Sharm El-Sheikh, 8 November 2022 – The World Benchmarking Alliance’s new Financial System Benchmark highlights that the financial sector’s current approach to tackling climate change and protecting human rights is fragmented, siloed and insufficiently aligned to drive scale. Published at COP27 today, it is the first benchmark covering 400 of the world’s leading financial institutions, including asset owners, banks, asset managers and insurers.
According to the World Benchmarking Alliance, a fifth (20%) of the financial institutions with the greatest ability to influence achievement of the UN Sustainable Development Goals have publicly acknowledged their impact on people and planet. Only 2% of financial institutions disclose their financing to low-income countries, despite $100billion worth of climate finance being promised to enable adaptation and mitigation of climate change in 2009 and going unfulfilled.
This is the first benchmark developed by the World Benchmarking Alliance that focuses on financial institutions. It covers governance, planetary boundaries as well as human rights and social issues, and provides insight on the progress (or lack of) in the finance sector. It recognises the interwoven connection between all these institutions, the conflicting roles they play and the different power dynamics. The results provide guidance for financial institutions to improve their impact on people and planet, and a transparent and independent mechanism tracking their progress against global standards and peers.
The benchmark highlights the challenges and complexity of aligning the financial sector with sustainable development, and shows:
Andrea Webster, World Benchmarking Alliance’s Financial System Lead, said:
Different parts of the finance sector have different roles to play in triggering the powerful domino-effect that is needed to mainstream sustainable finance. Providing transparency shows us what is currently being achieved, what can be scaled, and which areas need urgent collaboration.
We have developed this Benchmark as a tool for change. Yes, it shows a dismal picture overall of where we are now, but the intention is for it to provide a roadmap for companies themselves.
While we recognise that great efforts are being made by many, frustration is high and trust in the sector is low. This Benchmark provides a basis for hard but meaningful conversations. There is no hiding from the fact the world is behind on where it should be towards net zero and in ensuring that no one is left behind. We need a social transition as well as an energy transition.
The release of the Financial System Benchmark will be followed by the publication of an Insights Report in 2023.
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