GreenRoc Accelerates their World Class Project to Production as Early as 2028. Watch the full video here.

Less Ads, More Data, More Tools Register for FREE

Financial firms tout energy business after West Virginia restrictions

Tue, 09th Apr 2024 15:40

NEW YORK, April 8 (Reuters) - West Virginia has added Citi, HSBC and two other financial firms to a list of institutions that may be barred from some state business due to their energy finance policies, prompting three of them to assert their commitment to that industry.

The move was the latest flare-up in a bubbling dispute between Republican officials and Wall Street firms over use of environmental, social and governance (ESG) factors in banking and business.

West Virginia, a major energy-producing state, created the list in 2002, placing five firms on it at the time.

On Monday, West Virginia Treasurer Riley Moore also added TD Bank and the Northern Trust Co to the list.

Moore's office says the list is for firms that "have publicly stated they will refuse, terminate or limit doing business with coal, oil or natural gas companies without a reasonable business purpose".

Citi said it was disappointed by the designation.

"Citi is not engaged in a boycott of energy companies as evidenced by the fact that we continue to lend to these companies and have substantial credit exposure to the industry," it said in a statement.

A Northern Trust spokesperson said the asset and wealth manager "does not restrict or prohibit investment in fossil fuel-based energy companies." The spokesperson said Northern Trust had around $52 billion in investment exposure to companies in the traditional energy sector as of February 2024.

HSBC seeks "to work with - not boycott - energy companies," a U.S.-based spokesperson said via email. The bank expects to continue corporate lending and capital markets transaction support to "energy-based customers," the spokesperson continued.

TD Bank did not respond to a request for comment.

Financial firms also face pressure from the other side of the ESG debate, with environmental activists and investors pushing them to stop financing new projects in areas like oil and gas. (Reporting by Isla Binnie; Editing by Leslie Adler, David Gregorio and Paul Simao)

Related Shares

More News
5 Jun 2024 18:04

Banks' drive to 'tokenise' assets moves slower than expected

AMSTERDAM, June 5 (Reuters) - Banks which for years have talked about creating 'tokenised' versions of assets like bonds and currencies say a shift ...

2 Jun 2024 15:43

Investors flock to Aramco share sale that could raise $13 bln

DUBAI, June 2 (Reuters) - Saudi Arabia's sale of shares in oil giant Aramco drew more demand than the stock on offer within hours of kicking off on ...

31 May 2024 16:50

Saudi Arabia sets new test for international interest with $13.1 bln Aramco sale

DUBAI, May 31 (Reuters) - Saudi Arabia and its bankers on Sunday will start taking orders for as much as $13.1 billion worth of shares in its energy...

31 May 2024 11:16

Saudi Arabia sets new test for international interest with $13.1 bln Aramco sale

DUBAI, May 31 (Reuters) - Saudi Arabia and its bankers will on Sunday morning start taking orders for as much as $13.1 billion worth of shares in it...

30 May 2024 21:22

Saudi Arabia sets up new Aramco share sale that could raise $13.1 billion

DUBAI, May 30 (Reuters) - Saudi Arabia's government on Thursday filed papers to sell a new stake in state oil giant Aramco that could raise as much ...

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.

Quickpicks are a member only feature

Login to your account

Don't have an account? Click here to register.