Overview
Council on Ethics for the Norwegian Government Pension Fund Global is an independent advisory body established in 2004 by a Royal Decree of the Norwegian Ministry of Finance to support ethical investment governance for the Government Pension Fund Global (GPFG). It evaluates whether specific companies fall within the ethical guidelines set by the Ministry of Finance and advises Norges Bank, which manages the fund, on whether to exclude or observe these companies based on ethical risk criteria. Recommendations made by the Council are published publicly, and exclusions are reflected in the GPFG’s investment universe.
Mission and focus areas
The primary mission of the Council is to identify companies in which the GPFG holds investments that may contribute to unacceptable ethical practices, such as severe human rights violations, serious environmental harm, gross corruption, or involvement in prohibited products. The Council’s work integrates sustainability considerations into sovereign wealth fund governance by operationalising the ethical guidelines that aim to prevent the fund from holding companies engaged in unethical behaviour. By focusing on forward-looking risk, it aligns with ESG integration practices that safeguard long-term value and uphold responsible investment principles for one of the world’s largest institutional portfolios.
Structure and governance
The Council consists of appointed members with expertise in law, economics, science and social issues, supported by a professional secretariat led by a designated head. As of early 2024, the secretariat comprised nine employees responsible for preparing assessments for full Council deliberation. Leadership includes a chairperson and council members whose professional backgrounds contribute to multi-disciplinary evaluations of cases. The Council operates independently from Norges Bank and makes recommendations to the fund manager, although the final decision on exclusion or observation rests with Norges Bank.
Programs and offerings
The Council’s core outputs are its published recommendations on whether companies should be excluded from the GPFG or placed under observation due to ethical concerns. These include detailed rationales linked to the ethical guidelines’ criteria. It also publishes annual reports summarising its activities, methodology and case statistics, which provide transparency and insights into ethical assessment processes. These resources are valuable to finance professionals and sustainability practitioners looking to understand how sovereign wealth funds incorporate ethical and ESG considerations into investment decisions