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Work underway to install solar panels on the roof of King's College chapel, Cambridge University
Cambridge University has a huge investment portfolio, the management fees for which are thought to be about £10m a year. Photograph: Justin Tallis/AFP/Getty Images
Cambridge University has a huge investment portfolio, the management fees for which are thought to be about £10m a year. Photograph: Justin Tallis/AFP/Getty Images

Cambridge University reportedly could drop Barclays in favour of greener bank

This article is more than 4 months old

UK lender is a major European funder of oil and gas projects and university has said it does not want to back fossil fuel expansion

Cambridge University could cut ties with Barclays after more than 200 years over the bank’s refusal to stop financing new oil and gas projects, according to the Financial Times.

It reported that Cambridge is looking for an institution with robust climate policies to manage “several hundred million pounds” in cash and money market funds – a mandate expected to cover more than £200m in assets and generate about £10m in fees a year.

The university said it was “exploring opportunities to find financial products that do not finance fossil fuel expansion” as part of its “net zero engagement strategy with the banking sector”.

Though Barclays has provided financing to the university for centuries, the bank was also the top European funder of fossil fuels between 2016 and 2022, according to a report by the Rainforest Action Network.

In September, Leeds University switched to Lloyds because it “has the lowest fossil fuel investments of any of the major UK banks”.

Cambridge’s students and staff have been demanding a greener lender and the university has already pledged to divest its £3.5bn endowment from all direct and indirect investments in fossil fuels by 2030.

“We’re dealing with people who are likely going to be leaders of tomorrow,” a college bursar told the Financial Times. “And the biggest of their concerns is climate change.”

More on this story

More on this story

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  • Axing of Cambridge mixed choir ‘regressive move for women’, say supporters

  • Barclays to cut costs by £2bn, raising fears of further job losses

  • BBC rejects charge of elitist Oxbridge bias in University Challenge

  • Bank of England governor predicts UK recession will be ‘very small’, as MPs push for interest rate cuts – as it happened

  • Cambridge college to create fellowship to examine slavery links

  • Tesco to sell bulk of banking business to Barclays for £700m

  • Jason Arday to become youngest ever black professor at Cambridge

  • UK students launch Barclays ‘career boycott’ over bank’s climate policies

  • Cambridge University students vote for completely vegan menus

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