The Times Australia
Google AI
PR Newswire

.

RMI Convenes Six Global Banks to Decarbonize Steel

Citi, Goldman Sachs, ING, Societe Generale, Standard Chartered, and UniCredit are working together to develop a climate-aligned finance agreement to support steel sector decarbonization.

NEW YORK, May 27, 2021 /PRNewswire/ -- Several top lenders to the steel sector—Citi, Goldman Sachs, ING, Societe Generale, Standard Chartered, and UniCredit—have come together to define common standards of action for decarbonizing steel through a collective climate-aligned finance agreement. The banks have formed the Steel Climate-Aligned Finance Working Group, facilitated by RMI's Center for Climate-Aligned Finance[1], with the goal of crafting an industry-backed agreement before the United Nations Climate Change Conference in November 2021 (COP26). The agreement would create a level playing field for measuring progress against steel sector climate targets, as well as a platform for supporting the sector's decarbonization.

Low-carbon technologies exist across many industries. However, for the steel sector, which emits roughly 7% of global energy emissions and is heavily coal-dependent, commercially viable alternatives are still at an early stage. The sector's carbon intensity raises expectations of and from financial institutions to support its decarbonization.

The Working Group, led by ING and co-led by Societe Generale, comprises senior representatives from each bank's metals and mining teams. The Working Group will forge the scope, emissions pathways, methodologies, and governance structure of the collective climate-aligned finance agreement in collaboration with existing initiatives.

The agreement will be modeled after the Poseidon Principles[2], the first sector-specific climate-aligned finance agreement for maritime shipping. Developed through multi-stakeholder collaboration between major shipping lenders, industrial corporations and experts, the Principles set the stage for a similar framework in other sectors.

This effort is part of the Mission Possible Partnership[3] (MPP), an alliance of leading nonprofit organizations and 400+ businesses working to accelerate industrial decarbonization across seven sectors, including steel. Within MPP, the Working Group is part of the Net-Zero Steel Initiative (NZSI), comprising some of the world's largest steel producers and suppliers. The RMI Center for Climate-Aligned Finance[4] will facilitate engagement between the Working Group and NZSI to ensure the objectives of steelmakers and lenders are aligned.

"The formation of the steel finance working group is just the first step on the journey to a climate-aligned steel sector," said James Mitchell, director at the Center.

Media inquiries please contact:Alex Chin, associate - media relations, T: +1 973-262-0002, E: achin@rmi.org[5]

About RMIMore information on RMI can be found at www.rmi.org[6].

Read more https://www.prnasia.com/story/archive/3391713_AE91713_0

Business Times

Mint Payments partners with Zip Co to add flexible payment option…

Mint Payments, Australia's leading travel payments specialist, today announced a partnership with Zip Co (ASX: ZIP), a digi...

When Holiday Small Talk Hurts Inclusion at Work

Dr. Tatiana Andreeva, Associate Professor in Management and Organisational Behaviour, Maynooth University, Ireland, tatia...

Reflections invests almost $1 million in Tumut River park to boos…

Reflections Holidays, the largest adventure holiday park group in New South Wales, has launched four tiny homes at its Tu...

The Times Features

Why Fitstop Is the Gym Australians Are Turning to This Christmas

And How ‘Training with Purpose’ Is Replacing the Festive Fitness Guilt Cycle As the festive season ...

Statement from Mayor of Randwick Dylan Parker on Bondi Beach Terror Attack

Our community is heartbroken by the heinous terrorist attack at neighbouring Bondi Beach last nigh...

Coping With Loneliness, Disconnect and Conflict Over the Christmas and Holiday Season

For many people, Christmas is a time of joy and family get-togethers, but for others, it’s a tim...

No control, no regulation. Why private specialist fees can leave patients with huge medical bills

Seeing a private specialist increasingly comes with massive gap payments. On average, out-of-poc...

Surviving “the wet”: how local tourism and accommodation businesses can sustain cash flow in the off-season

Across northern Australia and many coastal regions, “the wet” is not just a weather pattern — it...

“Go west!” Is housing affordable for a single-income family — and where should they look?

For decades, “Go west!” has been shorthand advice for Australians priced out of Sydney and Melbo...

Housing in Canberra: is affordable housing now just a dream?

Canberra was once seen as an outlier in Australia’s housing story — a planned city with steady e...

What effect do residential short-term rentals have on lifestyle and the housing market in Brisbane?

Walk through inner-Brisbane suburbs like Fortitude Valley, New Farm, West End or Teneriffe and i...

The Sydney Harbour Bridge faces tolls once again — despite tolls being abolished years ago. Why?

For many Sydney motorists, the Harbour Bridge toll was meant to be history. The toll booths cam...