This article was first published by BloombergNEF.
If the world is to limit global warming to 1.5C, investment in low-carbon infrastructure will need to dramatically outpace spending on fossil fuels. For banks, that will translate to massively scaling finance and facilitated capital for clean energy and phasing down support for fossil fuels. A new disclosure agreement from two of the world’s biggest banks will help investors gauge progress on this process and pave the way for other banks to follow.
Citigroup Inc. has joined JPMorgan Chase & Co. in agreeing to disclose to investors their clean energy financing ratios, or the proportions of their low-carbon to fossil-fuel financing activity.
The metric Citi and JPMorgan have committed to report is similar to the Energy Supply Banking Ratio developed by BloombergNEF. Estimated for individual institutions based on commercially available data, the ESBR helps contextualize bank financing against broader energy investment and climate scenarios. BNEF estimates that JPMorgan facilitated 80¢ of financing for low-carbon projects and companies for every $1 directed toward fossil-fuel activities in 2022, for a ratio of 0.8:1. BNEF estimates Citigroup’s ratio at 0.6:1.