ECB aiding ‘climate chaos’ via emergency QE: Campaigners

Bloomberg

The European Central Bank’s (ECB) emergency stimulus program is endangering the region’s climate-change objectives by “feeding a natural gas frenzy,” according to environmental campaigners.
The central bank is buying bonds from fossil-fuel project developers including Royal Dutch Shell Plc, Total SE and Engie SA, Paris-based Reclaim Finance said in a statement. The Bank of France Governor Francois Villeroy de Galhau called on the ECB to incorporate climate change into its economic models within five years.
That is too slow for Reclaim Finance, with such a three-to-five-year window “very worrying” given the Bank of France is seen as a leading force on environmental reform, said Paul Schreiber, a campaigner at the group.
It’s the latest sign of tension between the need to help economies during coronavirus and longer-term ambitions to tackle global warming, after the Bank of England faced similar criticism last month. European leaders have said that they want the region’s recovery from the crisis to be a green one.
“The ECB must immediately exclude corporations whose practices are incompatible with Paris Agreement from its asset purchases, starting with companies that develop new fossil fuel projects,” Reclaim Finance said, urging the central bank to “stop contributing to climate chaos.”
Reclaim Finance said the ECB was avoiding climate-change reforms by referring to a “strategy review” that may not have any effect before 2022. Through its QE program the ECB supports 11 companies that plan to develop 62 new fossil fuel projects, the group said. Shell, Total and Engie declined to comment.
A spokesman for the central bank pointed to comments by ECB President Christine Lagarde in December, when she cautioned that assessments of the carbon intensity of entire economic sectors can be misleading. Lagarde also said climate change was an urgent and major challenge.
The criticism comes as governments burnish their green finance credentials, with Germany racking up near-record demand in its debut green bond offering, following a similar move by
Sweden earlier in the week.
Market analysts say the ECB may buy more green government debt as issuance picks up, but will face challenges in balancing environmental concerns with the need to remain market neutral.
ECB Executive Board member Isabel Schnabel said in July that the central bank held around 20% of green corporate bonds eligible for its purchase programs, and was being “environmentally mindful” in its pension fund investments.
The ECB has announced an extra 1.35 trillion euros of bond purchases for the pandemic program, to be carried out by the end of June 2021. It has also pledged to do more if needed.
Shell’s Chief Executive Ben van Beurden said in July the company would “put disproportionate growth into the transition,” which includes liquid natural gas as well as petrochemicals and power, while Total has also set plans to
reduce its carbon intensity.

Leave a Reply

Send this to a friend