Alastair Marsh

Alastair Marsh is a former Chief Executive Officer of Lloyd's Register, an international organization that provides certification and verification services for the maritime industry. He has extensive experience in risk management and sustainability issues.

57%

The Daily's Verdict

This author has a mixed reputation for journalistic standards. It is advisable to fact-check, scrutinize for bias, and check for conflicts of interest before relying on the author's reporting.

Bias

85%

Examples:

  • The article implies that other firms are also avoiding taking action on climate change by using the term greenhushing.
  • The article uses biased language to portray JPMorgan's exit from the climate group as a sign of greenhushing.

Conflicts of Interest

50%

Examples:

  • The article does not disclose any clear conflicts of interest for the author or the source.
  • The article may have a bias towards Bloomberg as its publisher and may be trying to generate more traffic by sensationalizing the term greenhushing.

Contradictions

85%

Examples:

  • The article contradicts itself by providing different reasons for JPMorgan's exit from the climate group.
  • The article presents conflicting information about whether other firms are also avoiding taking action on climate change or not.

Deceptions

30%

Examples:

  • The article does not provide any evidence or sources for its claims about greenhushing.
  • The article uses deceptive practices such as vague terms and clickbait headlines.

Recent Articles

JPMorgan, BlackRock and SSGA Exit Climate Action 100⚷ Investor Group for Different Reasons

JPMorgan, BlackRock and SSGA Exit Climate Action 100⚷ Investor Group for Different Reasons

Broke On: Monday, 19 February 2024 JPMorgan Chase, BlackRock and SSGA have exited the Climate Action 100⚷ investor group. JPMorgan did so because of its expansion of in-house sustainability team and establishment of climate risk framework while BlackRock withdrew U.S business due to concerns about potential anti-ESG backlash. State Street exited the alliance as phase 2 commitments conflicted with their independent approach to proxy voting and portfolio company engagement.