Bank of America (BoA)
has announced it will mobilize an additional $300 billion in capital by 2030
through its Environmental Business Initiative. This third commitment
increases the company’s investment in low-carbon business activities as part of
its focus on deploying capital for responsible, sustainable growth. Through
lending, investing, capital raising, advisory services and developing financing
solutions, this new commitment will drive innovation and help to accelerate the
transition to a low-carbon, sustainable economy.
The $300 billion goal brings BoA’s total commitment to more than $445 billion
since 2007, when the company issued its first Environmental Business
Initiative.
The bank has deployed more than $126 billion over the past 12 years in support
of environmental business efforts across the globe.
“The need to mobilize and deploy capital to address climate change has never
been more urgent,” said Bank of America Vice Chairman Anne Finucane. “As one
of the world’s largest financial institutions, Bank of America has a
responsibility and an important role to play in helping to mitigate and build
resilience to climate change by using our expertise and resources, as well as
our ability to convene partners across sectors, to accelerate the transition
from a high-carbon to a low-carbon society.”
This commitment, like the previous two, will not impact corporate expenses.
Leadership in environmental business finance
In 2013, Bank of America issued its second Environmental Business Initiative
commitment with a goal to deploy $125 billion by 2025. The company will achieve
this commitment by the end of 2019, six years ahead of schedule.
Highlights of how BoA supports clients through environmental business include:
-
Since 2013, Bank of America has issued $4.35 billion in corporate green
bonds. In May 2018, the company issued its fourth and largest green
bond
for $2.25 billion — becoming the first US financial institution to issue
four corporate green bonds.
-
Bank of America Merrill Lynch has led green bond underwriting since
2007, according to the Environmental Finance Green Bond Database and
Bloomberg New Energy Finance league tables. Since 2007, Bank of America
Merrill Lynch has underwritten $38 billion in green bonds on behalf of 100
clients, supporting more than 220 deals and providing critical funding to
environmental projects.
-
In 2017, BoA was one of a coalition of companies that introduced the
world’s first investment-grade carbon-pricing system for the power
sector —
which accounts for one-quarter of global emissions — in an effort to
accelerate the transformation needed to limit global warming to a 2°C
scenario.
-
The company was the No. 1 tax equity investor in the US from 2015 through
2018, again according to Bloomberg New Energy Finance. Since 2007, the Bank
of America Merrill Lynch Renewable Energy Finance team has been responsible
for approximately $10.5 billion of renewable energy tax equity financing
supporting wind and solar facilities.
-
By helping clean energy business tap global markets, Bank of America is
funding important sustainable projects while creating jobs and spurring
economic progress. EY took an independent
look
at a 25 percent subset of its second environmental commitment ($30 billion
deployed in the US between 2013 and 2017) and found this financing supported
an annual average of 76,000 domestic jobs, realized a cumulative $70
billion in economic output, and contributed a cumulative $36 billion to
GDP.
Capital deployment for sustainable development
Bank of America’s Environmental Business Initiative is part of the company’s
focus on facilitating the deployment of capital to further sustainable
development. Recognizing there is a significant gap between the capital that
must be applied to global challenges and the amount that is being deployed
today, Bank of America is a leader in engaging the private sector by mobilizing
players across the entire financial system to increase the flow of capital.
Alongside smaller, recent initiatives from organizations including Gold
Standard.
John
Hancock
and
Verra,
BoA says this enterprise-wide initiative is designed to unlock the necessary
financing and investment to address the broad needs outlined in the UN
Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) — including affordable housing,
clean water and sanitation, sustainable energy, education and health care. In
2018 alone, Bank of America deployed more than $50 billion that impacted a key
subset of the SDGs.
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Sustainable Brands Staff
Published Apr 4, 2019 2pm EDT / 11am PDT / 7pm BST / 8pm CEST