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9/14/2021

Treasury Announces U.S. Support for a Proposal at the OECD to End Official Financing Support for Unabated Coal Pow…

Treasury Announces U.S. Support for a Proposal at the OECD to
End Official Financing Support for Unabated Coal Power
September 14, 2021

WASHINGTON – Today, the U.S. Department of the Treasury announced that the United
States has joined Canada, the European Union, South Korea, Norway, Switzerland, and the
United Kingdom to co-sponsor a proposal at a September 15 meeting of the OECD’s
Participants to the Arrangement on O icially Supported Export Credits that seeks to end
o icial export financing support for unabated coal power. This proposal limits o icial export
credit support for coal power by expanding the scope of the commitments made in the
Sector Understanding on Export Credits for Coal Fired Electricity Generation Projects, a 2016
OECD guideline. For the United States, only carbon capture, utilization, and sequestration
technology, or CCUS, qualifies as abatement.
In conjunction with ending the use of public resources for coal power, the U.S. government
at the OECD is examining ways to further support global exports related to renewable energy
and climate change mitigation. The proposal is part of the U.S. Treasury’s implementation of
the President’s executive orders on climate change and complements Treasury’s recent
issuance of fossil fuel energy guidance for multilateral development banks. We encourage
all our international partners to join us in ending public sector export finance support for
coal power and shi ing to renewable sources of energy.
In his January 2021 Executive Order on Tackling the Climate Crisis at Home and Abroad,
President Biden directed the Secretary of the Treasury, along with other departments and
agencies, “to identify steps through which the United States can promote ending
international financing of carbon-intensive fossil fuel-based energy while simultaneously
advancing sustainable development and a green recovery.” At their June Leaders’ Summit,
the United States and our G7 partners “stress[ed] that international investments in unabated
coal must stop now and … committ[ed] now to an end to new direct government support for
unabated international thermal coal power generation by the end of 2021,” including
through export finance. The U.S. Department of the Treasury has sought to fulfill these
obligations across its areas of responsibility for international economic policy, including
https://home.treasury.gov/news/press-releases/jy0351

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9/14/2021

Treasury Announces U.S. Support for a Proposal at the OECD to End Official Financing Support for Unabated Coal Pow…

through its leadership at the multilateral development banks and in negotiating export
credit financing disciplines with other OECD countries.
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https://home.treasury.gov/news/press-releases/jy0351

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