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Trillions of dollars of fossil fuel finance routed via tax havens, study says

Trillions of dollars of bank finance to fossil fuel business is being routed through opaque monetary centres in a number of countries, including the Netherlands, research study released on Wednesday showed.

The research study by Tax Justice Network, which campaigns against tax havens, highlights an absence of openness in funding for energy business.

The study analyzed 60 global banks' $6.9 trillion of syndicated funding of fossil fuel companies, such as coal miners or shipping companies between 2016 to 2023, consisting of loans, credit lines and bonds.

We're raising the alarm on banks and nonrenewable fuel source companies greenlaundering their finances to hide just how much money they're. genuinely putting into fossil fuels, said Franziska Mager, one of. the report's authors.

The Netherlands has actually presented reforms to attempt to shed its. image as a conduit for money flows to nations with very low. taxation rates.

A representative for the Dutch financing ministry said it had. done much to combat tax avoidance, targeting money streams through. the country and countering violent structures, prompting a. decline of cash going to low-tax-states.

The syndicated finance highlighted in the research study represents. a small fraction of overall bank credit to the nonrenewable fuel source. industry however the research study's authors said it demonstrates how the complete. extent of finance for fossil fuels is being concealed.

Major banks have actually come under increasing pressure from. financiers and ecological advocates to step up cuts to. nonrenewable fuel source financing.

Europe's climate modification tracking service said last week. the world has had its hottest northern hemisphere summer considering that. records started and extreme weather will become more extreme if. countries do not cut planet-heating emissions.

Greenhouse gas emissions from burning nonrenewable fuel sources are the. primary cause of climate change.

(source: Reuters)