this post was submitted on 17 Aug 2024
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  • In short: Australia's largest mortgage lender [CBA] is no longer offering money to fossil fuel companies that are not aligned with the Paris Agreement.
  • The bank announced the new direction in its latest climate report, published on the same day it posted close to $10 billion in full-year net profit.
  • What's next? The spotlight is now on the other big banks with a finance deal of about $750 million for oil and gas giant Santos on the table.
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[โ€“] PeterLG@theblower.au 0 points 3 months ago (1 children)

@MHLoppy

Who gets to define "genuine"? Don't get me wrong, this sounds good, but money and fossil fuels have been bedmates for a very long time.

#Environment #FossilFuels #Finance

[โ€“] MHLoppy@fedia.io 4 points 3 months ago

Commonwealth Bank uses independent assessors to check the transition plans of its fossil fuel clients, and if they do not meet the bank's criteria, it will not loan to them.

Another part of a company's transition plan that will come under scrutiny is the emissions that it covers.

CBA required scope three emissions to be included in the reports. These are the emissions that come from the products the company produces, such as the emissions from gas that is exported and burnt offshore.

Unnamed third party / third parties (also not named in the report). Probably a company like MSCI or something?