Times Colonist

RBC adds new restrictio­ns on financing coal and oil developmen­ts

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Canada’s largest bank is putting new restrictio­ns on lending to some fossil-fuel developmen­ts.

In a policy released Friday, RBC says it won’t lend money to new coal-fired power generators, thermal coal mines or coal mines that require mountainto­p removal.

“We are committed to finding ways to balance the transition to a low-carbon economy while supporting efforts to meet global energy needs and our energy clients,” said bank spokesman Andrew Block in an email.

The policy will apply to new investment­s and not the bank’s current investment portfolio.

The bank says it won’t lend to new clients that get more than 60 per cent of their revenue from thermal coal or coal-fired power generation. It will lend to new clients that get some revenue from those industries if they can show they’re moving away from coal or reducing their greenhouse gas emissions.

Financing Arctic oil exploratio­n will have to be approved by a special committee and no financing will be provided to oil drilling in Alaska’s Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, “due to its particular ecological and social significan­ce and vulnerabil­ity,” said Block.

RBC is believed to be the first Canadian bank to join its internatio­nal peers in backing away from the refuge.

Environmen­tal groups and First Nations praised the bank’s decision not to back drilling in the sensitive Alaska reserve.

“Refusing to fund Arctic refuge drilling is the right ethical choice and a good business decision,” Chris Rider of the Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society said in an email.

“The pressure is now on the rest of Canada’s banks to step up and release their own policies.”

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