Business Day

Top banks commit to climate targets

- Elaine Chen

HSBC Holdings, Societe Generale, BNP Paribas and other banks, insurance companies and financial firms around the world moved a step closer to reducing their contributi­ons to greenhouse gas emissions.

Fifty-five firms have committed to a framework released on Thursday for setting climate goals specific to mortgages, bonds and other asset classes in their portfolios, said the Science Based Targets initiative (SBTi), a consortium that developed the framework.

The SBTi has been helping companies figure out how they should change their operations, such as energy usage in factories and offices, to align with the 2015 Paris climate agreement, which asks countries to aim to limit

Earth s temperatur­e increase to

no more than 1.5°C. The consortium is zeroing in on how financial firms should change their lending and investing activities.

Under the SBTi framework, companies would set goals such as adjusting their mortgage financing to reduce emissions per square metre or changing electricit­y-generation project financing to cut emissions per kilowatt-hour. Starting on Thursday, firms have two years once they commit to have their targets validated by SBTi, which would assess whether the targets are aligned with the Paris climate agreement.

There are a number of high

level commitment­s out there that financial institutio­ns are making,” said Cynthia Cummis, head of private-sector climate work at World Resources Institute, one of the research groups behind SBTi.

Morgan Stanley said last week it would eliminate the net carbon emissions generated by its financing activities by 2050.

Environmen­tal non-government­al groups see the financial

sector as a laggard on climate action, and would like them to be a lot more transparen­t on what their impact is on the climate ”,

Cummis said. We provide a

structure for financial institutio­ns to show they re actually

making progress against highlevel commitment­s.”

Among the 55 firms that have signed on, 30 are European, including Standard Chartered, ING Groep and Credit Agricole. Only seven North American firms have committed, including Amalgamate­d Bank, Principal Financial Group, MetLife and Mexico s Grupo Financiero Banorte.

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