Are you funding global warming every time you make a bank deposit?

Climate Finance

Are you funding global warming every time you make a bank deposit?

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If you are with one of the major banks, your money is likely to be funding fossil fuels. Here’s how to find out more and consider making a switch.

Editor’s note: Climate & Capital Media is partnering with the climate fintech startup, GreenPortfolio, to support GreenPortfolio’s efforts to bring transparency to the relationship between finance and climate change for American consumers. Please visit greenportfolio.com for more information. 

What happens to your money when it is deposited in a bank? Chances are you never worry about it as long as you think your money is safe. But as the global climate crisis escalates, you may want to take a closer look at your bank and whether it is using your money to fund fossil fuel projects worldwide. 

According to banking watchdog BankFWD and the Rainforest Action Network (RAN), the top 60 U.S. banks have provided $4.6 trillion to the fossil fuel industry since 2016. Compare that to the $203 billion in bonds and loans that have gone toward renewable projects – a mere 5% of what has gone into fossil fuel financing. Even as the International Energy Agency (IEA) has made it clear that there can be no new coal, oil and gas projects to remain below 2 degrees Celsius of warming, banks continue to provide a staggering amount of cash to finance them.

You are not alone if you have no idea how your bank is positioned on climate change. Except for a few dedicated “green” banks and, notably, First Republic Bank, the first major bank to commit to ending all lending to fossil fuels, most banks are not forthcoming about investing in or servicing fossil fuel companies. 

Discussions about fossil fuel lending are typically reserved for investors and government policymakers through dense policy documents written by well-paid lobbyists usually working to delay or defeat climate regulation in Washington or at the state and local level. Big banks have been doing their best to keep this information from you with misleading marketing campaigns for quite some time.

We’ll walk you through how to find out more about whether your bank is good or bad on climate change and provide you with ways to adjust your banking to match your values. But first, some background.

Banking has a fossil fuel problem

When you deposit your paycheck in the bank, it doesn’t just sit in a large digital bank vault. Instead, your money is lent to other businesses. One of the most significant users of bank capital is America’s fossil fuel industry.

Individual bank deposits used to finance fossil fuel projects produce more carbon than all the cooking, flying, driving, heating and cooling you do in an average year. 

“Despite the known risks of climate change to the economy and humanity, many banks are actually accelerating their fossil fuel funding,” says Vanessa Fajans-Turner, executive director of BankFWD, a network dedicated to persuading banks to phase out fossil fuel financing and to fund clean energy.

Together, the top six banks headquartered in the U.S. provided 29% of fossil fuel financing identified in 2021 and 31% of fossil fuel financing since 2015, when global leaders signed the Paris Agreement, charting a course away from carbon-emitting fossil fuels.

Oil and gas loans have been a lucrative business for banks for over a century since J.P. Morgan did business with Standard Oil founder John D. Rockefeller in the late 19th century. And fossil fuel lending remains an essential source of revenue and profit. Last year alone, banks facilitated more than $742 billion in financing for fossil fuel projects according to annual tracking by RAN. It’s report, “Banking on Climate Chaos,” is a great source to allow you to find out what the major banks are up to, possibly yours. 

Setting your money on fire

According to climate activist and writer Bill McKibben, individual bank deposits used to finance fossil fuel projects produce more carbon than all the cooking, flying, driving, heating and cooling you do in an average year. 

“It’s just sitting there in the bank spewing carbon,” McKibben writes. “Depending on how much money you have, your bank account is two, three or four furnaces chugging all day… Without knowing it, you’re setting your money on fire, over and over and over, and that fire is filling the atmosphere with greenhouse gasses.” 

But the climate crisis has prompted growing scrutiny of carbon pollution bank lending, particularly among a new generation of fintech savvy customers increasingly concerned about their climate footprint. That’s significant: U.S.household assets of Millennials and Gen Zs are expected to increase from $47 trillion to $140 trillion between now and 2030. 

Painting the banking industry green

Banks are acutely aware of this issue and are spending millions on “green” messaging to reassure depositors that they are part of the climate solution, not the source of the problem. Bank CEOs, like JPMorgan Chase’s Jamie Dimon, are trying to have it both ways — aggressively lending to carbon-based industries while urging the world to be more sustainable and green. It is a practice that futurist and writer Alex Steffen has dubbed “predatory climate delay.”

All of this makes it very confusing for the average banking customer. Yet, understanding what banks do with your money has never been more important.

Holding banks accountable for their fossil fuel footprint 

We want you to know where your money is going, how it may impact efforts to fight climate change and how banks use sophisticated marketing and public relations to project an environmental image that likely does not match their lending practices. After giving this a read, it’s worth considering if your current bank matches your values or if you should consider a better option.  

We chose to focus on the most significant four banks — JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup, Wells Fargo, and Bank of America — because they account for more than 25% of all fossil fuel financing identified over the last six years. The “big four” have collectively lent more than $1 trillion since the Paris climate agreement was signed in 2015. Plus, if you haven’t already moved your money to a climate-friendly bank, odds are you have an account with one of them. 

The emissions generated by Citi and other global financial firms’ investing, lending and underwriting activities are, on average, more than 700 times higher than their direct operational emissions.

We then looked at how the banks communicated to their customers earlier this year on Earth Day.

JPMorgan Chase: America’s largest bank is also the world’s largest lender to fossil fuels

We start with America’s largest bank, JPMorgan Chase & Co., which has been the world’s largest financier of fossil fuels every year since 2015. While J.P. Morgan has promised to provide $1 trillion in green financing initiatives by 2030, it is still ranked No. 1 in financing fossil fuels between 2016 and 2021, providing $382 billion in lending and capital market activity. That is 34% more than the second-ranked bank.

Yes, the bank financed $106 billion in green projects in 2021 but that was easily offset by its fossil fuel lending. In the 11 months following the United National COP26 climate talks in Glasgow in November 2021, the bank lent more than $60 billion to fossil fuel companies, including Exxon, Russia’s Gazprom and Saudi Arabia’s Aramco.

For its retail customers, Chase feeds a steady stream of ads promoting bank convenience and consumptive lifestyles. Climate & Capital reviewed Chase’s consumer advertising and could not find any reference to climate change. At best, there were a few references to “green” or “sustainable” practices. 

Given its size and impact on the future global economy, J.P. Morgan will play a critical role in financing the carbon transition. What CEO Dimon decides today will have a huge bearing on the lives your grandchildren live in 2050. J.P. Morgan is THE bank to shift to climate change leadership if we are to ensure a liveable planet in the future.

Citigroup: Increased virtue signaling while protecting long-established fossil fuel clients

JPMorgan Chase’s closest carbon finance competitor is Citigroup, ranked No. 2 in financing for fossil fuels between 2016 and 2021, providing $285 billion in lending and capital market activity. 

These facts contradict the environmental commitments and values promised in Citigroup’s marketing and social media. To “Celebrate Earth Day,” the bank chose to focus on the work of environmentalist and conservationist Robert Swan, the first person to venture to the north and the south poles. 

Readers quickly called out the greenwashing: “You don’t get to celebrate earth day when you continue to kill our planet with your investments in fossil fuel!!,” said one angry reader, @RealityBent.

That did not stop Citigroup from proudly touting its green credentials in an Earth Day Blog with a graphic of a plant sprouting from a jar of coins via twitter with a misleading claim: “Our commitment to sustainable finance spans our business & supports collective action with our clients.” 

To help offset the billions of dollars it lends for fossil fuel development, Citi launched an employee group called “Green Champions,” hosted a firmwide “Earth Day challenge” and proudly announced that over two weeks, it had saved an estimated 148,000 pounds of waste, 286,000-kilowatt hours of energy and 792,000 bottles of water through this challenge. “We challenge ourselves to extend our efforts to accelerate toward a more sustainable and climate-resilient future,” Citi said on Earth Day. 

The emissions generated by Citi and other global financial firms’ investing, lending and underwriting activities are, on average, more than 700 times higher than their direct operational emissions. Classic greenwashing. 

You would not know from Wells Fargo’s social media and promotional content, which seeks to construct a very different narrative.

Citibank defends its green banking credentials, arguing that In 2020 and 2021, it financed and facilitated a total of $222 billion in sustainable finance activity globally, which it says puts the company well on track to meet its $1 trillion commitment by 2030.

We challenge Citi to stop touting small scale initiatives and PR initiatives and  stop funding fossil fuels if it wants to make a real commitment to ending climate change.

Wells Fargo: Ramping up fossil fuel lending

Moving on, we come to our next bank, Wells Fargo, which ranked No. 3 in financing for fossil fuels between 2016 and 2021 providing nearly $272 billion in lending and capital market activity. 

Despite pledging $500 billion by 2030 for sustainability initiatives, Wells Fargo actually increased financing for fossil fuels significantly in 2021 to $46.2 billion, representing a 26% increase compared to 2016 levels and putting it in the No. 2 spot in 2021. By comparison, over the same period, the top 60 banks financing fossil fuels increased their financing of fossil fuels by a much lower 2.5%. Wells Fargo’s policy on financing coal power generation and coal mining remain weak even compared with other large banks. 

You would not know from Wells Fargo’s social media and promotional content, which seeks to construct a very different narrative. Last Earth Day, Wells Fargo decided to solicit a greenwash call to action in an Instagram post featuring a woman in a Wells Fargo shirt gardening with the caption: “It is our responsibility to make sure #EarthDay is not just another day. Whether you’re joining a big group event or doing a solo cleanup, we encourage you to get involved and be a part of the change because the risk of inaction is too great to ignore.” Clearly, advice Wells Fargo should listen to as well. 

Bank of America: Fossil fuel financing on the decline but still digging coal

Bank of America (BofA) is another large bank that has joined the commitment to strive for net zero carbon emissions by 2050. Much like most banking net zero commitments, we are left with significant gaps of information about how this pledge will become a reality for BofA. 

In its environmental reports, BofA targets reducing emissions intensity in its energy, power and auto manufacturing portfolios by 2030, as well as providing $1 trillion in finance to renewable energy, energy efficiency, sustainable transportation, sustainable water, agriculture and other low carbon solutions. 

Still, BofA sits high on the charts as the fourth-ranked financier of fossil fuels between 2016 and 2021, providing $232 billion in financing. Yes, BofA’s financing did fall by 18.6% in 2021 compared with 2016, a decline that outpaced most of its peers, but BofA’s financing of the world’s dirtiest fossil fuel energy source, coal power. BofA’s coal financing increased dramatically in 2021 compared to 2016, making it the second largest U.S. bank lender to coal.

BofA took to social media to flex its environmental commitments and concerns last Earth Day. The bank shared a flashy green video on multiple platforms warning that “climate change could be catastrophic for most of the world.” Meanwhile, BofA continues to lend to the chief culprits of global warming, fossil fuels. 

If what you just read is making you see red, then it’s time to take action!

Put your money where your values are

The banks we highlighted are lending billions of dollars for planned oil, gas, and coal production that are not in line with the companies’ pledges to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and achieve net zero. Unfortunately, it doesn’t seem like funding for these projects will stop anytime soon.

If what you just read is making you see red, then it’s time to take action! Here are some ways you can make your money count in the fight against climate change:

1) Understand what your bank is up to

If your bank isn’t one of these big four, you should check and see what they are planning regarding net zero targets, their historical financing for fossil fuel projects, and their current climate initiatives. Their annual reports are an excellent place to start, but if you want to jump directly to fossil fuel financing, you can look at this report from the Rainforest Action Network, which tracks the 60 largest fossil fuel financiers. 

2) Make your voice heard

Contact your bank and tell them they need to step up on climate change. Tell them they will lose you as a customer if significant decreases in fossil fuel financing aren’t made. The grassroots organization Third Act has resources to help you take action including talking points, email drafts and ways to engage your networks. Check out their Banking on our Future Toolkit and Outreach Guide.

3) Probably time to switch

The good news is there are other banks out there that prioritize environmental values. In addition to First Republic Bank mentioned above, many climate friendly banks are either locally focused, like credit unions, or started with climate in mind. Check out this list of climate-friendly banking options that GreenPortfolio has created.

Any action you take is a positive step towards a climate-safe world.

Want to learn more about your bank’s fossil fuel lending? 

  • Writer and activist Bill McKibben’s overview of the connection between financial institutions and the climate crisis is a great place to start in the New Yorker. Read it and share it. 
  • Third Act’s Banking on our Future Toolkit has useful talking points, sample posts and emails, resources, graphics, videos, ideas for house parties and actions you can take at bank branches. To spread the word in your neighborhood, use the Toolkit to recruit more Pledge signers and raise awareness.
  • This  index of banks that undermine our climate from Rainforest Action Network and other campaigners can help you navigate the good actors and the bad.
  • A new analysis (2022) in The Carbon Bankroll report shows the hidden climate impact of corporate finances, making it possible to understand the scale of emissions generated by the world’s largest companies’ cash, investments and financial practices. The carbon footprint generated by corporate investments and money held in big banks are a significant source of emissions – and sometimes the companies’ largest source.
  • Third Act’s infographic “Is Your Money Bankrolling the Climate Crisis?” sums up the climate change banking problem in one easy visual. 
  •  This article by Bill McKibben in Rolling Stone provides a closer look at the biggest of the bad banks and what it means to our climate.
  • CBS New MoneyWatch Video (Jan 2022) interviewed BankFWD’s Valerie Rockefeller and Third Act’s Bill McKibben on why divesting from banks still funding fossil fuels makes sense if you care about climate change.
  • On the bright side, this Bloomberg article shows how investment returns on renewable energy tripled compared to fossil fuels in the last decade.
  • A new Yale survey of consumers indicates quite a sizable group of Americans (38%) say they would be highly, very or moderately likely to switch banks or credit cards if they knew their bank was investing in fossil fuels.
  • Third Act’s Outreach Guide can help you engage your friends and family on the need to motivate banks to act on climate change, starting with joining the pledge.

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This article is a collaboration between Climate & Capital Media and GreenPortfolio as part of our ongoing partnership.

Climate & Capital Media was founded to accelerate climate action by raising awareness about the critical role of money in financing climate solutions and the role capital has played in supporting carbon-producing industries.  

GreenPortfolio is focused on helping people avoid greenwashing and leverage their financial decisions to fight climate change by providing transparent assessments about the climate impact of investments, bank accounts and other financial products.

Check out our TikTok accounts for more of our collaborations content: @climateandcapitalmedia / @greenportfolio!

Written by

Elizabeth Landau & Ella Lungstrum

Elizabeth Landau is the Co-Founder of GreenPortfolio, a fintech startup focused on helping consumers make a positive climate impact with their financial decisions. She has 10+ years of leadership experience in B2B and B2C markets at both Fortune 500 companies (BASF, Anheuser Busch) and startups, with a focus on brand management, innovation, and go-to-market strategy. // Ella Lungstrum is one of our summer 2022 interns who has been contributing to our social media platforms, website, and research. She is a rising senior at Bates College, and double majoring in Rhetoric as well as American Studies.