Asia banks stick with net-zero group that Wall Street abandoned


Several large Asian banks have joined their European peers in offering support to the industry’s biggest climate alliance, after a wave of exits by Wall Street and Canadian lenders.

Singapore and Malaysia-based banks, including DBS Group Holdings, Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp, Malayan Banking and CIMB Group Holdings, say they remain committed to the Net-Zero Banking Alliance (NZBA).

CIMB is “an active member” and will “work with NZBA in this changing landscape,” chief sustainability officer Luanne Sieh said. Maybank said in a statement that it continues to “share the aspirations and purpose of NZBA.” Both are members of the alliance’s steering group.

The comments follow an exodus by US banks that’s coincided with the arrival of Donald Trump in the White House. Canadian lenders were quick to follow, and last week Australia’s Macquarie Group announced it was also leaving the coalition. Banks in Europe, meanwhile, have so far said they remain committed to NZBA, setting the stage for a global divide in climate-finance strategies.

The alliance told remaining members last month that it’s exploring a “next phase” as it seeks to address questions around how it will operate with less of a global footprint. NZBA said last month it’s planning to “investigate how it can continue to deliver value and better support member banks to individually and independently implement their climate strategies and manage the climate-related risks, opportunities and objectives they face.”

NZBA has 135 members from more than 40 countries, according to its website. That includes Australia’s Westpac Banking, which is part of NZBA’s steering group, and ANZ Group Holdings Both banks are still committed to NZBA, according to people familiar with the matter.

Japanese lenders Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group – another steering group member – Nomura Holdings and Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group also confirmed their membership, while declining to comment on future plans. A Mizuho Financial Group spokesperson said the bank is having internal discussions around the topic, but it’s still a member.

A similar coalition for investment firms, the Net Zero Asset Managers Initiative, said in January that it was suspending activities and launching a review after BlackRock departed. Several investors, including Nikko AM, have said they remain committed to their membership.

“We have one planet and there is no plan B because there is no planet B,” said Scott Reinhart, founder at Hong-Kong based private equity firm Brawn Capital, which signed up to the initiative.