I’ll start by saying I don’t trust any bank to give me a list of green investments. Mine has a “pay monthly and we will invest for you” but the list of companies it has are all from BlackRock and have a bunch of US companies, oil and gas giants pretending to have green goals, and techno-fascist companies like Tesla on the list because “they’re going electric”.

My time is limited and I’m not willing to spend hours every day scrutinising companies and initiatives to ensure they are green, sustainable, and socially aware. Following green news, there is news about whatever new battery is in whichever stage, a new company testing a carbo-fibre something improve whatever new thing will turn a turbine, and so on, but some of those companies either aren’t public or so fresh it would be risky to invest.

How do I safely and lazily invest in green European businesses? I’m willing to pay for the service, but not a wild amount as I don’t have a wild amount to invest either. Also, the return should be more than just letting it sit in my savings account. Risk is fine, an average return of 2% isn’t.

  • atro_city@fedia.ioOP
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    12 days ago

    I’m evaluating a few options now. Mostly by reading their statements, how they work, costs, what the reporting on them looks like (positive, negative - especially negative is important), how long they have existed, and which projects they have funded.

    Supposedly there are also Green Bonds and Green Funds, but I haven’t finished reading investopedia. If somebody knows how to buy those, I’m all ears. (and I’ll finish reading investopedia).