Arab Times

Banks need to expedite ‘climate work’, says ECB

- ‘Glass half full’

FRANKFURT, Nov 2, (AP): The European Central Bank is warning that many of the financial institutio­ns it oversees are moving too slowly to shield themselves and Europe’s banking system from the impact of climate change, and it is setting new deadlines to meet those requiremen­ts.

The ECB said some progress had been made but that a review of 186 banks published Wednesday showed change was uneven and that “the glass remains half full,” top ECB official Frank Elderson said in a blog post on the central bank’s website.

The Frankfurt, Germany-based central bank for the 19 countries that use the euro currency set deadlines for banks to meet climate requiremen­ts by the end of 2024.

The ECB, acting in its role as banking supervisor, is pushing banks to identify where they could face the risks of climate change and outline how they would take action. Banks are key to the European economy’s functionin­g because most companies get the credit they need to operate from banks instead of from financial markets, the opposite of U.S. practice, for instance.

“Most banks have thus not yet answered the question of what they will do with clients who may no longer have sustainabl­e revenue sources because of the green transition,” said Elderson, one of six members of the ECB’s executive board and vice chairman of its supervisor­y board overseeing banks. “In other words, too many banks are still hoping for the best while not preparing for the worst.”

Both the ECB and the Bank of England have taken climate change into account more than the U.S. Federal Reserve, which has made modest steps to incorporat­e climate concerns into its regulatory framework. The U.S. central bank has faced criticism from congressio­nal Republican­s who say the issue is not within the Fed’s purview.

In Europe, banks’ strategy documents are full of references to climate change, Elderson said, but actual shifts to customers in more climate-friendly kinds of business and thus to more environmen­tally sustainabl­e sources of revenue remain rare.

Banks are not setting interim targets for reaching net zero carbon emissions by 2050 or collecting detailed data at the level of individual loans and investment­s, Elderson wrote.

While many are phasing out specific activities, such as supporting coal power generation, it’s not clear how these first steps will shield the banks’ business models from the impact of climate change and environmen­tal problems in coming years, he said.

 ?? ?? Christine Lagarde, President of the European Central Bank (ECB), and Vice President Luis de Guindos leave the podium after the press conference at ECB headquarte­rs in Frankfurt, Germany on Oct 27, 2022. (AP)
Christine Lagarde, President of the European Central Bank (ECB), and Vice President Luis de Guindos leave the podium after the press conference at ECB headquarte­rs in Frankfurt, Germany on Oct 27, 2022. (AP)

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