Major firms provided $1.5T to coal industry from 2019 to 2021

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SHANGHAI- Hundreds of financial institutions channeled $1.5 trillion into the coal industry in loans and underwriting from January 2019 to November 2021, even though many have made net-zero pledges, a report by a group of 28 non-government organizations showed.

Reducing coal use is a key part of global efforts to slash climate-warming greenhouse gases and bring emissions down to “net zero” by the middle of the century, and governments, firms and financial institutions across the world have pledged to take action.

But banks continue to fund 1,032 firms involved in the mining, trading, transportation and utilization of coal, the research showed.

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“Banks like to argue that they want to help their coal clients transition, but the reality is that almost none of these companies are transitioning,” said KatrinGanswind, head of financial research at German environmental group Urgewald, which led the research. “And they have little incentive to do so as long as bankers continue writing them blank checks.”

The study said banks from six countries – China, the United States, Japan, India, Britain and Canada – were responsible for 86 percent of global coal financing over the period.

Direct loans amounted to $373 billion, with Japanese investment banks Mizuho Financial, Mitsubishi UFJ Financial – both members of the Net Zero Banking Alliance – identified as the two biggest lenders. Neither firm responded immediately to requests for comment.

Another $1.2 trillion was channelled to coal firms via underwriting. All of the top 10 underwriters were Chinese, with the Industrial Commercial Bank of China (ICBC) in first place, accounting for $57 billion. It did not respond to a request for comment.

Institutional investments in coal firms over the period amounted to $469 billion, with BlackRock at the top of the list with $34 billion. The U.S. asset manager did not respond to a request for comment.

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