Skip to main content

Investors for Canada’s pension plan double down on oil

Julie Segal, senior program manager of climate finance at Environmental Defence, says to have a credible net-zero plan, CPPIB would have to cut emissions arising from its investments in half by 2030. Photo submitted by Julie Segal

Support strong Canadian climate journalism for 2025

Help us raise $150,000 by December 31. Can we count on your support?
Goal: $150k
$32k

A U.S. company partly owned by the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board (CPPIB) has made a massive investment in increased oil production.

Civitas Resources announced this week it will spend $6.2 billion to increase its oil production by 60 per cent. The CPPIB, which is responsible for investing the assets of the Canada Pension Plan, has a 21 per cent ownership stake in the company.

Reuters reported Civitas Resources would acquire oil and gas operations in the southwestern United States’ Permian Basin managed by private equity firm NGP Energy Capital Management.

The news has outraged Canadian climate groups, who say doubling down on oil production defies the CPPIB's net-zero emissions commitment and puts millions of Canadians' retirement savings at risk.

The International Energy Agency and the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change say there can be no investment in new fossil fuel projects if there is any hope to limit the global temperature increase to 1.5 C by mid-century.

CPPIB-owned Civitas Resources’ massive increase in oil production comes just three months after the pension board’s acquisition of a 49 per cent stake in Aera Energy, California’s second-largest oil and gas producer. #CPPIB #NetZero.

“As Canadians from coast to coast choke on smoke, evacuate their homes and suffer through the worst wildfire season on record, the CPPIB is allowing its growing portfolio of fossil fuel companies to spend $6.2 billion to acquire 335 million barrels of oil in Texas and Mexico,” says Patrick DeRochie, senior manager at Shift Action for Pension Wealth and Planet Health (SHIFT), an advocacy group. “The CPPIB is risking our national retirement fund on stranded assets and investing in a future of ever-worsening climate disaster.”

CPPIB-owned Civitas’ massive increase in oil production comes just three months after the pension board’s acquisition of a 49 per cent stake in Aera Energy, California’s second-largest oil and gas producer, according to a statement sent by SHIFT to Canada’s National Observer. “These investments expose all Canadians to unacceptable levels of climate-related financial risk.”

Canada’s National Observer reached out to the CPPIB for comment but did not receive a response in time for publication.

To make its portfolio net zero by 2050, last year the CPPIB committed to increasing its investments in green and transition assets from $67 billion to at least $130 billion by 2030. It states its goal is to be carbon-neutral in its operations by the end of the 2023 fiscal year.

James K. Rowe, associate professor at the University of Victoria's School of Environmental Studies, argues the Civitas investment does not line up with the CPPIB's need to reduce emissions if it is going to meet its climate goals.

“It is easy to make net-zero pledges for decades in the future,” said Rowe. “The difficult part is crafting a serious plan for achieving the emission reductions. The CPPIB’s investments in fossil fuel companies like Civitas that are significantly expanding production during a climate emergency is a sign that our national pension fund is not seriously planning for the future.”

Rowe said the CPPIB decision to pour billions of dollars into fossil fuel companies undermines climate security and is imprudent financially. “Whether due to the growing use of green energy and electric vehicles or much-needed climate legislation that will be required to forestall 1.5 degrees Celsius warming, it is likely that fossil fuel investments will rapidly lose value in the near future,” he added.

To have a credible net-zero plan, CPPIB would have to cut emissions arising from its investments in half by 2030, said Julie Segal, senior program manager of climate finance at Environmental Defence. “That leaves no room for expanding oil or gas,” she added.

The CPPIB operates Canadian Pension Plan (CPP) investments, serving more than 21 million contributors and beneficiaries. As of March 31, the CPPIB says its 10-year annualized net return was 10 per cent. At $570 billion today, the pension fund is projected to reach $1 trillion by 2031, the board said.

This story was produced in partnership with Journalists for Human Rights for the Afghan Journalists-in-Residence program funded by the Meta Journalism Project.

Comments