Home > Media release: New polling shows half of customers prepared to change banks over fossil fuels – as prominent Australians demand climate action
Media Release

Media release: New polling shows half of customers prepared to change banks over fossil fuels – as prominent Australians demand climate action

15 September 2016

 

Thursday 15 September, 2016: New research released today shows overwhelmingly that Australians want their bank to act on climate change by avoiding fossil fuel projects, with almost half prepared to change banks if their current institution finances projects that damage the environment or worsen climate change.

The research comes as an open letter, signed by over sixty civil society organisations and dozens of prominent Australians, demands the banks get out of fossil fuels by 2030.

Commissioned from Essential Media Communications by financial activist group, Market Forces, the poll of 1017 Australians showed that:

  • 74% of customers of the ‘Big Four’ banks (ANZ, CommBank, NAB and Westpac) believe it important that these banks invest in companies and projects that don’t harm the environment and contribute to climate change;
  • 46% would be more willing to switch banks if this were the case;
  • 73% supported the ‘Big Four’ banks agreeing to publicly back to the goal of limiting global warming to below two degrees;
  • 66% agreed banks should avoid funding projects that expand the size of the fossil fuel industry.

Each of the major banks made commitments in late 2015 to help hold global warming to below two degrees, in line with the agreement reached in Paris. However, Market Forces research released on 4 August showed that since their Paris announcements, the “big four” banks (ANZ, NAB, Commonwealth Bank and Westpac) have collectively loaned AU $5.6 billion to fossil fuel projects and companies around the world.

The carbon emissions that would be created from these new fossil fuel projects would amount to 3 billion tonnes, or about six times Australia’s total annual emissions.

“If we’re going to avoid sending global warming beyond a point of no return we need all parts of the community and the economy pulling their weight. As some of the largest and most powerful companies in Australia, our major banks need to start delivering on the commitments they made to act on climate change”, said Market Forces Executive Director Julien Vincent.

“At the moment, the banks’ action on climate change is way out of step with their rhetoric. These results show that Australians, especially customers of the major banks, endorse their banks taking serious action to avoid projects.

“We’re not just supporting it, we’re demanding it and will campaign until we get it”, said Mr Vincent.

On 7-8 October, Market Forces is coordinating a nationwide divestment day, in which hundreds of Australians will send the banks a clear message: “If you choose fossil fuels, your customers will choose another bank.”

As part of the campaign, a new open letter is calling on banks to make no further investments that expand the size of the fossil fuel industry and to reduce exposure to the thermal coal sector to zero by 2020, and all fossil fuels by 
2030.

Signatories include 68 organisations, as well as dozens of prominent Australians from all walks of life including authors JM Coetzee and Charlotte Wood, musicians Birds of Tokyo, Missy Higgins and multi-award-winning composer Nigel Westlake, Professor Ove Hoegh-Guldberg, Coordinating Lead Author for the Fifth Assessment Report of the IPCC, Bishop George Browning and Laureate Professor Peter Singer.

 

To view the polling: www.marketforces.org.au/banks-polling-2016

To view the letter and full list of signatories: www.marketforces.org.au/openletter