Almost 30 banks turn their back on TotalEnergies’ Papua LNG project
Helen Burley, Reclaim Finance, helen@reclaimfinance.org +44 7703 731923
Antony Balmain, Market Forces, Mobile/Signal +61-423-253-477, antony.balmain@marketforces.org.au
Helen Burley, Reclaim Finance, helen@reclaimfinance.org +44 7703 731923
Antony Balmain, Market Forces, Mobile/Signal +61-423-253-477, antony.balmain@marketforces.org.au
Twelve more financial institutions have said they will not finance TotalEnergies’ proposed Papua LNG project [1], following a formal complaint made to the banking industry risk standards body, the Equator Principles, concerning the risks to biodiversity, the climate and to human rights from extraction and production at Papua LNG [2]. In total 29 banks and export credit agencies have now excluded the project [3].
The 12 financial institutions, which include ING, Rabobank and Standard Bank, Export Finance Norway, KfW IPEX-Bank and the Swedish Export Credit Corporation, made the commitments in written responses after being contacted by the organizations behind the complaint, which alleged that the project was in breach of six of the ten Equator Principles.
Previously 15 banks, including 11 Equator Principles signatories, had committed not to finance the project, including French bank Crédit Agricole, which withdrew as lead financial advisor on the project in 2024 after being alerted as to environmental and human rights concerns.
Antoine Bouhey, campaign coordinator at Reclaim Finance, one of the organizations behind the complaint says: “More and more banks and export credit agencies are recognizing the enormous risks posed by this project, which is in clear breach of the Equator Principles. We can only wonder how other signatory banks, including MUFG justify their involvement in a project which will be clearly disastrous for the people in Papua New Guinea as well as devastating for the local environment and the global climate.”
With the 12 new commitments, one in six Equator Principle signatories has committed not to support the project, with a further four banks responding to say that they are not currently involved [4]. A further two banks did not substantively respond but have a clear policy that excludes financing for LNG projects [5].
Shona Hawkes, Director of Environmental Justice at Jubilee Australia Research Centre says: “More than 1 in 6 Equator Principles financial institutions have ruled out financing Papua LNG. If the project goes ahead, and has the impacts we fear, this raises a question of whether affected communities could pursue financial damages from the banks backing the project. There has been far too much secrecy surrounding Papua LNG. Why are key assessments into its impacts on human rights and climate change being kept from the public?”
The reluctance of banks to support the project raises questions about its viability, with the current reported lead financial adviser, Japanese bank, Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group (MUFG) still seeking backers after the Final Investment Decision (FID) was again delayed in 2025 [6], having originally been scheduled for 2020 [7]. Some analysts have suggested that the project may be re-structured [8].
Will van de Pol, Chief Executive, Market Forces said: “Many of the world’s major banks, including all of Australia’s big four, are recognising the growing risks and have ruled out funding the Papua LNG project, leaving MUFG and other Japanese banks isolated.
“The shrinking number of banks willing to support Papua LNG demonstrates and magnifies the cost blowouts, human rights and biodiversity risks faced by this project which would undermine the critical shift to clean energy in Asia and the Pacific.”
The government of Papua New Guinea and TotalEnergies are organizing a development forum with representatives from the local community, a key step before the Final Investment Decision can go-ahead. But the oil and gas major has still not published several critical documents including its full environmental impact assessments, climate change risk assessment or up-to-date human rights impact assessment. If Indigenous Peoples do not know about the contents of these, and other, statements, it is impossible for the project to meet the “informed” requirements necessary for their Free, Prior and Informed Consent.
Peter Bosip, Executive Director for CELCOR says: “The people of Papua New Guinea depend directly on land and sea for their livelihood. By financing Papua LNG without addressing its climate, biodiversity and ecological risks, it is like borrowing against the future. Our land, sea, forests, reefs and communities will pay the debt long term after gas is gone."
The organizations that submitted the complaint, which include organizations in Papua New Guinea, Asia, Australia and Europe, are urging other Equator Principles signatory banks not to back the deal.
Ends
Notes:
[1] The 12 banks which responded to NGOs to say they will not finance the project are: ABN Amro, Banco de Bogotá, Banco de Crédito del Perú, Export Finance Norway, ING, Instituto de Crédito Oficial, KfW IPEX-Bank, La Banque Postale, NWB Bank, Rabobank, Standard Bank and the Swedish Export Credit Corporation (SEK).
[2] Equator Principles complaint made against MUFG and potential Papua LNG project financiers, Reclaim Finance, CELCOR, Market Forces, Jubilee Australia Research Center, Asian Peoples’ Movement on Debt and Development, JACSES, December 2025
Complaint to the Equator Principles Limited regarding the Papua LNG project, December 2025.
[3] The 29 include the 12 new commitments (see note 1), 11 Equator Principle signatories who had already committed not to finance the project (ANZ, BNP Paribas, Commonwealth Bank of Australia, Crédit Agricole, Export Finance Australia, Intesa Sanpaolo, National Australia Bank, Natixis/BPCE, Société Générale, UniCredit and Westpac), 2 signatories who have policies that rule out financing (Bpifrance and UK Export Finance) and four non-signatories who have also said they will not finance the project (Asian Development Bank, Bank of South Pacific (BSP), CIC/Crédit Mutuel and Kina Bank). See: https://defundtotalenergies.org/en/papualng-2
[4] CaixaBank, Export Development Canada, Garanti BBVA and Nedbank replied to say that they were not involved in the project.
[5] Bpifrance and UK Export Finance did not substantively respond but have policies in place that rule out financing the project.
[6] Fitch Solutions, Delays plaguing PNG’s LNG project pipeline, March 2025
[7] Total and the State of Papua New Guinea sign Gas Agreement for Papua LNG project, TotalEnergies, 4 September 2019
[8] Energy Intelligence, Papua LNG Tests Portfolio Priorities for TotalEnergies, Exxon, 27 January 2026
