"An Environment Of Impunity Where Businesses No Longer Need To Even Pay Lip Service To Progress"
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But times change. The election of Donald Trump, whose advisers have waged war on climate fanaticism and woke capitalism, has created an environment of impunity where businesses no longer need to even pay lip service to progress. Fossil fuel companies donated $19m to Mr Trumps inauguration fund. So far, their investment has paid off. Mr Trump has withdrawn from the Paris agreement, used an invented energy emergency to justify the expansion of fossil fuels, opened public lands to drilling, and plans to cut funding for renewable energy.
With America reneging on climate action, businesses may feel they can relax. Barclays is the second British bank to leave the net zero alliance after HSBC quit earlier this year. Six of the largest US banks quit just weeks before Mr Trumps inauguration. Some institutions have come under direct pressure from the right: BlackRock left the net zero asset managers initiative, another GFANZ group, after it was sued by Republicans who claimed its promotion of environmental, social and governance (ESG) goals had cut coal production. In each of his annual investor letters from 2020 to 2024, BlackRocks chair, Larry Fink, namechecked climate change. His 2025 letter made no mention of it.
The deterioration of GFANZ reveals the weaknesses in relying on businesses to do the right thing. Its goals were always fuzzy: instead of calling for hard limits on the financing of fossil fuels, GFANZ encouraged banks to invest in low-carbon sectors. It has since drifted further from its mission, expanding its membership to companies without net zero commitments. Though it was never supposed to be a substitute for government action, inactive governments welcomed it. Boris Johnson, prime minister at the time of its creation, promised the alliance would help to build back greener.
Many green finance initiatives have less to do with preventing climate breakdown than minimising investors exposure to the risks this creates, such as carbon taxes or curbs on fossil fuels. Green ethical investing, writes Adrienne Buller, is a way of betting on the likelihood of a greener economy, rather than contribute to bringing that economy into being. When the risk of regulation wanes, as it has under Trump, so too does the impetus for this style of investing.
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https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2025/aug/10/the-guardian-view-on-climate-finance-crumbling-under-a-second-trump-presidency