Two and half years ago, bankers and investors attended the United Nations climate summit in Glasgow, an annual event normally dominated by activists and policymakers.
It was considered a milestone as the financial sector agreed to put its might into tackling climate change.
But a recent study, published by the European Central Bank, disputed the effectiveness of those promises.
The researchers found that since 2018 the banks had reduced lending 20 percent to sectors they had targeted in their climate goals, such as oil and gas and transport.
That seems like progress, but the researchers argued it was not sufficient because the decline was the same for banks that had not made the same commitment.
Persons:
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Organizations:
United, Glasgow Financial Alliance, European Central Bank, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Columbia Business School, Zero Banking Alliance
Locations:
United Nations, Glasgow