It’s Wednesday, February 26, and the world’s largest fossil fuel financier is pulling funding from some major emitters.
JPMorgan Chase, the largest U.S. bank and the world’s top lender for fossil fuels, has announced that it will stop financing many coal companies and all fossil fuel exploration in the Arctic. The company is also setting aside a $50 billion fund for green projects that advance the United Nations Sustainable Development goals.
The announcement comes hot on the heels of a leaked report written by JPMorgan economists warning its top clients in blunt, dire terms of the potentially “catastrophic outcomes” of climate change.
Activists have aggressively targeted the company for its abysmal environmental record. Since the 2016 Paris accord to limit global warming to 2 degrees C, the bank has lent nearly $200 billion to the fossil fuel industry — including 63 percent more money for fossil fuel exploration than any other bank. Activists seem to agree that JPMorgan’s new commitments are pitifully insufficient, but it’s clear that major banks can no longer afford to brush aside public concern for the climate: JPMorgan’s announcement trails a near-identical public commitment from competitor Goldman Sachs. The race to avoid the unenviable title of “the bank that messed up the planet most” is officially on.
The Smog
Need-to-know basis
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