Business Weekly (Zimbabwe)

BNP Paribas sued in France over fossil-fuel financing

-

PARIS. — Three climate-minded organisati­ons are set on Thursday to sue BNP Paribas (BNPP.PA), the eurozone’s biggest bank, on grounds its loans to oil and gas majors breach a legally binding duty to ensure its activities do not harm the environmen­t.

The three advocacy groups — Oxfam, Friends of the Earth and Notre Affaire à Tous — said in a statement that the lawsuit is aimed at making the French lender stop and exit the financing of fossil fuels, in what they called a world first against a commercial bank.

“BNP Paribas continues to write new blank cheques to the largest fossil fuel companies without setting any conditions for an oil-free, gas-free ecological transition,” said Alexandre Poidatz, advocacy officer at Oxfam France.

In a statement sent to Reuters, BNP said it regretted the advocacy groups chose litigation over dialogue and that it could not stop all fossil-fuel financing right away.

“We’re convinced that the ecological transition is the only viable path for the future of our economies,” it said.

Legal activism is an increasing­ly popular move for campaigner­s as they seek to push companies to move faster in the shift to a low-carbon economy and to hold laggards to account.

The Paris Agreement on climate change has set a goal to limit the global average temperatur­e rise to 1.5 degrees Celsius - a target that looks out of reach, the UN Environmen­t Programme (UNEP) said last year.

The case against BNP is part of a number of legal attacks taking place, targeting different laws and organisati­ons ranging from Air France-KLM’s Dutch branch to Shell, TotalEnerg­ies and even the French state.

It is based on a French law adopted in 2017 that requires companies to draft so-called environmen­tal damage vigilance plans. No court in France has yet forced a firm to change its ways on the basis of this law.

A much-awaited ruling in a similar case against TotalEnerg­ies (TTEF.PA) — a top client of BNP’s — is expected early next week.

The three NGOs said their legal approach against BNP is modelled after a historic lawsuit in the Netherland­s against Shell, which in 2021 was forced by a Dutch court to drasticall­y reduce the greenhouse gas emissions of its global operations to be brought in line with science-based climate assessment­s.

The groups claim that while BNP does not directly finance such projects, its general extension of credit allows it to make climate-friendly claims, such as joining the Net Zero Banking Alliance, while continuing to support potentiall­y damaging projects via its banking clients.

 ?? ?? BNP said it regretted the advocacy groups chose litigation over dialogue and that it could not stop all fossil-fuel financing right away
BNP said it regretted the advocacy groups chose litigation over dialogue and that it could not stop all fossil-fuel financing right away

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe