The movement to cut fossil fuels is getting powerful — albeit, unlikely — new allies: heirs to John D. Rockefeller’s colossal, 140-year-old oil fortune.
On Monday, the Rockefeller Brothers Fund (RBF), an international charitable foundation run by descendants of the billionaire oil tycoon, is formally announcing plans to divest assets from the hydrocarbon industries in favor of renewable energy sources. The move falls directly in between a 120-country climate summit to take place Tuesday in New York, and the largest climate march in history, which drew approximately 300,000 demonstrators to the streets of midtown Manhattan on Sunday.
While the gesture is largely symbolic and likely to have little immediate impact on traditional energy companies, members of the Rockefeller clan are hopeful it will inspire other investors to seriously consider the environmental consequences of burning fossil fuels at the current rate. According to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the summer of 2014 was the warmest on Earth since records began in 1880 — one decade after John D. Rockefeller founded Standard Oil.
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“Our divestment from fossil fuels, which is now underway, will be accomplished through a careful process of evaluating our exposure and a phased approach that proceeds as quickly as is prudent,” said the foundation in a statement Monday. “We hope that the framework the RBF has adopted to guide our divestment and investment strategies will be of interest to other foundations and institutional investors as we also expect to learn from the experience of others.”








