Goldman Sachs to stop financing new drilling for oil in the Arctic
Goldman Sachs has ruled out future financing of oil
drilling or exploration in the Arctic and said it would not invest in new
thermal coal mines anywhere in the world.
The new environmental policy, which was released by
the US bank on Sunday, was praised by environmentalists, though many warned
that it was only a first step.
In its statement, Goldman Sachs also “acknowledged”
the scientific consensus on the climate crisis, which it said was one of the
“most significant environmental challenges of the 21st century” and said it
planned to more effectively help its client manage climate impacts, including
through the sale of weather-related catastrophe bonds.
Jason Opeña Disterhoft, a climate and energy
campaigner at Rainforest Action Network (RAN), which helped to lobby for the
change, said the decision to rule out direct financing for Arctic exploration
made Goldman the first US bank to establish a “no-go” zone in the oil and gas
sector.
“Goldman Sachs’s updated policy shows that US banks
can draw red lines on oil and gas, and now other major US banks, especially
JPMorgan Chase – the world’s worst banker of fossil fuels by a wide margin –
must improve on what Goldman has done,” he said.
An investigation by the Guardian earlier this year
found that the world’s largest investment banks had provided about $700bn in
financing for the most aggressive fossil fuel companies since the signing of
the Paris climate agreement. That financing was led by JP Morgan Chase, which
has provided $75bn to companies expanding fracking operations and Arctic oil
and gas exploration since 2016.
RAN and other activists, including veteran Bill
McKibben, singled out the “tireless Indigenous-led resistance for pressing
Goldman Sachs to make the change, including the Gwich’in Steering Committee,
which represents more than a dozen indigenous Gwich’in communities in Alaska
and Canada.
The new policy was seen as an important development
in part because, environmentalists said, the US had been lagging behind
European peers and Asian banks that have been making the most rapid progress in
addressing the climate crisis.
Even as Goldman Sachs won some praise, however, it
is clear that the company was not fully committed to backing away from its
involvement in the oil and gas sector. The bank reportedly lobbied aggressively
last summer to win a seat at the table ahead of the initial public offering of
Saudi Aramco, the world’s worst state-owned polluter.
Recent reporting on the IPO indicated that Goldman
Sachs, among other banks, was likely to miss out on an anticipated fee
“bonanza” after the size of the offering was scaled back. Citing people with
knowledge of the matter, Bloomberg News recently reported that Goldman Sachs
was among the banks that were expected to make less than it had anticipated
after foreign investors opted not to participate in the share sale.
While Goldman Sachs suggested that its motive in
refraining from Arctic drilling was an environmental one, it was not the first
time the bank has suggested it was opposed to the idea. In 2017, one of the
bank’s natural resource experts said that the allure of tapping the Arctic for
new resources had been “dispelled” by the other “enormous cheap, easier to
produce and quicker time-to-market resources in the Permian onshore US”
resources, referring to western Texas and southeastern New Mexico.
Michele Della Vigna, head of energy industry
research at Goldman Sachs, said in 2017: “We think there is almost no rationale
for Arctic exploration … Immensely complex, expensive projects like the Arctic
we think can move too high on the cost curve to be economically doable.”
The move on Sunday nevertheless won plaudits from
the Sierra Club, among others, which said it had met with Goldman Sachs
representatives and other major banks in recent months, along with the Gwich’in
Steering Committee, to discuss the dangers of Arctic drilling.
“The Trump administration may not care about
ignoring the will of the American people or trampling Indigenous rights, but a
growing number of major financial institutions are making it clear that they
do,” said Ben Cushing, a Sierra Club campaign representative. “We hope other
American banks will follow their lead.”