EQX Biome

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Revision as of 02:21, 7 March 2023 by TH (talk | contribs) (Created page with "EQX Biome (owned by EQX Investor Capital LLC) describes itself on its homepage as "Bringing Wall Street to the Fight for Nature."<ref>https://www.eqxse.com/</ref> It includes among its advisory team multiple former executives of JP Morgan Chase, the #1 bank funding fossil fuels. <blockquote>Financial markets are perhaps humanity’s most powerful invention — seated at the core of capitalism, they have the power to mobilize unfathomable amounts of capital towards v...")
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EQX Biome (owned by EQX Investor Capital LLC) describes itself on its homepage as "Bringing Wall Street to the Fight for Nature."[1] It includes among its advisory team multiple former executives of JP Morgan Chase, the #1 bank funding fossil fuels.

Financial markets are perhaps humanity’s most powerful invention — seated at the core of capitalism, they have the power to mobilize unfathomable amounts of capital towards valuable endeavors.

Leadership

Team

Advisors

  • D. Ronald Daniel - Senior Partner Emeritus & former Global Managing Partner at McKinsey & Company, a funder of ALEC[4] which showcased Enron as its model company for years (during which time it was McKinsey's principal client).[5]
  • William F. Cruger - Former Vice Chairman of Investment Banking at JP Morgan Chase, the #1 bank investing in fossil fuels
  • Neal Sheory - A Business Vice President of major polluter DowDuPont
  • John Seethoff - Former Corporate Secretary, Vice President & Deputy General Counsel at Microsoft

Congo Basin Credits

As reported by The Guardian on Mar 1, 2023:

A New York investment firm is to launch a $400m (£334m) bid for oil concessions in the Congo basin rainforest and Virunga national park with plans to turn them into conservation projects, the Guardian can reveal. EQX Biome, a biodiversity fintech company, has sent an expression of interest to the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) government for 27 oil exploration blocks put up for auction last July, some of which are in critical ecosystems.[7]