Business Weekly (Zimbabwe)

BNP Paribas stops financing developmen­t of new oil,gas fields

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ARIS — BNP Paribas ( BNPP. PA), France's largest lender, will no longer provide any financing dedicated to the developmen­t of new oil and gas fields, the bank said yesterday, as it reiterated its target of an 80 percent cut of its oil exploratio­n financing by 2030.

Although European banks have been tightening their lending criteria for fossils fuels as part of pledges to cut financed carbon emissions to zero by 2050, environmen­tal groups and some activists investors have been urging them to go faster.

The new commitment­s, coming days ahead of BNP's annual shareholde­r meeting, also included a complete phasing out of all financing to non-diversifie­d oil companies.

"BNP Paribas no longer provides dedicated financing for the developmen­t of new oil and gas fields, regardless of

Pthe financing terms," the bank said in a statement. BNP Paribas had already announced plans in January to cut oil exploratio­n financing by 80 percent by 2030, and yesterday it confirmed it was on track with its climate change targets for the power generation, oil and gas and automotive sectors.

"Its new commitment­s are welcome and suggest that banks' financing appetite for new oil and gas is rapidly drying up," responsibl­e investment group ShareActio­n said in a statement, though it added the bank still had a way to go.

A group of three climate-minded organisati­ons — Oxfam, Friends of the Earth and Notre Affaire à Tous — which this year sued the bank over its fossil-fuel financing, said the move was a "small step", but added the banks climate policy was still not strict enough.

Indirect funding of gas projects via loans to involved companies, as well as the bank's handling of corporate bonds, were loopholes BNP still needed to close, ShareActio­n and the three groups involved in the legal case said.

Banks have been announcing plans to shift towards lower-carbon sectors and away from fossil fuels, although with many of their goals being targeted at 2030, it can be hard to assess progress.

BNP's French rival, Societe Generale, last year said it wanted to reduce its financial exposure to the oil and gas production sectors by 20 percent by 2025 compared with 2019.

BNP also said it had set new portfolio alignment targets for 2030 for the emissions-heavy steel, aluminium and cement sectors, saying it was looking to cut the "emissions intensity" of its investment­s by 10 to 25 percent from last year. — Reauters

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