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Thursday 02 May 2019 11:10 am  |  Updated:  Wednesday 05 June 2019 9:20 am

Climate change protesters target Bank of England MPC meeting

Climate activists protested outside the Bank of England this morning calling for the institution to go green, ahead of the release of its inflation report this afternoon.

Demonstrators from Positive Money and Fossil Free London urged the central bank to make its quantitative easing programme environmentally friendly by stopping asset purchases in high-carbon sectors and favouring bonds that fund green projects.

Read more: Extinction Rebellion hates capitalism, but they wouldn't exist without it

The groups also demanded that the bank guides firms to stop investing in fossil fuels, arguing that it is “complicit in the climate crisis”.

The protest comes after weeks of disruption in London caused by eco-activist group Extinction Rebellion, which called on financial institutions to “tell the truth” about its role in the “climate and ecological emergency”.

More than 300 Extinction Rebellion protesters blockaded the London Stock Exchange, Goldman Sachs and Bank Interchange and other areas in the City last week, in a day of action that brought two weeks of protests to an end.

Positive Money executive director Fran Boait said: “As regulator of financial system, the central bank has the power to stamp out risky fossil fuel lending, using the same macroprudential tools it has used to clamp down on irresponsible mortgage lending since the financial crisis.

“In choosing not to use these powers at its disposal, it is complicit in the climate crisis.”

Last month Bank of England governor Mark Carney warned that businesses must tackle climate change or “fail to exist”.

Read more: Extinction Rebellion founder wants to upend the UK's financial sector

Writing in the Guardian, Carney said firms must integrate the monitoring of climate-related financial risks into day-to-day supervisory work, and sustainability should be central to portfolio management.

“The stakes are undoubtedly high, but the commitment of all actors in the financial system to act on these recommendations will help avoid a climate-driven “Minsky moment” – the term we use to refer to a sudden collapse in asset prices,” he said.

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