Allianz, AXA and SCOR quit UN climate alliance as insurers hold talks

    • Allianz says in an emailed statement on Thursday that it has decided to leave the NZIA and says it will stick to its own climate goals.
    • Allianz says in an emailed statement on Thursday that it has decided to leave the NZIA and says it will stick to its own climate goals. PHOTO: REUTERS
    Published Fri, May 26, 2023 · 12:30 AM

    A UN-convened climate alliance for insurers was holding talks on Thursday (May 25) to decide if it had a future after three more companies – Allianz, AXA and SCOR – quit in the face of growing political opposition in the US.

    Of the eight founding members of the Net-Zero Insurance Alliance (NZIA), which launched in 2021, at least five have now left. AXA Group chief risk officer Renaud Guidée had chaired the alliance but the French insurer said in a statement it was leaving to “continue its individual sustainability journey.”

    NZIA is part of the Glasgow Financial Alliance for Net Zero set up by UN climate envoy Mark Carney and it requires members to commit to reducing their greenhouse gas emissions.

    The group has been buffeted by growing political opposition from some Republicans in the US, who say the group could be violating antitrust laws.

    This month 23 US state attorneys general told NZIA members that the group’s targets and requirements appeared to violate both federal and state antitrust laws. They gave insurers a month to respond in a May 15 letter seen by Reuters.

    Swiss Re announced its exit on Monday, following Munich Re, Zurich Insurance and Hannover Re in leaving. All of these insurers have significant US business or exposure.

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    Allianz said in an emailed statement on Thursday it had decided to leave the NZIA, and said it would stick to its own climate goals.

    SCOR’s new CEO announced its exit at its annual general meeting earlier on Thursday. A spokesman for SCOR declined to provide any reason for the departure.

    Legal experts have told Reuters that it would be difficult to make a legal case using antitrust rules against a company collaborating on tackling climate change through an alliance. But the political backlash in parts of the US had made insurers particularly sensitive to such accusations, they say.

    Lloyd’s chief executive John Neal told Reuters on Wednesday the alliance needed to make its membership rules less prescriptive or risk falling apart. REUTERS

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