On Wednesday, a climate coalition supported by the United Nations and focused on banking released revised guidelines for its members.
These guidelines now mandate greater disclosure about their strategies to reduce carbon emissions, specifically from their activities in capital markets.
The Net-Zero Banking Alliance (NZBA), comprising 143 members managing $74 trillion in capital, stated that the updated guidelines will also necessitate data disclosure related to the banks’ transition planning and climate advocacy efforts.
As reported initially by Reuters, the guidelines reaffirm the coalition’s goals despite challenging political circumstances, the group asserted.
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Certain US politicians, particularly vocal in their opposition, have raised concerns regarding antitrust issues.
“We are still here at the table, we are not watering down, we are expanding the scope, doubling down on 1.5 degrees and not moving away from that,” said Remco Fischer, head of climate at the UN Environment Programme Finance Initiative, which acts as the secretariat for the NZBA.
The 2015 United Nations Paris Agreement sets goals for countries to keep the global average temperature rise below 2 degrees Celsius above pre-industrial levels and ideally aim for 1.5 degrees Celsius (2.7 degrees Fahrenheit).
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Scientists warn that crossing this threshold could lead to more severe climate change effects.
The recent guidelines stress that each bank should operate independently, especially due to concerns about antitrust issues. However, they also mention a worldwide strategy to transition away from fossil fuels, which has faced opposition in Europe and prompted political pushback.