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The Tufts Daily
Where you read it first | Monday, April 29, 2024

Why we can't take no for an answer

"This is the year to take action on climate change. There are no more excuses," Jim Yong Kim, current President of the World Bank, proclaimed at this year's World Economic Forum in Davos. "We can divest [from carbon-intensive assets]," he continued, saying that investing in the fossil fuel industry betrays investors' "responsibility to future pension holders who will be affected by decisions made today."

Less than three weeks later, Tufts University's Board of Trustees voted not to divest from fossil fuels, citing, "significant anticipated negative impact on Tufts' endowment." 

As part of President Monaco's Tufts Divestment Working Group, it quickly became clear to us that the group had not convened to have an "open discussion" about the possibility of divestment from fossil fuels, as President Monaco claimed. Instead, it existed to generate financial models supporting the administration's expectation that it was financially impossible. 

In one of our committee meetings, Patricia Campbell, the executive vice president of our university, said that divestment could indeed be feasible -- but it was clear to us that the administration wasn't willing to consider the changes to Tufts' investment strategy that it would entail. The working group identified fossil-fuel free money managers that were willing to help Tufts take the first steps toward a more ethically-invested endowment. In his Davos address, President Kim said, "Corporate leaders should not wait to act until market signals are right and national investment policies are in place," challenging administrators' claims that Tufts should wait for the carbon bubble to burst before taking action.

Meanwhile, many corporate and institutional leaders are already taking leadership. Mayors of cities including Seattle, Madison and our own Somerville are pursuing divestment. Norwegian financial services firm Storebrand, which controls more than $60 billion in assets, has announced its intention to pull its investments out of coal and tar sands companies to ensure "long-term stable returns" because they know that those stocks will be "financially worthless" in the future. In January, the CEO of Google joined sixteen other managers of charitable foundations in divesting their assets from the fossil fuel industry. The list goes on.

Our administration and trustees have not joined these other institutions because they are afraid, not because they are unintelligent or misinformed. Perhaps some of our trustees are afraid to consider that the profits they gained from their investments in fossil fuel companies have accumulated at the cost of a stable climate and human lives. We have heard both President Monaco and trustee Laurie Gabriel admit that divestment is the moral choice, but they are afraid to challenge one of the largest, most powerful industries in the history of the world. They are afraid to take leadership.

We, like so many of our fellow students, chose Tufts because we believed it was a place that valued ambitious leadership, bold innovation and active global citizenship. These are the values that Tufts promotes to us throughout its admissions process, in the classroom, and ultimately in the paths we take after graduation. We are expected to lead, make moral choices and improve our society. But the recent announcement that Tufts will not divest showed that our administration is failing to live up to its own values.

In his letter to the Tufts community, President Monaco wrote, "We are committed to meeting ambitious sustainability goals for Tufts' operations," and cited new projects in building energy metering and cogeneration. These are important steps, but compared to the scale and urgency of combating climate change, Tufts' "sustainability goals" are not in any way "ambitious."

We have seen this lack of ambition from our institution many times before. It took forty years for Tufts to create an Africana studies department. It took more than a decade to divest from apartheid South Africa. We don't have a decade now. We do not have the luxury to be anything short of ambitious. Not when too many communities are already fighting for their lives, for clean air to breathe, clean water to drink and food to eat. Not when the fossil fuel industry imperils our generation's ability to live, work and raise children in a stable and just world. 

The student body showed its support for divestment last semester in a referendum. We know that we, the student body, have the moral clarity and ambition that our administration has failed to show. Tufts will not change unless we fight for that change. So we ask that as this campaign moves forward, you stand with us to make Tufts a place that we can be proud of, for the sake of our future.