Sustainability, Clean Energy, Recycling & ESG Matters

Pressuring The Banks To Pressure Their Corporate Customers

Written by Graham Copley | Jul 13, 2021 5:50:28 PM

We have talked at length in our dedicated ESG pieces about the inevitable role that investors and financial regulators will play in addressing climate change, and we see more evidence that some of this pressure to conform is going to be pushed down to banks and lenders as standards are set for disclosing financial exposure to high emission industries. The banks will have little choice but to add their weight to the calls for better disclosure and eventually mitigation plans, as it will impact their ability to lend and their ability to defend lending portfolios to their stakeholders. Green bond markets are developing around the world, but still need some definitional oversight and it will be interesting to watch corporate behavior if a significant borrowing cost delta emerges between “green lending” and other lending – it might be a lot cheaper to get debt focused on net-zero related projects than expansion projects and it was interesting to note that Repsol’s announcement (linked here) talks about carbon abatement (in general terms) as part of the investment in Portugal.

The banks are very important to the process industries today and they carry a big stick. Whether more accountability from the banks will have the desired effect or whether it will lead to the emergence of other lenders looking to exploit an arbitrage remains to be seen.