emissions targets

Articles tagged “emissions targets

2 articles found

Beyond Targets: Why RBC and Scotiabank''s Retreat on Oil & Gas Emissions Signals a Deeper Financial Shift
Power Energy

Beyond Targets: Why RBC and Scotiabank''s Retreat on Oil & Gas Emissions Signals a Deeper Financial Shift

In April 2026, RBC and Scotiabank removed specific emissions reduction targets from their oil and gas lending portfolios, a move first reported by Bloomberg. This is not merely a policy adjustment but a strategic pivot revealing the complex pressures on global finance. The decision underscores a retreat from explicit, sector-specific climate commitments in favor of more flexible, portfolio-wide approaches. It highlights the tension between regulatory pressures, investor demands for climate action, and the pragmatic realities of financing a critical national industry. This analysis explores the hidden economic logic behind the shift, examining its implications for Canada's energy transition, financial risk management, and the evolving narrative of sustainable finance.

Beyond the Ultimatum: How Follow This''s FCA Threat Exposes a Systemic Flaw in UK Corporate Governance
Esg Assets

Beyond the Ultimatum: How Follow This''s FCA Threat Exposes a Systemic Flaw in UK Corporate Governance

The ultimatum from shareholder activist group Follow This to BP, threatening escalation to the UK's Financial Conduct Authority (FCA), is more than a simple climate dispute. It represents a critical stress test for the UK's 'comply or explain' governance framework. This article analyzes how the potential exclusion of a climate resolution, despite securing significant minority support (15.96%), reveals a fundamental tension between board discretion and shareholder voice on material financial risks like climate change. We examine the strategic calculus behind Follow This's move, the precedent it could set for other high-emission firms, and the long-term implications for investor engagement and regulatory intervention in shaping corporate climate accountability.