By Matthew Green
LONDON (Reuters) – United Nations Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Monday urged development banks to stop backing fossil fuel projects, raising the pressure on the state-backed lenders ahead of a climate change summit France is hosting next month.
Environmental campaigners have for years been demanding publicly-listed commercial banks in Europe, the United States and Asia stop financing new coal-fired power stations, oil exploration or natural gas infrastructure.
But the world’s development banks, whose backing is often crucial in determining whether such projects are viable, are also facing calls to starve the fossil fuel industry of finance.
Guterres urged a virtual meeting of a coalition of finance ministers and economic policymakers from dozens of countries to ensure development banks phase out fossil fuel investments, rapidly scale up support for renewable energy, and back projects to help those most exposed to the impacts of climate change.
“We need speed, scale, and decisive leadership,” Guterres said in a video message. “I count on this coalition to rise to the challenge.”
France is hosting what it says is the first global meeting of all public development banks to discuss climate change, called the Finance in Common Summit, on Nov. 12.
(Reporting by Matthew Green; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama)