Anticipating the release by the Royal Bank of
Scotland of its 2007 Corporate Responsibility Report, a coalition of NGOs
are criticising the bank for funding fossil fuel developments in various parts
of the world.
RBS' report isn't published until Friday (11 June), but Friends of the Earth
Scotland, People & Planet, Platform, BankTrack and Scottish Education and
Action for Development have already taken the bank to task for ploughing an
estimated $6bn (£3bn) into oil companies and "heavily contested fossil fuel
projects".
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The NGOs expect the report to focus on the bank's $2-4bn loans to renewables
projects, but says its investments in fossil fuel projects negate any claims the
bank makes about its environmental stance.
A source close to RBS told BusinessGreen.com that the coalition's allegations
are not new and date back to reports made up to two years ago.
"RBS is committed to supporting the transition to a low carbon economy, as
evidenced by our very recent partnership with the government to host the UK Low
Carbon Economy Summit," said an RBS spokesperson. "In 2007 alone we were one the
largest financiers of renewable energy globally, with over $1.5bn committed."
The environmental campaigners say that if RBS is to be taken seriously as a
'green' bank, it must become fully transparent regarding the implications of the
finance it provides and arranges, properly consider the risks arising from such
investments, and therefore cap and reduce its lending to coal, gas and oil
projects and companies.
"In the last year and a half, RBS has made small steps in the right
direction," said James Lloyd, head of campaigns at People & Planet. "It now
needs to put its money where its mouth is and stop pouring cash into a new wave
of fossil fuel projects that will emit millions of tonnes of carbon dioxide for
decades to come."
The NGOs say RBS consistently claims it should not be held responsible for
the emissions resulting from fossil fuel projects, and does not include these in
the CSR report. But, they say, it implicitly claims the credit for emissions
reductions resulting from renewable energy.
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