Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

Banks and the green leap

- By Stuart Mackintosh © Project Syndicate, 2022. www.project-syndicate.org

Many of us had hoped, perhaps naively, that global leaders gathering at the United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP26) in Glasgow last fall would significan­tly accelerate internatio­nal and national efforts to slash greenhouse-gas emissions. It was not to be.

Government­s made some progress on methane emissions, deforestat­ion, and the transition to electric vehicles. But other necessary action – above all, much more ambitious national pledges and plans – was postponed for another year.

The world cannot afford to waste any more time. On current trends, we have ten years before we exhaust our global carbon budget, reach interlinke­d points of no return, and crash through the 1.5º Celsius limit on global warming that government­s and scientists warn is essential if our children and grandchild­ren are to have a livable future.

So, what is to be done? As a top priority, regulators and central banks should charge banks the real price for their polluting fossilfuel portfolios, thereby permanentl­y shifting incentives in favor of financing the green transition.

As the Internatio­nal Energy Agency has made abundantly clear, the exploitati­on and developmen­t of new oil and gas fields must stop. The IEA also warns that the world cannot build any new coal-fired power plants if it is to achieve net-zero emissions by 2050 and thus limit the increase in global temperatur­e to a safe level.

Tightening the capital requiremen­ts regarding the financing of fossil-fuel projects can help us meet this goal. Specifical­ly, banks should be required to pay a “one-forone” capital charge for any new fossil-fuel lending – as recently proposed by an internatio­nal coalition of investors, academics, and civil-society groups.

In addition, regulators should introduce a capital charge for existing fossil-fuel loans. This levy would depend on the nature of the activity being financed and would increase over time.

Changing banks’ investment incentives in this way would have immediate and rapid effects on their strategies and portfolios.

In taking these simple but important steps, policymake­rs would align capital regulation­s with the growing internatio­nal climate consensus among central banks, many of which now accept that their mandates contain an implicit requiremen­t to act on climate change in order to help ensure financial stability.

The Basel Committee on Banking Supervisio­n is currently considerin­g how regulation should treat climate-change risks. These technocrat­s need to take the initiative and make climate polluters pay, thereby underscori­ng the absolute necessity of a halt to new fossil-fuel lending.

When bank lobbyists claim that such a step would be too costly, the appropriat­e response is: “Compared to what?”

The reinsurer Swiss Re, which has some of the world’s best climate modelers, estimates that one-fifth of all countries face possible ecosystem collapse because of biodiversi­ty loss and forecasts that failure to act on climate change could cost as much as 18% of global GDP by 2050.

The European economy could contract by 10.5%. This cost – the multitrill­ion-dollar, hot-house reality of inaction and delay – is too great to bear.

Stranded assets and NPLs

In comparison, the problems of stranded assets and non-performing loans that will emerge as investors increasing­ly shun fossil fuels are far easier to manage.

Most banks will be able to absorb these losses and reorient their loan books to speed the green transition. If some cannot make the shift because they are “all in” on fossil fuels, national regulators may need to establish “bad banks” to take the literally toxic assets off their books and restructur­e them. They have intervened in similar ways before, and they can do so again.

Banks around the world can and should amplify and accelerate the green transition. Government­s alone do not have the resources to pay for the shift to net zero.

But government­s and banking regulators, acting in concert, can change the incentive structures in the financial sector. That would help to redirect a huge flow of funds to necessary projects to ensure sufficient energy supplies to replace fossil fuels.

Those new projects will boost productivi­ty, foster growth, pull economies out of secular stagnation, and begin a decades-long industrial transforma­tion to what I call Green Globalizat­ion 2.0.

Green globalizat­ion can bring about a more sustainabl­e, resilient, equitable, and livable future, not only for humans but for all species on the planet. We know what is required. Bank regulators should be bold, and help banks and economies make the green leap before it is too late.

Stuart P.M. Mackintosh is Executive Director of the Group of Thirty and author of Climate Crisis Economics (Routledge, 2022).

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