Banking alliance aimed at limiting fossil fuel investments collapses

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The Trans-Alaska Pipeline system required bank investments. Image by Luca Galuzzi via Wikipedia (CC BY-SA 2.5)

The Trans-Alaska Pipeline system required bank investments. Image by Luca Galuzzi via Wikipedia (CC BY-SA 2.5)

A coalition formed to align the international banking sector’s investments with global climate goals has disbanded nearly four years after it was launched.

Set up in 2021, the Net-Zero Banking Alliance (NZBA) was a U.N.-sponsored initiative to shift bank financing away from fossil fuels — the biggest source of climate changing greenhouse gases — and toward net-zero emissions by 2050. Members were required to set five-year targets and provide detailed reports on how they planned to meet their goals.

“The NZBA had laid out a timeline for members to develop detailed transition plans meaning the rubber was starting to meet the road and banks globally, not just in the US, were getting cold feet,” Allison Fajans-Turner, who works in climate and energy finance with the Rainforest Action Network, told Mongabay by email.

However, the alliance began hemorrhaging participants following the U.S. election of Donald Trump and his anti-environment rhetoric. All the major U.S. and Canadian banks withdrew from the group, soon followed by many European and Japanese financial institutions.

According to a 2025 report, bank financing for fossil fuels fell in 2022 and 2023 but grew more than 20% in 2024. As of 2024, the world’s 65 largest banks, many which were once part of the NZBA, had invested roughly $7.9 trillion in fossil fuels since 2016, when the Paris Agreement to limit climate change went into effect.

“Trump’s election was absolutely a catalyst, but the wheels had been set in motion before his election,” Truzaar Dordi, a climate finance researcher at the University of York, U.K., told Mongabay by email.

“The alliance’s real purpose was creating the illusion of action to stall and delay regulation,” Truzaar said, adding that banks routinely pointed to participation in the NZBA when regulators or shareholders pressed them on climate. Now that the NZBA has disbanded, “paradoxically, this might accelerate momentum for regulation as voluntary alternatives are so definitively discredited,” he said.

The collapse of the NZBA could also push fossil fuel-rich countries, including many in Africa, to invest further in fossil fuel infrastructure, “which risks becoming a stranded asset as global demand declines. This would leave African nations with significant debt and environmental damage, while missing the critical opportunity to leapfrog to renewables,” Truzaar said.

The collapse of the NZBA, experts say, presents an opportunity to replace a failed voluntary system with a stronger, mandatory framework for regulating financial investments in industries most responsible for driving the climate crisis.

“NZBA’s legacy is that voluntary approaches don’t work. Banks have proven they won’t sacrifice profitable fossil fuel relationships no matter what they promise publicly,” Truzaar said.

Mongabay reached out to the International Banking Federation, which represents more than 18,000 banks internationally, and the U.S.-based Bank Policy Institute, but did not receive a response by deadline.

Author: Bobby Bascomb


This article was originally published on Mongabay under the Creative Commons BY NC ND licence. Read the original article.

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