RBS, what are you waiting for?

Yesterday the Royal Bank of Scotland held their 2011 Annual General Meeting at their Gogarburn headquarters on the industrial edge of Edinburgh (see Press Association video with Clayton Thomas-Muller from Indigenous Environmental Network and myself). The conference centre was flanked by press jesting with shareholders about diminishing returns. Much of the press group made a dash for the entrance when around 20 ‘Oily Bankers’ arrived, suited, booted and adorned with false moustaches and bowler hats, to protest RBS finance of fossil fuels. The group climbed on top of the RBS logo monument and the poured oil down their throats.
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Representatives of Canadian First Nation groups and communities arrived shortly after and became the focus of media attention around the questions they would be bringing to the AGM on RBS finance for tar sands related projects and companies. Jasmine Thomas, leader of Yinka Dene 
Alliance – a forum of indigenous people in British Columbia – called on 
RBS “to behave like an ethical, publicly owned, financial institution”. “RBS 
should not make money from business with Enbridge, whose proposed 
pipeline will result in the pipeline spills that threaten our salmon 
economy, our water security and our cultural foundation.”
My question was along similar lines. There is a massive gap between RBS rhetoric and RBS financing. As a publicly owned bank, RBS is not financing in the interests of the public good – exactly the opposite. After gallons of greenwash RBS needs to stump up some solid policies that limit its finance of fossil fuels, rather than an array of ‘Group Sustainability’ and ‘Energy Financing’ reports that are filled with empty rhetoric.
Whenever RBS claims envoronmental interest or responsibility it is being hypocritical – its risk assets, or financing, of fossil fuels are greater than any other UK bank.
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Our most recently released report ‘Dirty Money: Corporate greenwash and RBS coal finance’ shows that from 2008 to 2010 inclusive RBS has been involved in financing worth almost €8bn to international coal projects. This research looked specifically at the financing of the world’s 20 biggest coal mine operators and 20 biggest generators of coal based electricity, as listed by Profundo, internationally renowned financial research and consultancy group.

In August 2010 the Sunday Herald ran a front cover expose showing that RBS had provided nearly £13bn worth of finance to the oil and gas industries in the two years since it was bailed out by the UK public.

PLATFORM has been tracking RBS fossil fuel finance for the past five years. We’ve done this research using industry sources including Project Finance International and Bloomberg. One of our demands of RBS over the past five years has been to monitor and publish their fossil fuel finance deals – so that we can draw from a complete set of data. The industry sources we use are those used by international banks and companies around the world, but are not complete accounts of all deals, and do not qualify as publicly available because they are expensive to access – we have obtained information from them as part of the international network of groups tracking banks harmful investments, BankTrack.

Over the past 5 years, we’ve seen RBS do a U-turn in its rhetoric on fossils and climate. From calling itself ‘The Oil and Gas Bank’, the bank has become increasingly conscious of the negative perception that this association could promote in an more climate-conscious public. Since then, rather than engage in any serious finance policy shifts, such as ruling out investments in companies or projects involved in tar sands or new coal, RBS has generated a steady wave of greenwash to detract attention from the worst of its finance deals. Its most recent endeavour – the sponsorship of the nationwide event Climate Week one month ago – follows the same pattern of emphasising corporate concern about climate change, while at the same time refusing to address the issue of the provision of finance to those industries that are largely responsible for it.

RBS recently in late 2010 produced an Energy Financing Report, a document that made various claims of socially and environmentally responsible behaviour and was a sorry excuse compared to the energy policies drawn up by other international banks DexiaWest LBThe Co-op and HSBC. One example from it makes a case in point on RBS window-dressing:

“Since 2006, we have provided more finance to wind power projects than any other type of energy project.”

Finance for wind power does not offset or neutralise finance to coal power. Wind turbines alone do not deal with climate change – there needs to be a concurrent move away from fossil fuels. This figure also refers to the provision of project based finance (a kind of finance that is provided to specific, discrete projects) as opposed to corporate finance (finance that is provided to a corporate entity for them to do with largely as they choose). RBS here seem to be leaving their provision of corporate finance to fossil fuel companies out of the equation. According to research carried out by Brant Olson of the Rainforest Action Network based in North Amercia, if we move the focus away from project finance, the figures tell a very different story. Since the bail-out, less than 1% of the US$15 billion RBS raised for the energy sector went to alternative energy – just US$83 million.

Having bailed out RBS, the UK taxpayer is owed a financing practice that serves the public good by promoting ecological, social and economic sustainability rather than driving us to the edge of climate catastrophe. Over the past three years students have mobilised to kick RBS of their campuses, a coalition of NGOs has taken the Treasury to court for failing to restrict RBS finance in the bail-out, climate activists have targeted the UK as part of several Climate Camps, affected groups and First Nation representatives have met with the Head of Corporate Social Responsibility, the Head of Sustainability and the Chairperson; yet still RBS greenwash their portfolio and fail to act on the clearly made demands of a concerned public. What are they waiting for?

RBS AGM – the aftermath and the follow up

On the 28th of April, RBS held its Annual General Meeting in Edinburgh. Amidst the various motions relating to executive bonuses and a report back on the rocky road to recovery, two people raised concerns over the impact that RBS’ investments were having on indigenous communities in very different parts of the world.

Eriel Tchekwie Deranger is a Dene woman from Canada, a community member of Fort Chipewyan in Canada, and a tar sands campaigner for the Rainforest Action Network. Writing in the RAN blog about her experiences in Edinburgh at the AGM, Eriel talks about questioning the board about how they could justify the damage being done through tar sands extraction by companies that the bank was financing. And whether RBS would consider moving towards policies that fully respect the rights of indigenous communities to free, prior and informed consent.

Simon Chambers is a documentary maker who has spent some years in India making a documentary that was screened by Channel 4 that examined the impact that a mining company, Vedanta, was having on tribal peoples in Orissa, the poorest state in India. RBS has been involved in providing finance to Vedanta on a number of occasions, and Simon wanted to know why RBS was continuing to provide finance to a company with such an appalling human rights and environment record.

Apart from questions being raised inside the AGM, there was a feisty protest taking place outside the building, and later on in the evening, a number of groups, including Platform hosted a Public Shareholders Meeting, inviting the UK public as majority shareholder in RBS to come and discuss the future of the bank. There was also some great coverage of RBS’ appalling record in fossil fuel finance in the press in Scotland, including a head-to-head piece between Platform and RBS in the Edinburgh Evening News debating RBS’s attempts to greenwash itself as an engine of sustainability.

The day after the AGM, RBS requested a meeting with the various groups who have been putting pressure on the bank. Previously, we have only had meeting with people from the bank’s Corporate Social Responsibility team, but this time the meeting took place with Philip Hampton, the Group Chairman of the bank, which was a sign that the campaign and the demands around the campaign were being taken more seriously.

The meeting didn’t lead to any immediate results. Deborah Doane from WDM who also took part in the meeting, wrote in her organisation’s blog that the banking executives hid behind a number of defensive positions, but out of the meeting came an invitation from Philip Hampton to write a more detailed letter to the board outlining our concerns in more detail.

After a week or so of edits and re-edits, the letter, which is copied below, was sent to Philip Hampton last week. We’ll keep you posted once we get the response.

17 May 2010

Dear Sir Phillip,

Thank you for meeting us at the end of last month in Edinburgh, and for your clear commitment to take our concerns and suggestions to the Board of RBS, and to Sandy Crombie as the senior independent director and chair of the Board’s sub-committee on sustainability.

We are now writing, as agreed, to set out specific suggestions and proposals to address some of the concerns we have about the practices, policies and governance of RBS. These reflect the different competences and remits of each of our organisations.

Our concerns about RBS, especially as a primarily tax-payer owned bank, relate to the severe environmental consequences of financing projects and companies involved in exploitation of fossil fuels, and particularly tar sands, as well as to human rights abuses, and other social concerns, including poverty and conflict arising from these activities. We provide, below, a list of steps we believe RBS should be taking towards meeting these concerns, including issues of disclosure, risk management, investment practices, due diligence and governance.

1. Improved disclosure of financial arrangements. It was clear in our discussions that full and prompt disclosure of information is essential to better understand the consequences of the bank’s activities. Where RBS is involved in project or corporate finance, either as a lead underwriter or as a member of a syndicate, we expect the bank to disclose the client and purpose of the finance. The bank should also disclose the nature and magnitude (if not the client) where such arrangements are declined for reasons of human rights, environmental, ethical or social performance. At an absolute minimum, the bank should disclose annually the total number and value of such declined arrangements in each sector.

2. Improved disclosure of greenhouse gas emissions embedded in the bank’s project and corporate finance portfolio. Given the tightening in legislation relating to greenhouse gases, there is growing probability that high carbon intensity assets will become more expensive to operate, undermining cash flows and leading to refinancing risk. There is consequently a direct incentive for the bank to analyse the carbon emissions of clients operating in carbon-intensive sectors and providing related disclosure to stakeholders. While compilation of a ‘carbon footprint’ for every customer might be onerous, it would surely be practical to measure and disclose such ‘embedded emissions’ for all loans or arrangements over, say £10m. There are companies that could provide such a service. Moreover, failure to collate such information could be considered a breach of the Board’s duty under Company Law to consider significant risks to the business including those from environmental issues.

3. Risk management. We noted in our meeting that you failed to mention environmental or social risks in your Business Review. While we appreciate some issues are captured in your sustainability reports, we reminded you that under UK Company Law the Business Review is also obliged to consider and alert shareholders to such risks. While some investors may read your sustainability reports, others will not, and the disclosure of environmental or social risks is not simply a matter of interest to explicitly ‘socially responsible investors’, it is a legal duty held by the directors to all members of the company. For example, the risks of extant legal challenges to the Canadian government, as regards to its constitutional obligations to uphold the rights of indigenous peoples certainly place a medium-term financial risk on your investments in companies operating in tar sands if these cases are successful. We also understand that your SEC report of risks does make reference to environmental factors such as climate change, and we would fully expect these reports to be aligned.

4. Human Rights obligations: There is an emerging consensus, reflected in the 2010 report on Business and Human Rights of the UN Special Representative, Professor Ruggie, that the responsibility to respect human rights applies to all companies in all situations. He defines the scope of this activity by “the actual and potential human rights impacts generated through a company’s own business activities and through its relationships with other parties, such as business partners, entities in its value chain, other non-State actors and State agents”. This clearly applies to financial products and services supplied by RBS. We challenge RBS to live up to its stated Group Position on Human Rights, which specifies a commitment “to respecting and upholding human rights in all areas of our operations and within our sphere of influence”. Simply having a policy statement and excluding some countries from your operations does not address this.

5. Social responsibility: We believe RBS must acknowledge and act upon its responsibility for the downstream impacts of its financial support for client businesses. Such impacts on local populations are particularly severe in cases such as tar sands and other extractive industries. RBS should require clients to provide evidence of Free Prior Informed Consent (FPIC) from First Nations (and other indigenous peoples) on projects and activities affecting their community. FPIC reflects international law, minimizes conflict, and was adopted by TD Bank Financial Group as part of its Environmental Management Framework in 2007.
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7. Investment criteria: RBS should establish clear criteria to guide its project and corporate finance in high-risk sectors such as weapons, mineral extraction and fossil fuels. Pending such development RBS should announce and implement a moratorium on the extension of any new credit guarantees or debt/equity issuance underwritings to companies that own and/or are undertaking activities within an agreed list of project types and companies involved in such projects (including unabated coal power; and the upstream and midstream development activities associated with unconventional fossil fuels including tar sands). The bank should further commit to a progressive review of all such existing investments in the Bank’s lending portfolio. We firmly believe that the case for enhanced due diligence in financing such risky industries is as compelling as the case for phasing out financing for the manufacture of cluster munitions, steps already undertaken by RBS.

8. ESE policy development: We note that RBS intends to produce ESE policy statements this year on oil and gas; energy generation and on mining. These will provide the bank with clear opportunities to show a commitment to demonstrably moving away from a business-as-usual model. Nevertheless, a policy generated only by internal processes and people is likely to be constrained by existing policies and priorities. We recommend that the bank consult the UK Sustainable Development Commission, or another independent body with relevant and appropriately broad expertise to facilitate discussions internally and with relevant stakeholders.

9. The Equator Principles: You noted the bank’s commitment to the Equator Principles for project finance. But as you know, there are significant shortcomings with implementation of the principles. We call upon RBS to ensure exemplary practice through enhanced transparency and accountability, including external, independent and transparent third party verification of compliance with the principles and voluntary extension of your application of the Principles to all corporate finance activities conducted by the bank.

10. Engagement practices:
RBS should commit to active engagement with its corporate and project finance clients wherever evidence emerges of a lack of compliance with EP or equivalent standards. The bank should use its leverage as a financier to seek rapid and appropriate rectification, remediation and compensation to protect the corporate reputation of both the bank and its client.

There is also a longer term case to shift the bank to a more progressive agenda, that will enhance the value of the bank over time. In respect of fossil fuel investments, that case arises from the conclusions of the Stern Report and with the strategic direction, which has been set by the Committee on Climate Change. Given that taxpayers comprise the vast majority of RBS’s shareholders, we believe that the usual practice of treating climate change costs as externalities is simply not open to RBS since these costs will inevitably fall on taxpayers. In that sense it is in the interests of all your shareholders that you take a leadership role in re-shaping the bank’s role in supporting the oil, gas and coal sector.

In this context, we believe it is incumbent on the Bank and its Board and management to consider a wider public interest, and to the Bank’s role in delivering public policy objectives. It is in this spirit that we present two further suggestions:

i). UKFI investment mandate. You clearly see it as a role for Government to set the framework of policy and regulation within which financial institutions operate. We believe it is in RBS’ interests to engage in proactive dialogue with your largest shareholder, UKFI, to develop a stronger, considered mandate that aims to achieve the highest levels of environmental and social governance. In our view, the current mandate has failed to provide you with the levers to make more considered decisions that will benefit the taxpayer in the long-run. UKFI should provide RBS with a clear mandate to forgo short-term profits where environmental or human rights issues are at risk. The recently adopted UKFI sustainability policy falls below best practise expectations, which does a disservice to both RBS, and the taxpayer.

ii). Green Investment Bank: The recently elected Conservative-Liberal Democrat coalition government has expressed its intention to establish a public Green Investment Bank (GIB) to help fund the UK’s transition to a low carbon economy. The format of this bank has yet to be finalised, but we believe RBS should be at the centre of these discussions, and should be looking to work proactively with the GIB to develop joint financing programmes for renewable energy and green transport infrastructure schemes in the UK. Pursuing this strategy presents a very practical way in which RBS’ directors could look to create long-term benefit for its primary shareholders, the British taxpayer.

We look forward to hearing from you.

Yours sincerely,

Clayton Thomas Muller
Indigenous Tar Sands Campaigner-Indigenous Environmental Network

Ian Leggett
Director, People & Planet

Deborah Doane
Director, World Development Movement

Johan Frijns
Coordinator, BankTrack

Duncan McLaren,
Chief Executive, Friends of the Earth, Scotland

Kevin Smith,
Climate and Finance Campaigner, Platform

Peter Frankental
Economic Relations Programme Director
Amnesty International UK

Brant Olson,
Campaigns Director, Rainforest Action Network

Jeni Mackay
Director, SEAD (Scottish Education and Action for Development