The intrinsic role of the banks in decarbonizing the economy
-
DOIhttp://dx.doi.org/10.21511/bbs.12(4).2017.04
-
Article InfoVolume 12 2017, Issue #4, pp. 44-55
- Cited by
- 1130 Views
-
196 Downloads
This work is licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License
Global warming and climate change continue to disrupt the environment and all aspects of people’s endeavors and as such, there is need to look at causes of climate change and deploy appropriate tools to address the problem of the scourge of climate change. The bank holds a pivotal position in the economy of any country. Apart from being the custodian of money, they also collaborate with the government and international financial institutions to perform various roles that shape the direction of the world’s economy in terms of growth and development. Against the backdrop of this, this article looks at banks as part of the appropriate tools that should constantly be used to address and reduce the influence of fossil fuels that are fuelling global warming and climate change and switch to more sustainable green economy. In order to achieve this, there should be radical acceleration in advancing credit and loan facilities by banks to fund green projects and investments in order to decarbonize the economy, and at the same time maintain sustainable economic growth and development.
- Keywords
-
JEL Classification (Paper profile tab)Q53, Q54, Q58
-
References77
-
Tables0
-
Figures1
-
- Figure 1. Sustainable Banking Network members and countries having introduced green finance guidelines and regulations
-
- AFD (2011). Agence Francaise de Developpement. Green Credit Line: Providing the commercial banks with an incentive to explore the renewable energy and energy efficiency markets.
- Barbier, Edward. (2011). The policy challenges for green economy and sustainable economic development.
- Barker, Terry. (2017). The economics of avoiding dangerous climate change.
- Bei, L. T., Shang, C. F. (2006). Building marketing strategies for state-owned enterprises against private ones based on the perspectives of customer satisfaction and service quality. Journal of Retailing and Consumer services, 13(1), 1-13.
- Benn, Suzanne, Dunphy, Dexter, Griffiths, Andrew. (2014). Organizational change for corporate sustainability.
- Berensmann, Kathrin, Lindenberg, Nannette. (2016). Green Finance: Actors, Challenges and Policy Recommendations.
- Berensmann, Kathrin, Lindenberg, Nannette. (2016).Green Banking Regulation – Setting out a Framework.
- Bodansky, D. (2012). The Copenhagen climate change conference: a postmortem. American Journal of International Law, 14(2),230-240.
- Boehmer-Christiansen, S. A. (2016). Fuel for Thought. Energy & Environment, 27(3-7), 434-515.
- Boehmer-Christiansen, S. A. (2017). Fuel for thought: Mid-December to early March.
- Campiglio, E. (2016). Beyond carbon pricing: The role of banking and monetary policy in financing the transition to a low-carbon economy, Ecological Economics, 121, 220-230.
- Clark, Ed, Geppert, Mike. (2002). Management learning and knowledge transfer in transforming societies: approaches, issues and future directions.
- Cogan, Douglas. (2008). Corporate governance and climate change: The banking sector.
- Conley, J. M. Williams, C. A. (2011). Global banks as global sustainability regulators? The equator principles. Law & Policy, 33(4), 542-575.
- Dale, Gareth. (2008). Green shift’: an analysis of corporate responses to climate change.
- Draft, C. (2012). Green Growth and Developing Countries.
- Esty, Daniel, Winston, Andrew. (2009). Green to gold: How smart companies use environmental strategy to innovate, create value, and build competitive advantage.
- Geels, F. W. (2013). The impact of the financial-economic crisis on sustainability transitions: Financial investment, governance and public discourse. Environmental Innovation and Societal Transitions, 6, 67-95.
- Gomez-Echeverri, Luis. (2013). The changing geopolitics of climate change finance.
- Haas, Peter, Keohane, Robert, Levy, Marc. (1993). Institutions for the earth: sources of effective international environmental protection.
- Hallegatte S. (2009). Strategies to adapt to an uncertain climate change, Global environmental change, Global Environmental Change, 19(2), 240-247.
- Herz S. (2017). Making Paris Work.
- Hillman, Meyer, Fawcett, Tina, Rajan, Sudhir. (2007). The suicidal planet: How to prevent global climate catastrophe.
- Hirsch, Dennis. (2011). Green Business and the Importance of Reflexive Law: What Michael Porter Didn’t Say.
- Hulme, Mike. (2009).Why we disagree about climate change: Understanding controversy, inaction and opportunity.
- Jepkorir, Susan (2011). Challenges of implementing financial innovations by commercial bank in Kenya.
- Jeucken, Marcel (2010). Sustainable finance and banking: the financial sector and the future of the planet.
- Kauffmann, Celine, Corfee-Morlot, Jan, Marchal, Virginie, Kennedy, Christopher, Stewart, Fiona (2012). Towards a green investment policy framework: The case of low-carbon, climate-resilient infrastructure.
- Kaygusuz, K. (2012). Energy for sustainable development: A case of developing countries, Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews, 16(2), 1116–1126.
- Koester, Eric (2016). Green entrepreneur handbook: the guide to building and growing a green and clean business.
- Kurtz, S. R. (2009). Opportunities and challenges for development of a mature concentrating photovoltaic power industry.
- Lewis, J. I., Wiser, R. H. (2007). Fostering a renewable energy technology industry: An international comparison of wind industry policy support mechanisms, Energy policy, 35(4), 1844-1857.
- Lingl, Paul, Carlson, Deborah. (2010). Doing business in a new climate: a guide to measuring, reducing and offsetting greenhouse gas emissions.
- Lohmann, L. (2009). Toward a different debate in environmental accounting: The cases of carbon and cost-benefit. Accounting, organizations and society, 34(1-3), 499-534.
- Lohmann, Larry. (2008). Carbon trading: solution or obstacle?
- Lowitt, Eric, Hoffman, Andrew, Walls, Judith, Caffrey, Anna (2009). Sustainability and its Impact on the Corporate Agenda.
- Lubin, D., Esty, D. (2010). The sustainability imperative.
- Marshall, C., Rossman, G. (2014). Designing qualitative research.
- Mathenge, G. (2013). Living More Humanely and Sustainably: A Framework to Embracing Environmental Ethics as a Driver to Stable, Just and Self-Sustaining Societies.
- Mattoo, A., Arvind, S. (2013). A Greenprint For International Cooperation on Climate Change.
- Mayo, E. (2007). A review of the Stern Review on the economics of climate change.
- McDonald, D. (2014). Rethinking corporatization and public services in the global south.
- Meadowcroft, J. (2009). What about the politics? Sustainable development, transition management, and long-term energy transitions.
- Mehling, M. (2017). A New Direction for US Climate Policy: Assessing the First 100 Days of Donald Trump's Presidency.
- Michonski, K., Levi, M. (2010). Harnessing international institutions to address climate change.
- Miles, K. (2008). International investment law and climate change: issues in the transition to a low carbon world.
- Mills, E. (2009). A global review of insurance industry responses to climate change. The Geneva Papers on Risk and Insurance – Issues and Practice, 34(3), 323-359.
- Mosello, B. (2015). How to Deal with Climate Change?
- Nedbank 2014. Nedbank: Africa’s First 100% Renewable Energy Powered Bank Branch 23 January 2014, Green Africa Directory.
- Neuhoff, Karsten, Fankhauser, Sam, Guerin, Emmanuel, Hourcade, Jean-Charles (2010). Structuring international financial support for climate change mitigation in developing countries.
- Newell, Peters, Paterson, Matthew. (2010). Climate capitalism: global warming and the transformation of the global economy.
- Olah, George. (2005). Beyond oil and gas: the methanol economy.
- Omer, Abdeen, Mustafa. (2008). Energy, environment and sustainable development, Renewable and sustainable energy reviews, 12(9), 2265-2300.
- Paterson, Matthew. (1996). Global warming and global politics.
- Pelling, Mark. (2010). Adaptation to climate change: from resilience to transformation.
- Poortinga, W., Spence, A., Whitmarsh, L., Capstick, S., Pidgeon, N. F. (2011). Uncertain climate: An investigation into public scepticism about anthropogenic climate change. Global Environmental Change, 21(3), 1015–1024.
- Rao, Purba. (2004). Greening production: a South-East Asian experience.
- Richardson Benjamin. (2005). Equator Principles: The Voluntary Approach to Environmentally Sustainable Finance.
- Santarius, Tilman, Scheffran, Jurgen, Tricarico, Antonio. (2012). North South Transitions to Green Economies: Making Export Support, Technology Transfer, and Foreign Direct Investments Work for Climate Protection.
- Sarkar, A., Singh, J. (2010). Financing energy efficiency in developing countries – lessons learned and remaining challenges. Energy Policy, 38(10), 5560-5571.
- Savitz, Andrew. (2013). The triple bottom line: how today's best-run companies are achieving economic, social and environmental success-and how you can too.
- Shaaban, M., Petinrin, J. O. (2014). Renewable energy potentials in Nigeria: meeting rural energy needs. Renewable and Sustainable Energy Reviews, 29, 72–84.
- Soltau, Friedrich. (2009). Fairness in international climate change law and policy.
- Sonntag-O’Brien, Virginia, Usher, Eric. (2006). Mobilizing finance for renewable energies.
- Starkey Richard, Anderson Kevin. (2005). Domestic Tradable Quotas: A policy instrument for reducing greenhouse gas emissions from energy use.
- Szabó, L., Soria, A., Forsström, J., Keränen, J. T., Hytonen. E. (2009). A world model of the pulp and paper industry: Demand, energy consumption and emission scenarios to 2030. Environmental Science & Policy, 12(3), 257-269.
- Tanner, Thomas, Horn-Phathanothai, Leo. (2014). Climate change and development.
- Twidell, John, Weir, Tony. (2015). Renewable energy resources.
- UNFCCC (2016). United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change.
- Van de Graaf, T., Lesage, D. (2009).The International Energy Agency after 35 years: Reform needs and institutional adaptability. The Review of International Organizations, 4(3), 293-317.
- Ward, Robert. (2008). Good and bad practice in the communication of uncertainties associated with the relationship between climate change and weather-related natural disasters.
- Weiss, Linda. (2000). Developmental states in transition: adapting, dismantling, innovating, not normalizing.
- Whitmarsh, Lorraine. (2009). What’s in a name? Commonalities and differences in public understanding of climate change and global warming.
- Worsdörfer, M. (2015). 10 Years’ Equator Principles: A Critical Appraisal. Responsible investment banking, 473-501.
- Wright, Christopher, Nyberg, Daniel. (2012). Working with passion: Emotionology, corporate environmentalism and climate change.
- Zadek, Simon, Flynn, Cassie. (2013). South-originating green finance.
- Zenghelis, Dimitri. (2012). A strategy for restoring confidence and economic growth through green investment and innovation.