Bankers Told They Can Ignore Binding Fossil-Finance Restrictions
Efforts to reassure bankers that they can continue to finance oil, gas and even coal, come less than a month before the COP27 climate summit in Egypt.
October 18, 2022 at 02:14 PM
3 minute read
The world's biggest climate coalition for bankers says it has the right to ignore a proposal that would require members to phase out the financing of fossil fuels.
Tracey McDermott, chair of the Net-Zero Banking Alliance, said in a letter on Monday that the 119-strong group, which counts Deutsche Bank AG, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and UBS Group AG among signatories, has "an autonomous governance structure and decision making process" and any changes to its guidelines "can only take place in accordance with that governance."
The clarification was issued after the United Nations-backed Race to Zero campaign, which reviews and accredits net-zero initiatives, updated its criteria in June to put forward more stringent decarbonization targets. That move angered a number of Wall Street firms, with JPMorgan Chase & Co., Morgan Stanley and Bank of America Corp. all threatening to walk out over the issue, people familiar with the matter said last month.
Efforts to reassure bankers that they can continue to finance oil, gas and even coal, come less than a month before the COP27 climate summit in Egypt. The event looks set to draw far fewer financial chief executives than attended the COP26 summit in Scotland last year, Bloomberg News has reported.
"It is important for members to understand that Race to Zero does not have the ability to impose requirements either on the NZBA as a whole or on individual members," said McDermott, who is also group head of conduct, financial crime and compliance at Standard Chartered Plc. Race to Zero had put forward an explicit requirement to phase down and out unabated fossil fuels, including coal.
Race to Zero has since revised its language and emphasized that members must "independently find their own route" to the 1.5C-aligned climate goal and do so by following the "most appropriate" science-based pathway. The new guidelines are due to come into effect from June 2023.
"The NZBA will independently consider RtZ's updated criteria, together with any other relevant changes in the external environment and any lessons we have learned over the first years of implementing net zero commitments, and decide, through established NZBA governance, whether any changes should be made to our Guidelines to reflect these," said McDermott.
"The work we have ahead of us is challenging but more necessary than ever," she said. "We remain firmly committed to the banking sector playing its part to achieve the 1.5C pathway."
The bankers' alliance is a subgroup of the Glasgow Financial Alliance for Net Zero. GFANZ is co-chaired by former Bank of England governor Mark Carney and Michael R. Bloomberg, the founder of Bloomberg News parent Bloomberg LP.
Alastair Marsh reports for Bloomberg News.
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