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Bankrolling Climate Change

NGOs present groundbreaking research on banks’ involvement in coal financing
2011-11-30 | Durban
By: urgewald, Earthlife, BankTrack and groundWork
Contact:

For further information or interviews, contact:

Heffa Schücking, heffa@urgewald.de, Tel: (49)-160-96761436

climate@banktrack.org

Claire Sandberg, Rainforest Action Network: +01-646-641-6431 claire@ran.org

Bobby Peek, bobby@groundwork.org.za, Tel: (27)-82-4641383

Tristen Taylor, tristen@earthlife.org.za, Tel: (27)-84-2502434

Photo: -
2011-11-30 | Durban
By: urgewald, Earthlife, BankTrack and groundWork
Contact:

For further information or interviews, contact:

Heffa Schücking, heffa@urgewald.de, Tel: (49)-160-96761436

climate@banktrack.org

Claire Sandberg, Rainforest Action Network: +01-646-641-6431 claire@ran.org

Bobby Peek, bobby@groundwork.org.za, Tel: (27)-82-4641383

Tristen Taylor, tristen@earthlife.org.za, Tel: (27)-84-2502434

Today, the German environment organisation urgewald, the South African social and environmental justice organisations groundWork and Earthlife Africa Johannesburg and the international network BankTrack will present new research on the portfolios of the world's leading banks. The study "Bankrolling Climate Change" examines commercial banks' lending for the coal industry and provides the first comprehensive climate ranking for financial institutions.

"We chose to look into coal financing as coal-fired power plants are the biggest source of man-made CO2 emissions and the major culprit in the drama of climate change," explains Heffa Schuecking of urgewald. "In spite of the fact that climate change is already having severe impacts on the most vulnerable societies, there is an abundance of plans to build new coal-fired power plants. If banks provide money for these projects, they will wreck all attempts to limit global warming to 2° Celsius," says Schuecking.

The organisations examined the portfolios of 93 of the world's leading banks and looked into their support for 31 major coal-mining companies (representing 44% of global coal production) and 40 producers of coal-fired electricity (which together own over 50% of global coal-fired generation capacity). The total value of coal financing provided by these banks since 2005 (the year the Kyoto Protocol came into force) amounts to 232 billion Euro.

The study identifies the top twenty "climate killers" in the banking world. Among the top twenty are banks from the United States, the United Kingdom, Germany, France, Switzerland, China, Italy and Japan. The top three banks fuelling climate change worldwide are JP Morgan Chase (EUR 16,5 bio.), Citi (EUR 13,7 bio.) and Bank of America (EUR 12,6 bio.).

Coal-fired power plants are not cheap to build. Typically, a 600 Megawatt plant will cost around US$ 2 billion. Power producers therefore rely heavily on banks to provide and mobilize the necessary capital for coal plants. "Our figures clearly show that coal financing is on the rise," notes Tristen Taylor of Earthlife Africa Johannesburg. "Between 2005 and 2010, coal financing almost doubled. If we don't take Banks to task now, coal financing will continue to grow," he warns.

The study looks into the statements of the top climate killer banks and also examines their existing climate policies. "Interestingly, almost all of the top twenty climate killer banks in our ranking have made far-reaching statements regarding their commitment to combating climate change," explains Yann Louvel of BankTrack. "However, the numbers show that their money is not where their mouth is." He also notes that the policies many banks have adopted and the voluntary initiatives they have signed on to like the  "Carbon Principles" or the "Climate Principles" have failed to make any difference in banks' portfolios.

"Our study names and shames the banks that are destabilising our climate system," says Bobby Peek from groundWork. "Plans for new coal fired power plants and coal mines are meeting with fierce resistance all over the world and we are going to begin turning that heat on the banks", explains Peek. The study calls on banks to become responsible climate actors and to quit coal. According to the NGOs, banks need to shift their portfolios to renewables and energy efficiency and set and implement ambitious CO2 reduction goals for their financed emissions.

The table shows the top twenty financiers of the coal industry since 2005.

The Top Twenty Climate Killer Banks

 

Bank

in million Euro

Ranking

JPMorgan Chase

16,540

1

Citi

13,751

2

Bank of America

12,590

3

Morgan Stanley

12,117

4

Barclays

11,514

5

Deutsche Bank

11,477

6

Royal Bank of Scotland

10,946

7

BNP Paribas

10,694

8

Credit Suisse

  9,495

9

UBS

  8,217

10

Goldman Sachs

  6,770

11

Bank of China

  6,323

12

Industrial and Commercial Bank of China

  6,182

13

Crédit Agricole / Calyon

  5,637

14

UniCredit / HVB

  5,231

15

China Construction Bank

  5,110

16

Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group

  4,980

17

Société Générale

  4,742

18

Wells Fargo

  4,523

19

HSBC

  4,432

20

Data provided by Profundo

The study will be presented at a side event during COP17 in Durban at 11:30 a.m. on November 30th in the Hex River room. A full copy of the study with a ranking of all the researched banks can be downloaded here. The underlying data for this research were provided by Profundo economic research. They can be found here.

Banks

Bank of America

United States
Active

Bank of China

China
Active

Barclays

United Kingdom
Active

BNP Paribas

France
Active

China Construction Bank

China
Active

Citi

United States
Active

Crédit Agricole

France
Active

Deutsche Bank

Germany
Active

Goldman Sachs

United States
Active

HSBC

United Kingdom
Active

Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC)

China
Active

JPMorgan Chase

United States
Active

Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group (MUFG)

Japan
Active

Morgan Stanley

United States
Active

NatWest Group

United Kingdom
Active

Société Générale

France
Active

UBS

Switzerland
Active

UniCredit

Italy
Active

Wells Fargo

United States
Active

Credit Suisse

Switzerland
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