Advocacy Groups Call GFANZ's Proposed Method for Measuring Transition Finance 'Fatally Flawed'

Financial alliance publishes paper on how financial institutions can measure decarbonization
Contact

Ginny Cleaveland, Deputy Press Secretary, Federal Communications, Sierra Club, ginny.cleaveland@sierraclub.org, 415-508-8498 (Pacific Time)

Helen Burley, International Media, Reclaim Finance, helen@reclaimfinance.org, 
+44 7703 721923 (GMT)

NEW YORK — Reclaim Finance, Sierra Club and seven other advocacy organizations have warned in a comment letter that a proposed new method for financial institutions to measure their decarbonization impact is “opaque, easily manipulated, and likely counter-productive”. The comment was made in a detailed response to a consultation paper published by the Glasgow Financial Alliance for Net Zero (GFANZ) on how financial institutions can measure their contribution to financing the energy transition. 

In the paper, GFANZ argued that the current approach of setting targets for financed emissions incentivizes financial institutions to deprive companies of the finance needed to transition to cleaner practices. GFANZ proposed a new “Expected Emissions Reduction” (EER) methodology, which would reward financial institutions based on the estimated volume of emissions that would be avoided due to their investees’ and clients’ transition plans.

“The recent proposal from GFANZ on how financial institutions can measure their decarbonization impacts enables a new paradigm of greenwashing, in which financial institutions can continue businesses as usual while patting themselves on the back for so-called transition financing. The financial sector plays a key role in facilitating the transition to a clean energy economy. But this won’t happen if voluntary initiatives pave the way for polluting companies to game the system and raise billions of dollars without doing anything to actually align their business with global climate goals,” said Adele Shraiman, Senior Campaign Strategist with the Sierra Club’s Fossil-Free Finance campaign.

The advocacy groups warned that while the current approaches to decarbonization promoted by GFANZ and its member alliances need to be greatly improved, the EER approach is “fatally flawed”, and risks being used to justify continued high levels of finance for fossil fuel companies without putting any meaningful pressure on them to change. They noted the risk that EER could become a core “transition” metric for financial institutions, and could be taken up by financial regulators.

It is simply not credible to argue that oil and gas companies need more cash to support them in the transition, the advocacy groups said. Finance is needed, however, for sectors such as steel and cement to transition, and to shut down polluting infrastructure like coal plants. This transition and phaseout finance can be incentivized with robust policies that end finance for new fossil fuel consuming infrastructure, promote engagement practices with financial penalties for non-performance, and encourage funding for coal phaseouts.  

Oil and gas companies are currently awash with cash, and only a pitiful proportion of that money is going to developing sustainable energy supplies. It is nonsensical to believe that shoveling even more money in the direction of fossil fuel companies is the key to reducing their emissions. The proposed ‘expected emissions reductions’ approach is based on subjective counterfactual guesstimates that will be easily gamed by companies and their funders. This is in fact the same approach used to generate carbon offsets, and is the main reason why the offsetting market is suffering from a crisis of legitimacy, something GFANZ should pay careful heed to," said Patrick McCully, Senior Energy Analyst at Reclaim Finance.

The advocacy groups noted that the answer to the flaws and lack of ambition of finance sector decarbonization targets is to improve their design, level of ambition, and implementation. It is also imperative that decarbonization targets be just one part of financial institution net-zero transition plans. Key elements of credible transition plans have been outlined by the UN High-Level Expert Group on net zero (HLEG), and must include effective engagement, exclusion and voting criteria, and an end to finance for fossil fuel expansion

The comments were submitted by Reclaim Finance and endorsed by the Sierra Club, AnsvarligFremtid (Denmark), BankTrack (Netherlands), Carbon Market Watch (Belgium), Center for Energy, Ecology and Development (Philippines), Rainforest Action Network (USA), ReCommon (Italy) and Urgewald (Germany).

About the Sierra Club

The Sierra Club is America’s largest and most influential grassroots environmental organization, with millions of members and supporters. In addition to protecting every person's right to get outdoors and access the healing power of nature, the Sierra Club works to promote clean energy, safeguard the health of our communities, protect wildlife, and preserve our remaining wild places through grassroots activism, public education, lobbying, and legal action. For more information, visit www.sierraclub.org.