual funds or ETFs are aligned with your values. Talk to a financial advisor or other qualified financial professional who specializes in sustainable investing. If you don’t have an advisor and are new to sustainable investing, this article by Nerd Wallet, “ESG Investing: What It Is and How to Get Started,” is a good primer. See also the Fossil Free Funds website.

2. When evaluating climate-friendly investments you may want to take into account the following factors: (a) percent of assets linked with fossil fuels; (b) overall carbon footprint (in metric tons of CO2 or CO2 equivalents per dollars invested); and (c) percent of assets invested in clean-energy solutions. 

3. Consider your daily financial activities. Are the purchases you make on a daily basis as an investment toward a net-zero carbon emissions future? Are you using a credit card offered by a large bank/institution that funds the fossil fuel industry? Is your monthly energy bill supporting clean energy development in the North East (via Acton Power Choice GREEN)? Can you sign up for a farm share to support local and organic or sustainably managed farms? Consider “investing” in green-energy home upgrades such as solar panels, electric heating and cooling (e.g., heat pumps to replace oil or natural gas), energy efficient appliances and lighting — all of which can yield long-term savings for both your financial bottom line and the planet! Find more tips via Energize Acton Actions.

Energize Acton is not an investment adviser, nor do we provide financial planning, legal, or tax advice. Nothing in our communications or materials shall constitute or be construed as investment advice or investment recommendations.​

Deep Dive

Energize Acton and MassEnergize are not investment advisers nor do we provide financial planning, legal, or tax advice. Nothing in our communications or materials shall constitute or be construed as investment advice or investment recommendations.

Testimonials

Wanting my investments to reflect my values, I was disturbed to realize much of my money was unintentially supporting oil companies. An easy change was…
Clean investments have helped my conscience and my pocket book
Submitted by: Paul Reisberg

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