Investors weigh environmental, social risks of coal seam gasBY RACHEL ALEMBAKIS | FRIDAY, 4 NOV 2011 7:03AMThe mining of coal seam gas has never been more prominent in Australia, and institutional investors are weighing the environmental, social and political risks of being invested in companies with exposures to coal seam gas operations. While there are potential financial returns for projects mining natural gas from coal seam pockets in New South Wales and Queensland, institutional investors with long term time horizons have to balance those returns against the environmental risks of the mining process, particularly to water supplies, the risk of new and more costly regulation, and the social and reputational risks that come as stakeholders raise objections to coal seam gas. Related News |
Editor's Choice
Green Moves: ACSI, PRI, HOPE Housing
|PRI chief executive steps down, while ACSI strengthens its ESG team with a Greenfluence founder and HOPE Housing hires a director to raise capital.
Industry fund dumps sustainable option
|Prime Super will remove the SRI Balanced option from its investments lineup, citing its poor performance.
Proposals against ESG, DEI to increase: Proxy advisor
Shareholder engagement is likely to change this year, ISS-Corporate says.
Australians reject net zero targets, polling claims
|New polling suggests Australians are still not convinced a move to net zero is in their best interests, much preferring the government focus on affordability and reliability.