A new report reveals that global banks are contributing to the climate crisis in Africa by financing projects that exacerbate climate change. The report, titled “How the Finance Flows: The Banks Fueling the Climate Crisis,” highlights that banks from Europe, the Americas, and Asia invest 20 times more money in projects that contribute to the climate crisis than they do in climate solutions on the continent. The study analyzed financial flows in over 100 countries, focusing on fossil fuel projects and industrial agriculture.
Key Points:
- Eleven major banks, including HSBC, Citigroup, and JP Morgan Chase, have funded the expansion of fossil fuels with a staggering $3.2 trillion since 2015.
- The burning of fossil fuels and changes in land use driven by human activities are identified as the main culprits behind climate change.
- The report emphasizes the need for significant transitions in the energy sector, including reducing fossil fuel use, promoting electrification, improving energy efficiency, and exploring alternative fuels.
- Banks have invested approximately $370 billion in industrial agriculture projects, which are the second-largest contributors to greenhouse gas emissions after fossil fuels.
- ActionAid International, the organization behind the report, calls for global banks to publicly acknowledge their role in climate change and cease financing fossil fuels and industrial agriculture.
- The report highlights the detrimental impacts of these investments, including landlessness, deforestation, water pollution, and climate change, particularly affecting communities in Africa, Asia, and Latin America.
- The authors urge governments to regulate the banking, finance, fossil fuel, and industrial agriculture sectors, emphasizing the importance of human rights, free prior informed consent, safeguards, disclosure, and redress mechanisms.