The University of Birmingham updates its responsible investment policy by moving away from explicit exclusions on arms-related companies, according to Middle East Eye. The university’s earlier policy, adopted in 2022, said it would “minimise” investments in arms, tobacco and alcohol companies. It required investment managers to consider specific “exclusion criteria,” including firms earning more than 10% of revenues from activities connected to weapons systems, and companies manufacturing whole weapon systems, cluster munitions and anti-personnel landmines, alongside exclusions for tobacco, oil and mining. It also stated it would seek to minimise indirect investments that fell below stated ESG and exclusion standards.

In June, Birmingham adopts a new policy that does not include the previous exclusions. Instead, it requires that “financially material” ESG factors be considered in manager selection, monitoring and stewardship. The update also describes the appointment of JP Morgan as the university’s outsourced chief investment officer (OCIO), with expectations tied to compliance with UK prohibitions on cluster munitions and anti-personnel mines and obligations related to chemical and biological weapons.

The university says the portfolio itself is unchanged and that the update strengthens oversight and evidence, while students criticize the shift.