HSBC faces shareholder pressure to cut fossil fuel financing
Investors are turning their attention to the banking sector, which pours billions into hydrocarbons each year despite committing to support net-zero by 2050
Shareholders with $2.4tn in collective assets co-filed a resolution on Monday urging HSBC to publish a strategy and targets for the short, medium and long-term to lower its exposure to fossil fuel assets on a timeline aligned with the Paris Agreement. The resolution, which urges HSBC to start with coal, follows a four-year engagement with the London-based bank and is backed by 15 institutional investors, including pension funds and asset management giants Amundi and Man Group. Many of the world’s biggest banks have committed to become net-zero by 2050—including HSBC—but many are failing to reduce their financing of fossil fuels through underwriting services and loans. Institutional investors
Also in this section
14 January 2025
Bioenergy will be a key part of the energy transition as the world decarbonises, and Brazil is set to be a major player in the sector
14 January 2025
The region has ample resources of both gas and renewable energy and developing both will be vital to the global effort to reduce emissions
13 January 2025
The region’s fast-growing economies stand at a pivotal juncture, with the opportunity to drive a sustainable growth strategy that will keep the world’s net-zero ambitions alive
10 January 2025
Global energy demand keeps rising, and digital technology will play a crucial role in both meeting that demand and doing so in a sustainable way