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Wednesday 29 September 2021 8:58 am  |  Updated:  Saturday 30 October 2021 3:43 pm

Exclusive: 300 UK financiers provide £40bn in deforestation funds, claims WWF

By: Michiel Willems

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Around 300 City and UK-based financiers are directly providing £40bn in funding to companies that threaten Brazilian and Indonesian rainforests, according to nature charity WWF.

The funding is provided through both investments and loans, the organisation told City PM in an email.

Most of the companies are involved in the production of beef, palm oil, soy and cocoa, agricultural commodities whose farming threaten rainforests.

Other common crops include timber, paper and rubber, all of which are helping to drive the destruction of nature in some of the world’s most diverse habitats.

WWF went on to say that the government should stop UK banks and other financiers from funding deforestation in Brazil, Indonesia and elsewhere around the world.

“Deforestation is one of the biggest threats to our climate, to wildlife and to the local people who rely on forests for their livelihoods,” said London-based Karen Ellis, director of sustainable economy at WWF UK.

“Every hectare of rainforest that is destroyed makes it harder to limit global warming to below the 1.5C target set out in the 2015 Paris Climate Agreement. Alarmingly, UK investments in forest-risk commodities have not significantly reduced since then,” Ellis told City PM

No rules or legislation

The UK currently has no laws that require products to come from sustainable sources. Any such efforts are made voluntarily, which WWF argued leaves the UK’s supply chains exposed to deforestation.

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It called on the Government to develop a system for ensuring that UK financiers check they are not causing deforestation elsewhere as the country tries to reach net zero by 2050.

Voluntary commitments are not enough, according to Ellis.

“The UK Government committed to protect forests and address nature loss impacts from financial decision-making,” she said.

“The Environment Bill will require companies trading in palm oil, soy, and other forest-risk commodities to undertake due diligence checks,” Ellis continued.

“This must equally apply to firms that finance forest-risk commodities, as voluntary measures clearly aren’t giving forests the protection they urgently need.”

Treasury response

In a response to the claims, the Treasury said in a statement: “We are committed to the UK being the best place in the world for green and sustainable investment and were the first country in the world to commit to fully mandatory reporting by businesses across the economy on the financial risks posed by climate change.”

“Our new integrated sustainability disclosure requirements go further by requiring companies, pension schemes, financial services firms and their investment products to report on the impact they are having on the climate and environment, helping to ensure investors have the information they need to drive positive environmental impact.”

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