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Banks vote for loosening climate coalition membership requirements

Banks vote for loosening climate coalition membership requirements

Chair of the world's largest bank coalition, which is working to combat climate change, has announced that it will be removing some of the more strict membership rules in order to reflect the slower pace of change within the real economy.

Net Zero Banking Alliance, a UN-backed coalition that promotes climate action in financial services, has canvassed its members about changes to the rules it follows. This is despite the withdrawal of many of the largest banks from the coalition and the United States leading calls for abandoning climate action.

The banks voted to abandon the more strict target of aligning all sector financing to 1.5 degrees Celsius over pre-industrial levels by mid-century, and replace it with an ambition that is more flexible to align their business with a target well below 2 degrees Celsius.

Changes reflect the fact that real economic progress has not been as rapid as expected, and policy and technological advances haven't occurred at the pace predicted by banks and asset managers when they first declared collective action on climate change at COP26 Glasgow.

Shargiil Bahir, Executive Vice President and Chief Sustainability Officer at First Abu Dhabi Bank, said that "the knowledge we had about what was possible in 2021 has been very different from where we are now."

He cited housing and aviation, as two examples. "Some industries are not transforming as quickly as we anticipated four years ago. Either the technology has not moved as fast as expected or the policymaking has not moved as fast," said the expert.

Over 100 member banks of the group have already set sector targets aligned with 1.5 degrees, but to increase its numbers the group is looking to attract banks from countries that are not aligned with 1.5 degrees.

Bashir explained that the overhaul represents NZBA’s next phase, as it transitions from being primarily an organisation which sets targets to one which assists banks in implementing those changes via webinars, sectoral documents and other capacity building activities.

Bashir stated that the financial sector will discuss how it can use different accounting methods to calculate or reduce planetary warming emission, such as avoided emissions and carbon markets.

Over 80% NZBA members cast votes, and 90% were in favor of the proposals. (Reporting and editing by Stephen Coates; Virginia Furness)

(source: Reuters)