CBC Edition

Stop funding fossil fuels, protesters tell RBC at Montreal rally

- Joe Bongiorno

Protesters gathered in front of the Royal Bank of Canada's (RBC) downtown Montreal office on Satur‐ day to demand that the bank stop investing in fos‐ sil fuels.

It was one of dozens of protests held across Canada as part of a multi-day cam‐ paign to put pressure on the financial institutio­n ahead of its annual general meeting next week.

Rajendra Kapila Basdeo, co-ordinator of the Kahnis‐ tensera (Mohawk Mothers) solidarity collective, was one of the people who showed up.

"The bank should be a good example for people to put their money in, and they should divest from fossil fu‐ els," he said. "It's the only proper way to protect our en‐ vironment."

Last year, a Banking on Climate Chaos report found that RBC was the world's foremost funder of fossil fu‐ els in 2022. Between 2016 and 2021, the bank ranked fifth in financing fossil fuels, according to the report.

Greenpeace Canada says that since the Paris Agreement came into effect in 2016, the bank has con‐ tributed more than $250 bil‐ lion US in funding fossil fuels.

The bank, which has said its lending practices will reach "net-zero" emissions by 2050, has also been accused of greenwashi­ng, marketing itself as being aligned with the climate goals of the Paris Agreement while continuing to finance the fossil fuel in‐ dustry.

Marlene Hale, an elder from the Wet'suwet'en First Nation also among the pro‐ testers in Montreal, says RBC needs to meet with Wet'‐ suwet'en hereditary chiefs at their annual general meeting next week.

That's something the bank has refused to do in the past, Hale said.

The Coastal GasLink pipeline, which runs through the territory belonging to the northern B.C. First Nation, is also funded by RBC, despite opposition from several hereditary chiefs.

Not taking swift and deci‐ sive action to curb emissions means there will be more ex‐ treme weather and environ‐ mental destructio­n, Hale said.

"This summer is going to tell all. It's going to be hotter, and there's gonna be more floods," she said.

'Just words'

RBC told CBC it's taking steps to make its business greener.

"Supporting our clients on their decarboniz­ation journey is where we believe we can have the biggest im‐ pact in the climate transi‐ tion," it said in a statement.

The bank says it's tripling its lending for renewable en‐ ergy, with the goal of growing low-carbon energy lending to $35 billion by 2030. It also says it's allocating $1 billion by 2030 to support the devel‐ opment of climate solutions and supporting the accelera‐ tion of capital to emissions reduction efforts.

"If RBC wants to do some‐ thing about climate change, they need to stop talking and start acting," said Laura Ull‐ mann, head of climate at Greenpeace Canada.

"They need to stop in‐ vesting in fossil fuels. They need to commit to no new in‐ vestments, no new projects."

While investing in re‐ newals is a good step, the bank's rhetoric doesn't match up with the fact it con‐ tinues to support companies that fail to meet the stan‐ dards of the Internatio­nal En‐ ergy Agency, Ullmann said.

A March 2024 Greenpeace report calls on RBC to stop funding oil and gas com‐ panies that miss the mark and asks Ottawa to introduce rules to ensure federally reg‐ ulated financial institutio­ns are in line with Paris climate commitment­s and the UN Declaratio­n on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act.

Hale calls the promises to cut back on emissions "just words."

Basdeo isn't impressed ei‐ ther.

"They cannot be expand‐ ing oil and gas while talking [about] a green strategy as well," he said. "The two things don't make any sense."

American investors get RBC to 'show their work'

Earlier this week, RBC said it would start disclosing the ratio of how much money it puts into clean energy projects compared to how much gets invested in fossil fuel extraction.

The decision followed pressure from investors in the United States.

"Up until now, RBC had re‐ sisted calls to disclose that ratio clearly across all their lending and investment­s every year," said New York City Comptrolle­r Brad Lan‐ der, who reached an agreement with the bank.

"All they're doing with this agreement is agreeing to show their work," said Lan‐ der, pointing out that the agreement does not require RBC to reduce investing in projects that generate or in‐ crease carbon emissions.

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