Bill
Bill > AR163
NJ AR163
NJ AR163Urges lending institutions in State to stop financing projects that contribute to climate change.
summary
Introduced
09/26/2024
09/26/2024
In Committee
09/26/2024
09/26/2024
Crossed Over
Passed
Dead
01/12/2026
01/12/2026
Introduced Session
2024-2025 Regular Session
Bill Summary
This resolution urges lending institutions in the State to stop financing projects that contribute to climate change. The exploration for, development of, and burning of fossil fuels, such as oil, gas, and coal, releases greenhouse gases into the Earth's atmosphere. Greenhouse gases cause rising global temperatures that lead to catastrophic weather events, such as intense storms, weather extremes, heat waves, wildfires, and flooding. Despite the adoption of the Paris Agreement in 2015, the world's 60 largest lending institutions provided a combined total of $3.8 trillion in financing to oil, gas, and coal companies from 2016 to 2020. In addition, these same lending institutions have incrementally increased financing to oil, gas, and coal companies each year between 2016 and 2019. Many of these major lending institutions financed the fracking of oil in Neuquén province, Argentina, which has negatively affected the health and economic prosperity of the indigenous Mapuche people native to the area. Today, the Mapuche people and the animals grazing on the land suffer from serious health issues that have been linked to the fracking of oil, such as deformities, cancer, and bone density loss. In addition, the Mapuche community has lost large swaths of land to oil companies that were originally used for subsistence pasture. In Mozambique, a gas extraction project financed by major lending institutions has resulted in the forced relocation of at least 550 local families, has reduced the amount of usable land, and has left families in formerly self-sustaining local villages without livelihoods. Environmentally conscious lending institutions acknowledge that financing projects that contribute to climate change damages the health of the planet, and all life living on it, and take action to limit and reduce funding to oil, gas, and coal companies that plan to undertake projects that increase greenhouse gas emissions. For example, NatWest, formally the Royal Bank of Scotland, the largest bank in the world, and a substantial financier of the oil, gas, and coal industries, has pledged to finance $133 billion in sustainable energy projects by the end of 2025. NatWest has already financed a significant number of sustainable energy projects in the past, including offering $10 billion in sustainable and climate financing from 2018 to 2020, and $200 million in 2012. In 2017, NatWest reported it did not finance any new coal mining projects. In 2020, NatWest announced it would stop lending and underwriting major oil and gas companies if the companies failed to provide a transition plan that aligned with the goals of the Paris Agreement to restrict global temperatures by the end of 2021. In addition, while NatWest still finances previously existing coal related projects, the bank plans to phase out all coal related financing globally by January 1, 2030, reduce carbon related financing by 50 percent by 2030, and achieve net zero greenhouse gas emissions on discretionarily managed assets by 2050. In order to prevent the pervasive, damaging effects of climate change, and protect the Earth's environment and all life living on it, it is important that other lending institutions adopt a similar limit in financing oil, gas, and coal projects, and begin substantially financing sustainable energy projects. Therefore, this House urges lending institutions in the State to stop financing projects that contribute to climate change.
AI Summary
This resolution urges lending institutions in the State to stop financing projects that contribute to climate change, highlighting the significant environmental and human impacts of fossil fuel investments. The resolution emphasizes that the exploration, development, and burning of fossil fuels like oil, gas, and coal release greenhouse gases that cause rising global temperatures and lead to catastrophic weather events such as intense storms, heat waves, and wildfires. Despite the 2015 Paris Agreement, the world's 60 largest lending institutions provided $3.8 trillion in financing to fossil fuel companies between 2016 and 2020, with financing incrementally increasing each year. The resolution provides specific examples of the harmful consequences of these investments, including the negative health effects on the Mapuche people in Argentina due to oil fracking and the forced relocation of families in Mozambique from a gas extraction project. By highlighting NatWest's commitment to sustainable energy and plans to reduce carbon-related financing, the resolution calls on other lending institutions to similarly limit fossil fuel project financing and increase investments in sustainable energy to protect the planet and all life on it.
Committee Categories
Business and Industry
Sponsors (1)
Last Action
Introduced, Referred to Assembly Financial Institutions and Insurance Committee (on 09/26/2024)
Official Document
bill text
bill summary
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bill summary
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bill summary
| Document Type | Source Location |
|---|---|
| State Bill Page | https://www.njleg.state.nj.us/bill-search/2024/AR163 |
| BillText | https://pub.njleg.gov/Bills/2024/AR/163_I1.HTM |
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