Botswana Guardian

FirstRand stops funding new coal power stations, mines

The bank targets the net- zero emissions by 2050

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South Africa’s FirstRand will stop funding new coal- fired power stations and coal mines and has lowered the cap on its coal exposure as part of moves to reach net- zero emissions by 2050, it said on Wednesday. South Africa’s banks are the biggest on the continent, with the likes of FirstRand major lenders to fossil fuel projects, especially in oil and gas, and are increasing­ly under pressure from environmen­tal groups to turn off the taps. FirstRand, which had previously said it would continue supporting coal due to its importance to the South African economy, said it would no longer fund new coalfired power stations and would stop all funding for new coal mines from 2026.

“It is the long- term ambition of FirstRand to be net- zero by 2050 across operationa­l and financed emissions,” it said in a statement announcing its updated coal policy. It added that the group will also reduce the cap on its coal financing drawn advances from 2percent to 1.5percent from 2026 onwards, and will cut its exposure to coal further to 1percent by 2030 onwards. That makes FirstRand one of only two of South Africa’s big four lenders to close the door on funding for such activities altogether. Absa and Standard Bank have placed limits on what they will finance, but could still invest in such projects under certain conditions. FirstRand added that more details on its climate strategy and initiative­s and the risks it is exposed to as a result of climate change would be published ahead of its annual report for the year ending June 30.

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