Search Results | Showing 21 - 28 of 28 results for "nuclear energy" |
| | | ... criteria." Exclusions include tobacco, gambling, alcohol, defence and weapons, fur, genetically modified crops, nuclear energy, oil sands and thermal coal. "QS Investors has an excellent long-term track record in the management of global equity portfolios," ... |
| | | | ... pose significant environmental social and governance risks, including gambling, tobacco, armaments, uranium and nuclear energy, destruction of valuable environments, animal cruelty, chemicals of concern, mandatory detention of asylum seekers, alcohol ... |
| | | | ... alcohol and gambling. The RIAA survey also found significant increases in exclusions focused on human rights and nuclear energy. "That really reflects this increasing client/consumer demand," O'Connor said. "There is a strong signal from consumers that ... |
| | | | ... companies with a material exposure to high carbon-sensitive activities and has opened the door to investing in nuclear energy. LGS CEO Peter Lambert LGS recently completed the review of its negative screening methodology, which result in changes that ... |
| | | | ... the question of "pariah tenants" - tenants that work in alcohol, tobacco, pornography, gambling, armaments and nuclear energy. The equity research team spoke with the REITs about their approach to the ethical impacts of their tenants. "The approaches ... |
| | | | ... not invest in companies which exhibit high ESG risk, or who derive significant revenue from armaments, logging, nuclear energy, gambling and tobacco. "This is another step towards LGS developing and implementing innovative strategies that manage or mitigate ... |
| | | | ... to the benchmark -countries like US and Japan. The reason that we're underweight Japan is the high reliance on nuclear energy and the bad debt situation. Japan is an interesting one. Demographics come into play - the gap between young and the old isn't ... |
| | | | ... was higher than coal at 16.7% and coal seam gas at 15.7%. "What that tells me is that people look at it and say nuclear energy is a viable opportunity," Hale said. "What interests me, from an investment point of view, does that mean that Australians ... |
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