Asia’s major banks see widening gap between ESG leaders, laggards

 

Bloomberg

Asia’s major banks are seeing a widening gap between ESG leaders and laggards, as regulators in the region ramp up scrutiny of sustainable finance, according to WWF-Singapore.
While leading banks in Singapore and Malaysia made headway on implementing their environmental and social risk policies in 2022, over half of the 46 regional lenders surveyed made “little to no progress,” the organisation said in its annual sustainable banking report. Vietnamese and Filipino banks lagged the most.
This gap is “largely driven by the regulation,” Kristina Anguelova, head of Asia sustainable finance at WWF-Singapore, said in an interview. Central banks in Singapore and Malaysia have set out climate risk management guidelines, with climate stress tests planned or underway. Such green policies are prompting lenders to “restructure internally to meet the regulators’ demands,” she said.
The report also found 39% of the banks had committed to net zero financed emissions by 2050, up from 15% in 2021. Most banks in Singapore, Japan and South Korea, including DBS Group Holdings Ltd. and Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group Inc., have set net zero targets. Few in Indonesia, Vietnam and the Philippines have done so.
Regulators need to act to ensure there are no “loopholes,” Anguelova said. “We want to avoid capital going from a more regulated country to a country that has the least amount of barriers to continue with unsustainable activities.”

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