The Guardian (USA)

Barclays customers in switch threat over tar sands investment

- Rob Davies

Thousands of Barclays customers have threatened to switch to another bank unless it promises not to invest in pipelines for oil from tar sands, dubbed the “dirtiest fuel on the planet”.

Greenpeace, which occupied a branch of Barclays on Wednesday morning and erected signs branding it “The Dirty Bank”, said 30,000 customers signed a petition calling on the lender to pledge never to fund controvers­ial tar sands projects.

Of those who signed the petition, 6,000 told the environmen­tal group that they were ready to close their accounts if Barclays did not heed their warning, while some said they had already done so.

“Moving your bank account is quite a big undertakin­g, so we were genuinely surprised when people started doing it without us even suggesting it,” said the Greenpeace oil campaigner Hannah Martin.

“This new informatio­n shows that the opposition to Barclays funding dirty tar sands projects isn’t just broad but deep.

“People are prepared to put themselves through a bit of bureaucrat­ic hassle to try to persuade their bank to do the right thing.”

Six Greenpeace campaigner­s arrived at a branch of Barclays on Wednesday morning disguised as window cleaners but were prevented from creating an “oil spill” in front of the branch.

The organisati­on is protesting against pipelines being built across Canada and the US to bring oil to market from Alberta’s tar sands.

Environmen­talists say tar sands – which contain deposits of viscous, heavy hydrocarbo­ns – produce fuel that is particular­ly dirty when compared to renewable sources or even other fossil fuels.

At the bank’s annual meeting earlier this year, the non-executive in charge of reputation, Mary Francis, said the bank was reviewing its investment­s in “extreme fossil fuels” – typically including tar sands, coal and deep water Arctic oil – with an update due before the end of the year.

A spokesman for Barclays said it was “not currently providing any project finance to oil sands pipeline projects”.

However, the Guardian understand­s it was providing finance to Canada’s $4.5bn Trans Mountain project before it was nationalis­ed.

It also extends credit finance to organisati­ons involved in two other pipelines, something that would be precluded under a policy adopted by rival HSBC.

HSBC is among a clutch of lenders, including Crédit Agricole and BNP Paribas, to have already put in place policies preventing tar sands investment.

Greenpeace claimed that if the tar sands were fully exploited and burned, it would take up 15% of the world’s carbon budget if government­s are to meet the Paris accord goal of limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees.

 ??  ?? Greenpeace staged an anti-tar sands pipelines protest at Barclays Bank in Piccadilly Circus today. Photograph: Jiri Rezac/Greenpeace
Greenpeace staged an anti-tar sands pipelines protest at Barclays Bank in Piccadilly Circus today. Photograph: Jiri Rezac/Greenpeace
 ??  ?? Trucks and machinery along routes within the Suncore oil sands site in Northern Alberta. Photograph: David Levene for the Guardian
Trucks and machinery along routes within the Suncore oil sands site in Northern Alberta. Photograph: David Levene for the Guardian

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