UBS Joins Lenders Setting Fossil Fuel Emissions-Cutting Goals
ZURICH - UBS aims to cut its financing of fossil fuel
emissions by more than two-thirds by 2030, Switzerland's biggest bank said on
Friday, joining lenders setting targets for the first time this year.
More than 100 banks have pledged to reach net zero carbon
emissions by 2050 and are under pressure to provide details on the deep
shorter-term cuts needed if they are to have any chance of meeting their goal.
UBS unveiled plans on Friday to cut its loan book financing of
emissions caused by the oil and gas sector by 71% through 2030 from a baseline
of 3.781 million tonnes of CO2 equivalent in 2020. That amounted to a steeper
cut than those announced by competitors, but off a comparatively smaller
lending book.
The bank said its target was for a reduction in absolute
emissions, as opposed to the more flexible 'carbon intensity' metrics used by
some rivals, which links emissions to the quantity of oil or gas produced.
Swiss rival Credit Suisse said on Thursday it planned to cut
its exposure to "financed emissions" in the oil, gas and coal sector
by 49% through 2030 from a baseline of 37.1 million tonnes of CO2 equivalent in
2020.
UBS' plan does not include coal, which it said was a
marginal area for the bank.
HSBC in February outlined aims to cut emissions associated
with loans to oil and gas clients by 34% this decade, while Citigroup in
January vowed to reduce its energy-sector emissions by 29% over the same
period.
Other lenders, including Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan, Natwest
and Standard Chartered, have also set goals.
UBS' lending volume to fossil fuels dipped to $0.7 billion
in 2021, it said on Friday. Its overall lending exposure to carbon-related
assets was $45.6 billion, or 9.9% of its total customer lending.
UBS also aims to reduce the emissions intensity of its
lending to power generation firms and to residential and commercial real estate
lending. Together with fossil fuels, these accounted for a sizeable share of
the emissions it financed, UBS said, making these priority sectors.
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