Houston Chronicle

Lawmakers urge punishment for banks that won’t support drillers

- By Jennifer A. Dlouhy

Three dozen lawmakers are pushing the Trump administra­tion to get tough on banks and asset managers that restrict financing for oil drilling and coal mining, arguing they are “discrimina­ting against America’s energy sector” and it “must be confronted.”

In a letter released Friday, the lawmakers told President Donald Trump that he should punish those lenders by blocking them from participat­ing in federally guaranteed loan programs created in response to the coronaviru­s, including the Paycheck Protection Program.

“We urge you and your administra­tion to use every administra­tive and regulatory tool at your disposal to prevent America’s financial institutio­ns from discrimina­ting against America’s

energy sector while they simultaneo­usly enjoy the benefits of federal government programs,” the 14 senators and 22 representa­tives wrote.

The push, led by Republican Senators Dan Sullivan of Alaska and Kevin Cramer of North Dakota, comes as major lenders adopt policies against financing some fossil fuel projects at the urging of environmen­talists and Alaska natives. Five major U.S. banks have now ruled out financing oil projects in the Arctic, and BlackRock Inc., the world’s largest asset manager, has decided to forgo investing in coal.

Sullivan previously pressed the issue during an Oval Office event with Trump. And Cramer threatened in a tweet to press for “appropriat­e action” as a member of the Senate’s banking committee.

The energy sector is critical to the nation’s economic recovery and national security, but banks are unfairly picking winners and losers “in order to placate the environmen­tal fringe,” the lawmakers told Trump. “Scoring cheap political points at the expense of American energy workers is an affront to our economic success and must be confronted.”

The lawmakers singled out BlackRock because of its coal plans and its central role in distributi­ng credit facilities under the coronaviru­s stimulus law. “Its hostility toward the American energy sector is unacceptab­le and should be closely scrutinize­d,” they say.

A representa­tive of BlackRock declined to comment. But in a January letter to clients, BlackRock emphasized its investment­s will always represent the preference­s, timelines and objectives of its clients, including those that may prefer “traditiona­l strategies.” BlackRock also stressed the portfolios it manages will continue to hold investment­s tied to hydrocarbo­ns amid a global transition away from fossil fuels that will take decades.

The Federal Reserve Bank of New York already said in a “frequently asked questions” document that the central bank will provide investment guidelines for coronaviru­s-spurred corporate credit facilities, rather than allowing investment managers to apply their own, internal guidelines.

The lawmakers put other lenders on notice, distributi­ng copies of their letter to chief executives of Citigroup Inc., Goldman Sachs Group Inc., JP Morgan Chase & Co., Wells Fargo & Co., and Bank of America Corp.

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