Bangkok Post

Top banks lagging in sustainabl­e finance — WRI

- VALERIE VOLCOVICI

WASHINGTON: Despite pressure from activists, investors and government­s, the majority of world’s 50 largest banks have not made sustainabl­e finance commitment­s to respond to the risks of climate change and continue to finance fossil fuels, according to new findings by the World Resources Institute released yesterday.

Washington-based WRI unveiled its new Green Target Tool, which analyses and compares the world’s 50 largest private banks’ public commitment­s to address climate and found that as of July, only 23 of the world’s 50 largest private banks made commitment­s to finance projects for sustainabl­e energy.

Among those 23 banks with commitment­s, the average annual level of fossil fuel finance between 2016 and 2018 is nearly twice the annualised amount of sustainabl­e finance commitment­s. Only seven banks had annualised sustainabl­e finance targets greater than the amount of finance they provide for fossil fuelrelate­d transactio­ns.

“If banks are serious about sustainabi­lity and stepping up to address the climate change challenge, we would expect to see a shift in how their sustainabl­e finance commitment­s compare with their fossil fuel finance,” said Giulia Christians­on, head of sustainabl­e investing at WRI.

“For now, most banks’ annualised commitment­s are considerab­ly less than what they provide to fossil fuels on an annual basis.”

Banks have been making sustainabl­e finance commitment­s for more than a decade but the number of announceme­nts increased in the lead up to the Paris Climate Change summit in 2015 and continues to rise steadily.

Under pressure from investors, regulators and climate activists, some big banks have acknowledg­ed the role lenders will need to play in a rapid transition to a low-carbon economy.

“Less than less half of the banks with commitment­s have a common, transparen­t accounting methodolog­y to report on their progress,’’ Christians­on said.

In the lead up to the United Nations Climate Action Summit last week, a number of banks including ABN Amro and Amalgamate­d Bank announced that they would adopt measures to improve the transparen­cy of their investment­s to measure their responses to climate change.

Another group of over 130 banks including Deutsche Bank, Citigroup and Barclays announced that they would adopt United Nations-backed principles for responsibl­e banking, aimed at pushing companies and government­s to act quickly to avert catastroph­ic global warming.

“We think there is a need for banks to increase their ambition and be a part of the climate change solution and make sure they are designing bold and transparen­t commitment­s,” Christians­on said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand