LONDON (Reuters) - The share of bank finance going to renewable energy rather than fossil fuels has little changed in six years, raising questions about how fast lenders are pushing energy clients to become greener, according to research published Tuesday.
Since 2016 renewable energy has taken 7% of a total $2.5 trillion in bank loans and bond underwriting for energy activities, according to a report commissioned by environmental groups including Sierra Club and Fair Finance International.
The total annual sum banks have facilitated into renewable energy rose to a high of $34.6 billion in 2021, from $23.2 billion in 2016, but the amount going to fossil fuels increased too, keeping renewables' share broadly the same.
Last year the share of renewable energy in funding 8% while in 2021 and 2020 it stood at 10% and 7% respectively.
"Banks' financing to fossil fuels should be phasing out as financing to renewables increases drastically to have any chance of reaching the world's - and their own - climate goals," said Ward Warmerdam, researcher at Profundo, which compiled the data.
Lenders say they must finance fossil fuels given global energy needs but that they are helping firms transition to low-carbon future.
Renewable companies often tap private and government finance too, they add.
"This report does not provide a comprehensive view of clean energy investment," said a spokesperson for The Glasgow Financial Alliance for Net Zero, a major grouping of financial institutions.
The spokesperson pointed to analysis from the International Energy Agency which suggested that between 2021 and 2022 around 48% of total energy investment went to low-carbon energy supply.
According to GFANZ, low-carbon energy investment must hit $4 for every $1 invested in fossil fuels by 2030 if the world is to keep global temperature rises to 1.5 degrees Celsius.
JPMorgan (NYSE:JPM), Citi and Barclays (LON:BARC)' renewable energy share was 2% between 2016 and 2022 and The Royal Bank of Canada's 1%, the report said.
A Barclays spokesperson said the bank had a target of facilitating $1 trillion of sustainable and transition financing by 2030 and was investing 500 million pounds ($615 million) in climate-tech start ups to "support new green technologies and infrastructure projects that will build up low-carbon capacity and capability."
Citi declined to comment.
JPMorgan and RBC did not respond to requests for comment.
The research covered 60 of the world's biggest lenders and 377 energy firms. It excluded biomass, nuclear and carbon capture and storage from its renewable energy definition.
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