HSBC suspends banker over climate comments: reports by AFP Staff Writers London (AFP) May 23, 2022 HSBC bank has suspended its head of responsible investing after he hit out at climate change warnings during a recent presentation, media reported Monday. The London-headquartered bank has suspended Stuart Kirk while HSBC investigates the incident first reported by the Financial Times. Kirk reportedly told a conference held in the British capital last week that there is "always some nut job telling me about the end of the world" and is said to have showed slides stating that "unsubstantiated, shrill, partisan, self-serving, apocalyptic warnings are ALWAYS wrong". In the presentation, entitled "Why investors need not worry about climate risk", he is said to have accused officials at the United Nations and the Bank of England of overstating the financial risks of climate change. "Who cares if Miami is six metres underwater in 100 years? Amsterdam has been six metres underwater for ages and that's a really nice place," Kirk is reported to have told the Financial Times' Moral Money conference. While HSBC would not confirm whether Kirk had been suspended, HSBC chief executive Noel Quinn posted on social network LinkedIn that the comments were "inconsistent with HSBC's strategy and do not reflect the views of the senior leadership of HSBC or HSBC Asset Management". "Our ambition is to be the leading bank supporting the global economy in the transition to net zero." HSBC and its peers have come under fierce pressure from activist groups over their continued funding of projects deemed harmful to the environment, such as fossil fuel exploration. Regarding HSBC, "investors and customers should rightly question and scrutinise the bank's promises on climate, including its upcoming oil and gas policy", Beau O'Sullivan, senior campaigner at activist group Bank on our Future, said in a statement. - Shell consultant quits - Energy companies are also coming under fire for publishing plans on transitioning towards becoming greener, while at the same time announcing new exploration of fossil fuels. However on Monday, a long-serving consultant for British oil giant Shell announced her resignation in a video on LinkedIn, blaming the company's "double talk on climate". Caroline Dennett, who has spent more than a decade working with Shell to advise on safety at exploration sites, claimed the multinational is aware that "oil and gas extraction causes extreme harms to our climate, to our environment and to people". Responding, Shell said it is "determined to deliver" on its "global strategy to be a net zero company by 2050". It added in a statement that while the group is "investing billions of dollars in low-carbon energy,... the world will still need oil and gas for decades to come in sectors that can't be easily decarbonised". bcp/rl
G20 failing to update carbon-cutting pledges: report Paris (AFP) May 20, 2022 Nations in the G20 group of major economies have yet to strengthen greenhouse gas reduction goals despite agreeing to revisit their plans ahead of critical UN climate talks in November, according to an analysis by leading research NGOs seen exclusively by AFP. At the Glasgow COP26 climate summit last year countries pledged to review inadequate plans for cutting carbon pollution this decade ahead of the COP27 conference. Without a sharp reduction in emissions before 2030, the Paris Agreement targ ... read more
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