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9/19/2023

Treasury Releases Principles for Net-Zero Financing & Investment, Applauds $340 Million Philanthropic Commitment an…

Treasury Releases Principles for Net-Zero Financing &
Investment, Applauds $340 Million Philanthropic Commitment
and Other Pledges
September 19, 2023

WASHINGTON – Today, the U.S. Department of the Treasury published the Principles for Net-

Zero Financing & Investment (the Principles). The voluntary Principles highlight emerging best
practices for private sector financial institutions that have made net-zero commitments and
promote consistency and credibility in approaches to implementing them. With the Principles,
the Treasury Department is supporting the mobilization of more private sector capital to
address the physical and economic impacts of climate change and to seize on the historic
economic opportunity presented by the green transition.
Secretary Yellen will deliver remarks at the Bloomberg Transition Finance Action Forum in New
York City this a ernoon to discuss the Principles and will also meet with financial institutions,
civil society organizations, and philanthropic leaders to discuss the importance of climaterelated action by the private financial sector and how to accelerate and support related
e orts.
Accompanying the release of the Principles are a number of announcements from civil
society including a $340 million commitment by leading philanthropic organizations to support
the continued development of research, data availability, and technical resources intended to
help financial institutions develop and execute robust, voluntary net-zero commitments. This
funding will also support work to facilitate the transition planning e orts of non-financial
sectors of the economy. Further, additional organizations announced plans to generate tools
and technical work needed to facilitate the execution of net-zero commitments.
The climate crisis is propelling a massive economic shi and is hitting the most vulnerable
countries and communities first and hardest. Thereʼs increasing demand for technologies,
products, and services that will reduce greenhouse gas emissions, support a clean energy
future, and help adapt to a changing climate across all sectors. This demand is fueling growth
in new industries and business models. In the United States, government support is playing a
role in accelerating this transition. But successfully building these new industries will in part
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9/19/2023

Treasury Releases Principles for Net-Zero Financing & Investment, Applauds $340 Million Philanthropic Commitment an…

require a private financial system that allocates increasing amounts of capital and expertise
to the companies and people building this new clean energy economy. The Principles that
Treasury is unveiling are intended to support this growth.
Key announcements alongside the release of the Principles include:
Philanthropic organizations including Bezos Earth Fund, Bloomberg
Philanthropies, Climate Arc, ClimateWorks, Hewlett Foundation, and Sequoia Climate
Foundation, announced a $340 million commitment over the next three years to support
the continued development of research, data availability, and technical
resources intended to help financial institutions develop and execute robust,
voluntary net-zero commitments. This funding will also support work to facilitate the
transition planning e orts of non-financial sectors of the economy.
The Glasgow Financial Alliance for Net Zero (GFANZ) announced that more than 50 U.S.
financial institutions – and more globally – will independently publish net-zero transition
plans over the next year using the voluntary common frameworks developed by GFANZ
and financial sector alliances. In addition, the GFANZ Secretariat launched a 45day consultation on its work to further refine the definitions of its transition finance
strategies and support financial institutions in forecasting the impact of these strategies
on reducing emissions, with a final report to be released at COP28.
The Rocky Mountain Institute (RMI) Center for Climate-Aligned Finance (CCAF) will launch
frameworks for the aluminum and aviation sectors to help lenders measure and disclose
their lending-related portfolio emissions for these sectors, which each account for
2 percent of global emissions per year. The frameworks will launch in December 2023 for
aluminum and January 2024 for aviation. In addition, RMI will launch a new Transition
Finance Resource Hub in 2024 which will include a series of how-to guides to
help banks overcome barriers to mobilizing transition capital.
The Partnership for Carbon Accounting Financials (PCAF) will train and support up to 2,500
financial industry professionals on greenhouse gas accounting methodologies and
reporting through its new PCAF Academy. PCAF also plans to publish the first-ever
standard for facilitated emissions later this year. The standard will cover capital markets
transactions and provide the finance sector with a harmonized method to measure the
climate impact of those transactions and a metric that enables them to set science-based
targets and inform strategies for transition finance.

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Treasury Releases Principles for Net-Zero Financing & Investment, Applauds $340 Million Philanthropic Commitment an…

The Center for Climate and Energy Solutions (C2ES) announced it will work with over a
dozen large, publicly traded companies across sectors to develop insights on how they
are developing and communicating their net-zero transition plans to their investors,
policymakers, and the public. Over the next three years, this e ort will support the
development of businessesʼ net zero transition plans, identify interdependencies between
industry sectorsʼ decarbonization e orts, and will inform the e orts of financial
institutions as they engage with clients and portfolio companies.
Ceres has committed to working with over 250 investors and companies on their net-zero
transition plans over the next year, including by helping firms develop specific milestones
for progress and providing resources, one-on-one advice, and workshops to support plan
development.
Over the past year, Treasury engaged with financial market participants, research
organizations, civil society organizations, and Tribes, to understand how financial institutions
are setting and meeting their net-zero commitments. These stakeholders
noted varied research, guidelines, and voluntary standards about net-zero financing,
investment, and advisory services. They also expressed the need for further clarity on where
emerging consensus exists and where gaps in best practices remain. Treasury is proud to
launch the Principles to address this need.
The Principles establish that financial institution net-zero commitments should be in line with
limiting the increase in the global average temperature to 1.5 degrees Celsius. They a irm
that financial institutions that have made these commitments should develop transition plans
with clear practices, targets, and metrics. And that they should support their clients and
portfolio companies in adopting their own transition plans.
A link to the full Principles can be found here.
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