Investing in BlackRock 'a clear conflict of interest,' hurts West Virginians, treasurer says
WATCH NOW: Investing in BlackRock hurts West Virginians, treasurer says, ‘a clear conflict of interest’
West Virginia Treasurer pulls banking contracts from BlackRock over anti-energy concerns.
Investing in BlackRock would be "a clear conflict of interest" since the firm aims to cut the greenhouse gas emissions of its portfolio to net-zero, West Virginia Treasurer Riley Moore told Fox News.
The West Virginia Board of Treasury Investments will no longer use BlackRock for banking transactions, Moore announced Monday. He said the decision was made since BlackRock "has urged companies to embrace ‘net zero’ investment strategies," which he said hurts West Virginians.
"There's a clear conflict of interest here to hand over tax dollars generated from coal and gas to a financial institution that wants to destroy those very industries in which they're reaping dollars from," Moore told Fox News.
BlackRock, the world's largest asset manager with nearly $10 trillion under its management, announced in 2021 that it is "committed to supporting the goal of net zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050 or sooner."
WATCH NOW:
WATCH NOW: Investing in BlackRock hurts West Virginians, treasurer says, ‘a clear conflict of interest’
West Virginia Treasurer pulls banking contracts from BlackRock over anti-energy concerns.
WEST VIRGINIA DUMPS BLACKROCK FUND OVER ANTI-ENERGY STANCE
"What does that mean? That means no fossil fuels," Moore told Fox News.
"So why are we going to hand those dollars over to the same people that want to destroy our industries? That doesn't make sense," Moore continued. "We're not going to pay for our own destruction."
In a Jan. 17 letter to investors, BlackRock CEO Larry Fink said the firm "does not pursue divestment from oil and gas companies as a policy."
Coal and energy production are the lifelines of the Mountain State's economy, Charleston residents told Fox News.
"All you have to do is go in your yard and go down a foot, you're going to find coal," one West Virginia resident, Anthony, told Fox News, "Coal is West Virginia's bread and butter."
A West Virginia woman told Fox News: "A lot of our stuff that we have here runs on coal."