Morgan Stanley har taget et markant skridt i klima-kampen ved at forpligte sig til at mobilisere 1000 milliarder dollar indtil 2030 til indsatsen. Det er penge, som banken vil skaffe selv eller i samarbejde med andre finanskilder for at investere i klima-venlige løsninger, f.eks. i form af grønne obligationer. Det er en tredobling af en målsætning, som banken tidligere har fastlagt. Banken har tilsluttet sig FN’s Net-Zero Banking Alliance sammen med 43 af verdens førende banker for at fremme udviklingen mod CO2-neutralitet.
Morgan Stanley commits $1 trillion for sustainable solutions
Public health emergencies, social and economic inequality and the ramifications of climate change stand among the most immediate and pressing global issues of our time. In response, governments, corporations and investors have rallied around sustainability efforts, not only to preserve our planet for current and future generations, but also to improve the standard of living for diverse communities.
Morgan Stanley has been a leader in prioritizing environmental, social and governance (ESG) practices for more than a decade and, now, the firm has pledged to mobilize at least $1 trillion by 2030 to fund low-carbon solutions that help prevent and mitigate climate change—a scale of capital that reflects the growing severity and urgency of this global challenge.
The additional $750 billion triples our initial $250 billion goal, set in 2018, as part of Morgan Stanley’s effort to help facilitate the transition to a low-carbon economy and support the United Nations’ Sustainable Development Goals by 2030.
Morgan Stanley also joined the United Nations-convened Net-Zero Banking Alliance, which coordinates 43 of the world’s leading banks to accelerate the transition to net zero, a state in which the amount of carbon produced is offset by the amount removed from the atmosphere. The alliance provides a common framework for banks to set, communicate and achieve 2050, 2030 and nearer-term targets, and engage with clients on decarbonization efforts.
“The convergence of recent crises in climate, health and social justice underscore the interconnections between environmental, societal and structural issues. It is imperative for business and finance to accelerate our efforts to drive positive global, systemic change,” says Audrey Choi, Morgan Stanley’s Chief Sustainability Officer and CEO of the Institute for Sustainable Investing.
“We are tripling our low-carbon commitment and increasing our efforts to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals for the simple reason that there is no time to waste. As a leader in sustainable finance, it is our obligation to do more to support businesses, governments and individuals in securing a more sustainable world for future generations.”
To reach our $1 trillion target, we will work with corporations, governments and individuals to provide clean tech and renewable energy finance, green bonds and other transactions. In the first two years of our commitment, we have so far mobilized $80 billion for low-carbon financing.
Morgan Stanley’s Climate Change Commitments
The firm’s latest climate initiative builds on its 2020 pledge to achieve net-zero financed emissions by 2050, in line with the Paris Agreement. Last year, Morgan Stanley also joined the Steering Committee of the Partnership for Carbon Accounting Financials to develop the tools and methodologies to measure and disclose our carbon-related activities. Both efforts were the first of their kind for a large U.S. bank.
Morgan Stanley’s other climate commitments include achieving carbon neutrality across global operations by 2022—a goal that was set in 2017—to power 100% of global operational electricity needs from renewable sources and offset any remaining emissions. To achieve this, the firm is exploring on-site power generation, securing power-purchase agreements and purchasing renewable energy credits and carbon offsets.
In our other ESG work, the firm has supported green, social, sustainability and blue bond transactions valued at approximately $83 billion, including the issuance of its own inaugural $500 million green bond in 2015. Last year, Morgan Stanley also issued a $1 billion social bond to support projects to build affordable housing.
The firm’s longstanding integration of ESG practices and commitment to help mitigate some of the world’s biggest sustainability challenges, such as climate change and plastic waste, date back to 2009, when Morgan Stanley established its Global Sustainable Finance group. It extended that commitment further in 2013, founding the Institute for Sustainable Investing, chaired by CEO James P. Gorman, dedicated to product innovation, thought leadership and building the next generation of sustainable finance leaders.