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Preaching water while drinking wine? The EU’s call for COP28 to address the world’s climate-harming financial flows not matched by its own efforts at home, research by ActionAid reveals

As the EU calls on COP28 climate negotiations to make progress on stopping climate-harming finance flows, its own financial industry continues to fund fossil fuels and other carbon-intensive sectors, ActionAid’s report shows. 

The EU, which has been vocal on the implementation of Article 2.1c of the Paris Agreement to make “finance consistent with a pathway towards low greenhouse gas emissions and climate-resilient development,” must lead the way.   

The report, “European Finance Flows Fuelling the climate crisis: The Role of Article 2.1c under the UNFCCC” finds that annual financing provided by European banks to fossil fuel and industrial agriculture activities in the Global South comes to an average of US$46.7 billion (€40.2 billion) per year. This is four times the US$11.26 billion (€9.7 billion) annual average that the EU and its member countries have provided as the real value (grant-equivalent) value of climate finance to countries in the Global South. 

The EU’s efforts to move the Article 2.1c agenda forward are both helpful and problematic at the same time. ActionAid welcomes efforts to shift the world’s harmful financial flows. However, the report finds that the EU is also attempting to use the Article 2.1c agenda to try to reduce its own obligations to provide its fair share of grant-based public finance.  

Under parallel negotiations to develop a new post-2025 climate finance goal, developed and developing countries disagree on the extent to which private finance, including loans provided by banks, should count towards climate finance targets. For countries already being pushed into debt by the impacts of climate change, finance in the form of grants is the most useful type of support. Developing countries are understandably concerned that the EU’s efforts to green private finance under 2.1c will be used to count towards the New Collective Quantified Goal on Finance (NCQG), relating to Article 9 of the Paris Agreement.  

Teresa Anderson, Global Lead on Climate Justice at ActionAid International and one of the report’s authors, said:

The world’s money is flowing in the wrong direction. Banks often claim that they are addressing climate change, but their continued financing of fossil fuels and industrial agriculture is condemning communities in Africa, Asia, and Latin America to the cruel combination of landlessness, deforestation, water pollution and climate change. European finance flows are a big part of the planet’s problem, channeling far more funds to the cause of climate change in the Global South than to the solutions. The EU is preaching water while still drinking wine. 

“COP28 presents a key opportunity to fix the planet’s climate-harming finance flows. But this should not be used as an excuse for the EU and other wealthy countries to wriggle out of their responsibility to provide real support to the countries suffering from climate change impacts. We need to fix the harmful finance flows and scale up real climate finance for solutions at the same time – not trade these vital agendas off against each other.” 

The report calls for: 

ENDS  

For media requests, please email Christal.James@actionaid.org or call 704 665 9743.

Spokespeople are available:

·        Teresa Anderson is the Global Lead on Climate Justice at ActionAid International and one of the report authors. 

·        Hamdi Benslama is the EU Advocacy Advisor at ActionAid International and a co-author of the report. 

Photo op 

ActionAid plans to organize an action/photo op at COP28 relating to finance flows and “COP28 Finance Day” on Monday, December 4. More details will be forthcoming. 

Notes to Editors  

The research was done in partnership with independent research organization Profundo.  

Summary of the top EU banks financing fossil fuels and industrial agriculture in the Global South, 2016-2022: 

Bank Country  Fossil fuels Industrial agriculture Total (US$ billions) 
BNP Paribas France 36.530 13.018 49.55 
Société Générale France 36.305 5.396 41.70 
Crédit Agricole France 31.279 6.288 37.57 
Deutsche Bank Germany 23.908 8.073 31.98 
Santander Spain 19.609 6.040 25.65 
ING Group Netherlands 13.386 7.750 21.14 
UniCredit Italy 11.914 6.484 18.40 
Groupe BPCE France 13.729 4.238 17.97 
Rabobank Netherlands 3.601 9.961 13.56 
Intesa Sanpaolo Italy 9.178 2.768 11.95 

This research identifies the real value of climate finance as the grant-equivalent amount tracked in Oxfam’s Shadow Climate Finance Report (2023). 

For more information about global finance flows to fossil fuels and industrial agriculture activities in the Global South, how these are harming local communities, and the solutions, see ActionAid’s recent global report “How the Finance Flows: The banks fuelling the climate crisis” (September 2023) https://actionaid.org/publications/2023/how-finance-flows-banks-fuelling-climate-crisis 

Ends  

For media requests, please email Christal.James@actionaid.org or call 704 665 9743. 

Spokespeople are available:

About ActionAid   

ActionAid is a global federation working with more than 15 million people living in more than 40 of the world’s poorest countries. We want to see a just, fair, and sustainable world in which everybody enjoys the right to a life of dignity and freedom from poverty and oppression. We work to achieve social justice and gender equality and to eradicate poverty.  

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