ECAs prepare to lock horns over fossil fuel financing
(Global Trade Review, London, 14 October 2024) Ahead of crunch talks within the OECD Arrangement, climate groups are pressuring the US, Korea and Japan to agree to a comprehensive proposal that would halt billions of dollars in fossil fuel financing each year. In recent days, over 40 environmental and social activity groups have written to members of the OECD Arrangement on Officially Supported Export Credits, urging them to expand an existing ban on coal financing to also include oil and gas projects. Export credit agencies (ECAs) are among the world’s largest backers of fossil fuel transactions, often in developing regions such as Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa. Climate groups argue their support – in the form of guarantees, insurance and loans – can be vital in ensuring projects reach financial close. In the past year, the Export-Import Bank of the United States (US Exim) has seen two advisors on its climate board quit over a US$500mn loan guarantee backing oil and gas field expansion in Bahrain, while Japan’s agency has come under fire for financing a new gas field in Western Australia. Friends of the Earth, Oil Change International and BankTrack are among the signatories of the letter, which says it is “unthinkable that OECD agencies continue to pour billions into fossil fuel projects”.