Amundi Wins $635M UK Universities Fossil-Free Cash Fund Mandate
• £500m fund excludes fossil fuel-linked companies across debt and equity markets
• Backed by 79 higher education institutions aiming to decarbonize short-term investments
• Launch expected by late 2025, expanding responsible investment across public sectors
Cambridge Coalition Backs Fossil-Free Cash Investments
A Cambridge-led coalition of UK universities has awarded a £500 million ($635 million) mandate to establish a fossil-free cash fund, marking one of the most significant shifts yet in how institutional investors manage short-term capital.
The coalition, formed through the University of Cambridge’s Banking Engagement Forum, unites 79 higher education institutions seeking to eliminate exposure to companies expanding fossil fuel production or financing. The initiative reflects growing pressure on asset managers to provide credible cash-like investment products that align with institutional net-zero commitments.
The new vehicle—described as a “quasi-money market fund”—will allow universities and other public-sector investors to earn stable returns on liquid assets while adhering to stringent fossil fuel exclusion criteria. It will screen out not only energy producers but also utilities, banks, and insurers involved in fossil fuel expansion activities.
A New Approach to Institutional Liquidity
The fund responds to a challenge faced by many universities and local authorities: how to manage large short-term cash balances without contradicting their sustainability pledges. While equity portfolios have increasingly moved toward ESG compliance, cash holdings have lagged due to limited fossil-free liquidity products in the market.
By pooling resources, the coalition aims to catalyse the development of new sustainable cash vehicles and push market standards higher. Institutions excluded under the screening rules may be readmitted if they demonstrate clear withdrawal from fossil fuel expansion.
According to the coalition, the collective initial investment commitment of roughly £500 million could grow as additional investors—including pension schemes and insurers—join before the expected launch in late 2025.
Stewardship Meets Financial Prudence
Amundi, one of Europe’s largest asset managers, will oversee the fund. Jean-Jacques Barbéris, Head of Institutional and Corporate Clients Division & ESG at Amundi, said the initiative reflects a broader evolution in investor expectations.
“Delivering strong stewardship alongside responsible investment solutions is essential to achieving a low-carbon economy while providing long-term value for clients,” Barbéris said. “This product, developed for the UK’s leading universities, shows the growing recognition among institutional investors of the role responsible finance plays in advancing social, environmental, and economic benefits.”

The strategy aligns with Amundi’s ongoing push to integrate ESG criteria into all asset classes, particularly within liquidity management—traditionally a conservative segment of institutional portfolios.
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Governance, Finance, and Climate Implications
For policymakers, the move reinforces the influence of the higher education sector in shaping sustainable finance practices. Many UK universities, including Cambridge and Oxford, have already divested their endowments from fossil fuels. Extending that discipline to cash investments demonstrates a maturing of ESG governance, bridging long-term climate commitments with day-to-day treasury operations.
Financially, the fund will provide a test case for how exclusionary screening can coexist with liquidity, credit quality, and yield targets. Success could set a new benchmark for public and private institutions managing significant cash reserves within responsible investment mandates.
From an ESG standpoint, the fund’s design aims to demonstrate that capital allocation—even over short time horizons—can contribute meaningfully to the global transition away from carbon-intensive sectors.
A Broader Institutional Shift
The initiative comes amid a wave of climate-aligned financial products emerging across Europe. With the UK’s Transition Plan Taskforce and incoming Sustainability Disclosure Requirements tightening scrutiny of ESG claims, institutions are increasingly seeking investment vehicles that meet both ethical and regulatory standards.
By creating a scalable model for fossil-free liquidity, the Cambridge-led coalition’s fund could influence similar efforts by pension schemes, charities, and municipalities across Europe. Its governance-driven approach underscores the sector’s potential to act as a collective market lever—redirecting capital away from fossil expansion and toward sustainable outcomes.
As the fund moves toward launch in 2025, its success will likely depend on whether it can deliver competitive performance while adhering to rigorous exclusions. If it does, it may redefine how the UK’s largest universities and public institutions manage their balance sheets in the era of net-zero finance.
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