National Post

DEAR BANK CEO...

SO BEGAN THE EMAIL CAMPAIGN BY CLIMATE GROUPS AIMED AT CANADIAN AND U.S. BANKS TO STOP FINANCING ENBRIDGE’S LINE 3 PIPELINE.

- Alastair Marsh And danielle Bochove

IT IS A LITTLE BIT PRANKISH. SOMETIMES SOMETHING A LITTLE CREATIVE LIKE THAT CAN HELP US GET THE ATTENTION OF VERY POWERFUL PEOPLE (WHO) CAN BE HARD TO MAKE PAY ATTENTION.

— ALEC CONNON, ORGANIZER OF THE #DEFUNDLINE­3 CAMPAIGN

Even by the standards of the chief executive of America’s biggest bank, March 31 looked like it was going to be a very busy day.

Jamie Dimon’s office calendar was chock-full of invitation­s for that overcast New York Wednesday, with more than 1,000 unsolicite­d meetings all scheduled to cover the same topic: Jpmorgan Chase & Co.’s role in financing an oil pipeline running through Minnesota.

The invites had been rolling in since mid-february, with titles such as “Don’t Fund Climate Disaster” and “Drop Line 3,” a reference to the name of the pipeline being funded in part by Jpmorgan and built by Calgary-based Enbridge Inc. Dimon wasn’t the only executive invited — the bank’s chief risk officer, its chief operating officer and the CEO of its commercial banking arm, plus several board members, each received thousands of calendar notificati­ons, as well.

Eventually their inboxes became so clogged up with diary dates from climate activists — not to mention the tens of thousands of emails they sent requesting the bank withdraw funding — that the bank’s IT staff intervened and the invites started bouncing back.

That the protesters’ messages could no longer get through to Jpmorgan executives meant that their message had gotten through. With the bank having been sufficient­ly notified of their concerns, the campaigner­s turned their focus to America’s next largest banks, including Bank of America Corp., Wells Fargo & Co. and Citigroup Inc., as well as the heads of the biggest Canadian lenders, Royal Bank of Canada and Toronto-dominion Bank. Their goal: to stop the flow of dollars that enable the destructio­n of habitats, the violation of Indigenous communitie­s and the emission of greenhouse gases.

“It is a little bit prankish,” says Alec Connon, a key organizer of the #Defundline­3 campaign that aims to persuade Enbridge’s financial backers to cut ties with the company. “Sometimes something a little creative like that can help us get the attention of very powerful people (who) can be hard to make pay attention.”

Like the Dakota Access and Keystone XL pipelines before it, Line 3 is becoming a cultural flashpoint. The new pipeline —a $9 billion steel tube that will transport 760,000 barrels of oil per day 1,100 miles from the oilsands of Alberta to a storage terminal in Wisconsin — will cross more than 200 water bodies, including the Mississipp­i River twice, as well as sensitive watersheds, ecosystems and pristine northern Minnesota landscapes. The campaign against it is also yet another chapter in the story of the U.S. and its Indigenous peoples, as the pipeline will directly affect five Ojibwe tribes with treaty rights to hunt, fish and gather wild rice in the region.

Protesters say the risk of oil spills devastatin­g waterways is too great for communitie­s that survive off the land. Oilsands oil is also typically more carbon-intensive than other types of crude because of the extra energy required to extract and refine the sticky mixture. The #Defundline­3 campaign points to forecasts estimating that the new pipe will add 193 million tons of CO₂ to the atmosphere each year during its lifetime, more than the annual emissions of Argentina.

Enbridge emphasizes that Line 3 is a replacemen­t for an older, existing pipeline, and that its constructi­on was motivated by safety and maintenanc­e concerns. “It is noteworthy that Enbridge’s pipeline has coexisted for 70 years without disturbing wild rice waters,” says Jesse Semko, a spokespers­on for the company.

A spokesman for Jpmorgan declined to comment on its role in financing Enbridge or its response to the activists who targeted the bank.

Bridging both the Indigenous and the financial sides of the protest movement is Tara Houska. The 37-year-old Anishinaab­e lawyer, a key organizer of both the on-the-ground activism and the #Defundline­3 campaign, is equally adept navigating the corridors of power in Washington and on Wall Street as she is climbing inside an unfinished pipeline in the freezing Minnesota winter and facing off against armed police in defence of Indigenous lands.

That ambidexter­ity is key to taking on Big Oil, she says: “Make sure that you’ve got the outside game and the inside strategy at the same time.”

The seeds of #Defundline­3 efforts were planted during the Dakota Access Pipeline standoff, when Houska and other protesters were hunkered down 370 miles southwest of the Line 3 route, near the Standing Rock Indian Reservatio­n in North Dakota.

She remembers the exact date: Oct. 27, 2016. “That was the day they had a riot line of 1,000 police officers, and tanks, and were shooting tear gas and mace and rubber bullets at our faces,” she says. “I’ll never forget that day as long as I live.”

Once state troopers and the National Guard moved in to blockade the camp — producing indelible images of cops firing water cannons at protesters in sub-zero temperatur­es — physically blocking the pipeline’s constructi­on was off the table. So Houska and her fellow demonstrat­ors started thinking about other ways to halt the project.

Yes! magazine, a nonprofit activist journal, had published an article the month before listing the banks backing the DAPL and calling on people to target them by pulling their investment­s and closing accounts. “It was a way for people to get involved from anywhere,” Houska says. “We essentiall­y took that campaign and ran with it.”

As the movement gained momentum, Houska, through the Women’s Earth and Climate Action Network, began visiting banks and insurers in Norway, Switzerlan­d, Germany and France to speak about the destructio­n caused by oil pipeline finance.

European lenders, including ABN Amro Bank NV and DNB ASA, stepped back from financing the project or its backers after having supported it initially, with ING Groep NV even selling its portion of a project loan supporting the pipeline. In the U.S., Citigroup’s then Chairman Mike O’neill said “we wish we could have a do-over on this.”

Ultimately, between the protests, boycotts, legal challenges and divestment campaigns, Energy Transfer Partners, the company behind Dakota Access, and others with an ownership stake spent at least US$7.5 billion on the pipeline, according to a study by the University of Colorado Law School and the Leeds School of Business — almost double initial estimates. Banks associated with the pipeline lost an additional US$4.4 billion in costs.

“It was a very successful way of campaignin­g,” says Houska. “Following the money is finding your way to the pocketbook of a company. They do not listen to morality, but they do listen to money.”

Neverthele­ss, constructi­on on DAPL finished in early 2017, and oil has been flowing through it ever since. Energy Transfer Partners spokespers­on Vicki Granado says the company has been “so pleased” with the pipeline, adding that its operation brings tax revenue to states and “supports our country’s energy security and independen­ce.”

The #Defunddapl campaign wound up raising an army of protesters across the globe that, while temporaril­y down, were not defeated. In November 2019, a little over a year before #Defundline­3 would kick off, Houska and representa­tives from half a dozen other groups, including the Sierra Club and Greenpeace, held a gathering in Vermont to discuss ways to better align their efforts. The result was Stop the Money Pipeline, a coalition of more than 150 environmen­tal nonprofits, which coordinate­s protest movements, including #Defundline­3.

Financing oil infrastruc­ture is becoming increasing­ly difficult for banks and other financial institutio­ns to justify to their shareholde­rs, making financial institutio­ns an especially ripe target for pipeline protests. Not only have most major U.S. and European banks, as well as some Canadian lenders, committed to reach net-zero emissions in their loan books, but the Internatio­nal Energy Agency said in a seminal report in May that to meet the net-zero target there should be no investment in new fossil fuel supply projects.

I’LL NEVER FORGET THAT DAY AS LONG AS I LIVE.

Since Enbridge hadn’t raised any project-specific financing for Line 3, #Defundline­3’s aim was to pressure banks not to refinance the company’s next maturing loan, a $3-billion revolving credit facility coming due on March 31.

Targeting a specific financial instrument is a novel approach for activists, according to Ben Cushing, financial advocacy campaign manager at the Sierra Club, which also is involved in a lawsuit against the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers aiming to revoke Enbridge’s constructi­on permit for Line 3. Such tactics have only been used on a few previous occasions, including in late 2017 to call on Wells Fargo, Jpmorgan and other funders of TC Energy Corp., the company behind the Keystone XL pipeline, not to renew two loans totalling US$1.5 billion.

Such moments are opportunit­ies for banks to decide, “do they want to double down and continue financing that kind of business? Or do they want to make a different choice and shift away from that destructiv­e funding?,” says Cushing. “These are key moments, like a fork in the road.”

Protesters and activists started bombarding the banks with emails and calendar invites, all aimed at getting them not to refinance the loan. But what happened next surprised them. Two days after the launch of the campaign, Enbridge repaid the $3-billion loan in its entirety and refinanced with a $1-billion credit facility linked to sustainabi­lity targets — a type of lending that rewards considerat­ion for climate change or the environmen­t with lower interest payments.

The company announced the new loan in its 2020 annual report, saying that it would help align its performanc­e on environmen­tal, social and governance metrics with its funding costs and calling it the first such loan in its sector. Houska called it “greenwashi­ng at its worst” in a press release, and likened giving Enbridge a sustainabi­lity loan to giving a weapons manufactur­er a “peace” loan.

Greenwashi­ng is the ultimate slur in the ESG world, yet ESG bona fides are often difficult to come by. Though banks have a legitimate role to play in helping high-carbon companies transition to less environmen­tally damaging ways of operating, they open themselves up to criticism when they lend to such businesses without closely supervisin­g how those businesses are performing on relevant ESG issues.

For most of the world’s biggest banks, the de facto approach is to pledge to cut the net emissions from their office buildings and lending to zero by 2050, though often without saying how they’ll reach that target, or even how they’ll define it. That gives banks cover to show they’re responding to global warming, while at the same time leaving them plenty of latitude to continue lending to companies that are incompatib­le with a net-zero world.

The new credit facility is tied to ESG goals Enbridge announced last year. The company said it planned to reach net-zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050 and reduce its emissions intensity 35 per cent by 2030, though its targets don’t include so-called Scope 3 emissions generated by the burning of the oil it transports.

“When we announced our ESG goals, we planned on also releasing a sustainabi­lity finance strategy that links our borrowing costs to our ESG goals further incentiviz­ing their achievemen­t,” says Semko, the Enbridge spokespers­on. He says the company has been “increasing­ly investing in making our own operations more sustainabl­e for years,” including efforts to limit scope 3 emissions and backing offshore wind and solar projects, as well as tying executive and employee compensati­on to ESG goals.

Earlier this month, Enbridge released a framework for the issuance of sustainabi­lity-linked bonds, the first for a North American pipeline company. Sustainabi­lity-linked bonds are a nascent asset class that generally penalizes issuers with higher borrowing costs should they fail to meet certain environmen­tal, social and governance metrics. If the issuer meets or exceeds the targets, the coupon remains unchanged.

Enbridge issued its first bond tied to ESG goals on June 24, selling US$1 billion of the 12-year securities to yield 2.54 per

cent. That’s at least five basis points tighter than where the company’s regular debt would’ve been priced, thanks to the more than 100 investors who took part in the transactio­n, according to Max Chan, Enbridge’s vice president of treasury.

“For a company building fossil fuel infrastruc­ture that will have a climate impact 4.5 times that of the country of Scotland to be having any type of sustainabi­lity conversati­ons strikes me as greenwashi­ng,” says Connon. “And any banks continuing to support this awful Line 3 tarsands project clearly need reminding that this pipeline violates any commitment­s they may have made on climate change.”

Constructi­on on the new Line 3 is already complete in Canada, Wisconsin and North Dakota; work in Minnesota began in December, and is already 60 per cent finished. A key permit for the pipeline was upheld by the Minnesota Court of Appeals in mid-june, removing a potential delay for the controvers­ial project. Enbridge still has the suit against the U.S. Army Corps to worry about, as an adverse ruling would require the government to conduct a new environmen­tal review. But a judge in February declined to issue an injunction until the case was decided, leaving the company free to proceed with constructi­on. Enbridge has said it expects to finish the pipeline by the end of the year.

With their clock running, more than a thousand protesters descended on the site near the headwaters of the Mississipp­i River in early June, Houska among them, some scaling fences and chaining themselves to equipment while others used a boat to block the entrance to an Enbridge pump station. Then, a low-flying United States Customs and Border Protection helicopter sent to disperse the crowd caused a dust storm that forced demonstrat­ors from the site. Meanwhile, activist-actor Jane Fonda and tribal leaders went on national television to lobby President Joe Biden to stop Line 3.

While the fight is far from over, either on the ground or in Washington, efforts to cut off the money spigot to Enbridge continue. The Canadian company has three further credit facilities worth a total of more than $7 billion expiring on July 22 and July 23, and activists will make renewed efforts to call on the more than 20 banks that loaned the money, including Credit Suisse Group AG, HSBC Holdings Plc and Mizuho Financial Group Inc., not to provide further finance.

“I’d be curious to hear how a tarsands fossil fuel company is going to try to tell us, tell the public, that they are engaging in sustainabl­e practices when they are responsibl­e for the expansion of the fossil fuel industry,” Houska says. “I don’t think that they can slap a coat of paint on an entire body of work that involves destroying the planet.’”

 ?? MICHEL EULER/POOL VIA REUTERS ?? JP Morgan chief executive Jamie Dimon is facing creative pushback from climate activists over the bank’s role in financing an oil pipeline running through Minnesota.
MICHEL EULER/POOL VIA REUTERS JP Morgan chief executive Jamie Dimon is facing creative pushback from climate activists over the bank’s role in financing an oil pipeline running through Minnesota.
 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS / FILES ?? Enbridge’s Line 3 constructi­on is already complete in Canada, Wisconsin and North Dakota.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS / FILES Enbridge’s Line 3 constructi­on is already complete in Canada, Wisconsin and North Dakota.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada