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Animal welfare campaigners call on council pension fund to drop £5.5m investments

News | Saul Cooke-Black - Local Democracy Reporting Service | Published: 10:54, Tuesday January 25th, 2022.
Last updated: 10:54, Tuesday January 25th, 2022

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Caerphilly Council's headquarters in Tredomen
Caerphilly Council’s headquarters in Tredomen

Animal welfare campaigners have called for a local government pension scheme run by Torfaen council to drop £5.5 million of investments in livestock companies.

The Greater Gwent (Torfaen) pension fund, whose members include staff from Torfaen, Monmouthshire, Newport, Blaenau Gwent and Caerphilly County Borough councils, is amongst the top ten in the UK for investing in industrial livestock companies, according to research by environmental campaign group, Feedback and animal rights organisation, World Animal Protection.

Why is Caerphilly in Gwent?

Caerphilly County Borough was formed on April 1, 1996, by the merger of the Rhymney Valley district of Mid Glamorgan with the Islwyn borough of Gwent.

Administratively, for local services such as the police and health, the borough now falls under a wider region referred to as Gwent. This comprises the council areas of Caerphilly, Newport, Torfaen, Blaenau Gwent and Monmouthshire.

Figures from Freedom of Information requests show ten local authority pension funds hold almost half of total investments in livestock companies, worth £110.6 million, including West Midlands, Swansea, Strathclyde, Clwyd South Yorkshire, Durham and Greater Gwent.

The Greater Gwent pension fund’s investments of £5.5 million in livestock companies including Tyson Foods and WH Group, is the tenth highest in the UK.

Campaigners say major industrial livestock companies like WH Group, based in China, and Tyson Foods, based in the US, have been linked to a series of environmental, public health and animal welfare concerns.

Martin Bowman, senior campaigner at Feedback, said: “Industrial livestock corporations are simply not compatible with a climate-safe future and like fossil fuels, have no place in the pension portfolio of a climate-conscious local authority.

“We’re calling on councils to divest their bonds and shares in these companies, so public money is not being used to fuel climate change, future pandemic risk, human rights abuses, deforestation and species loss which put the future security of pensions, people and planet under threat.”


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Lindsay Duncan, farming campaign manager at World Animal Protection, said public funds “should be used to invest in our future not to jeopardise it”.

“We urge local authorities to consider all aspects of harmful factory farming including poor welfare, deforestation, species loss and the devastating effects of climate change,” she said.

“To ensure a future that is fit for everybody in the UK we need to invest responsibly in our food system. That means investing in sustainable industries that address the issues facing our planet, not those exacerbating them.”

A Torfaen council spokesman said the Gwent pension fund has “taken steps to cut the carbon footprint of its equity investments and aims to achieve net zero” in accordance with government targets.

“On top of reducing its carbon footprint, the pension fund is also committed to investment in renewable and sustainable solutions,” the spokesman said.

“Since 2020, the pension fund has committed £70 million towards sustainable infrastructure opportunities including renewable energy, energy storage, waste recycling, biodiversity and land regeneration.”

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