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Canadian lender RBC abandons sustainability finance goals citing Competition Act

Royal Bank of Canada announced on Tuesday it will abandon its sustainable financing goals. The bank cited recent changes in Canada's Competition Act that require companies prove their environmental claims.

In its report on sustainability for 2024, published on Tuesday, Canada's largest lender stated that "we have reviewed our method and concluded that it might not have accurately measured certain of sustainable finance activities presented on a cumulative basis."

RBC has committed to facilitate C$500 Billion ($361,19 billion) of sustainable financing by 2025. The refreshed climate strategy, it says, is "an action-oriented plan".

The bank stated that the changes made to the Canadian Competition Act last year, which targeted greenwashing and environmental statements, prevented the bank from disclosing certain sustainability disclosures or the progress being achieved.

The bank stated that recent amendments to Canada’s Competition Act have limited the information it can share about certain sustainability disclosures, and the progress made. It has also restricted its ability to report publicly on various metrics.

The bank was able to provide a method to calculate the energy supply ratio - the ratio of funding for low carbon energy projects to their financing of fossil fuel projects.

The bank stated that it will continue to monitor the ratio and report it internally.

RBC, along with US counterparts Citigroup and JPMorgan, agreed to disclose this metric after an agreement was reached with the

New York City Comptroller

RBC, along with other large banks, has left the Net-Zero Banking Alliance. This initiative was sponsored by the United Nations and set up Mark Carney who, after winning an election Monday, will remain as Canada's Prime Minister.

Climate advocacy groups say that Carney now has the responsibility to improve the sustainable and climate finance goals in the financial industry.

Richard Brooks, director of climate finance at Stand.earth in Toronto, said that the banks were not leading.

The campaigners are concerned that banks will use a change in the political climate - particularly under U.S. president Donald Trump - to dilute their commitment to decarbonise their portfolios.

(source: Reuters)