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World’s largest banks pledged $869bn to fossil fuel firms in 2024, new report finds

about 16 hours ago
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The world’s largest banks boosted the amount of financing given to fossil fuel companies last year, committing $869bn to those involved in coal, oil and gas despite the worsening climate crisis and the banks’ own, fraying, environmental commitments, a new report has found,The report, compiled by a coalition of eight green groups, shows that while the amount loaned by big banks to fossil fuel firms had been declining in 2021, last year saw an abrupt reversal,Two-thirds of the world’s largest 65 banks increased their fossil fuel financing by $162bn from 2023 to 2024,Scientists have been clear that no new fossil fuel project can proceed if disastrous climate impacts are to be avoided, with last year the hottest ever recorded amid a slew of disasters driven by global heating,However, many banks have recently watered down or ditched their own commitments to help reduce planet-heating emissions, amid a changing political dynamic that has seen the US again being led by Donald Trump, who has famously called climate science “a giant hoax” and “bullshit”.

In February, the US treasury withdrew from a global banking network that aims to increase green finance and reduce climate risk.Four of the five largest fossil fuel financiers last year were American companies, with JPMorgan Chase lending the most at $53.5bn.Bank of America was second, followed by Citigroup.The Japanese bank Mizuho Financial was fourth, with Wells Fargo in fifth.

The largest absolute increases in fossil fuel lending last year came from the top American institutions as well as Barclays, the British bank.In the decade since the world’s political leaders committed, in the landmark Paris climate agreement, to restrain dangerous global heating, the biggest banks have continued to pour lending towards drilling projects, pipelines and other fossil fuel activity.In total, banks have financed fossil fuels by $7.9tn since the Paris deal.“By injecting a staggering $869bn into fossil fuel financing in 2024 alone, the world’s largest banks fund the climate chaos that fossil fuel companies wreak on people and communities worldwide,” said David Tong, global industry campaign manager at Oil Change International and a co-author of the report.

“Governments must step in and take urgent action to hold financial institutions accountable for their role in the climate crisis.”While most of the world’s top financial firms have pledged to abide by the Paris deal and help tackle the climate crisis, many of them have ignored or walked back these promises in the past year while predicting catastrophic global temperature rises.Last year, six US senators said that JPMorgan Chase may have misled investors by backtracking on its climate commitments.Then, in January, shortly before the inauguration of Trump as US president, the six largest American banks – JP Morgan, Citigroup, Bank of America, Morgan Stanley, Wells Fargo and Goldman Sachs – all withdrew from the net zero banking alliance.The alliance is a United Nations-sponsored initiative to spur banks to align their lending and investment portfolios with the Paris goals.

It requires banks to set targets and reduce emissions associated with their investments.“This year, banks have shown their true colors – many have walked away from climate commitments and doubled down on financing fossil fuel expansion, even as global temperatures break records,” said Lucie Pinson, director and founder at Reclaim Finance, and another report co-author.“A few European banks may have inched forward, but for most, the lure of dirty money has proven too strong.”The Guardian contacted all of the top lenders to fossil fuels about the report, which is called Banking on Climate Chaos.A Citi spokesperson said that it supports the “transition to a low-carbon economy and, in 2021, made a commitment to reach net-zero greenhouse gas financed emissions by 2050.

“We work with our clients as they seek to decarbonize their businesses and support clean energy solutions as part of our $1tn sustainable finance goal,Our approach reflects the need to transition while also continuing to meet global needs for energy security, particularly in this time of increasing electricity demand,”A Barclays spokesperson said: “Barclays provides finance to meet consumer and businesses energy needs while financing the scaling of clean energy,Last year, we mobilised nearly $100bn more Sustainable and Transition Finance than in 2023 and continue to invest £500m in climate tech start-ups by 2027,These are significant interventions to support our clients to transition.

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Adult gaming centres failing to help problem gamblers self-exclude

Flaws in a scheme meant to help gamblers bar themselves from 24-hour slot machine shops have been described by the industry regulator as “very concerning”, following revelations in a BBC documentary.The Guardian has previously revealed how gambling operators are exploiting favourable planning and licensing laws to flood UK high streets with “adult gaming centres” (AGCs), which are disproportionately concentrated in the poorest areas.The shops must offer self-exclusion schemes to customers who fear they have a problem with slot machines, which are consistently linked with higher rates of addiction than products such as sports betting.But a documentary by BBC File on 4 Investigates, due to be broadcast on Tuesday evening, found that in one UK city 13 out of 14 venues failed to implement the scheme properly.An undercover reporter for the programme signed up to exclude himself from all AGCs within a 40km radius of central Portsmouth

about 17 hours ago
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Stress blamed for high number of NHS call handlers quitting

NHS call handlers are quitting amid burnout at dealing with 999 calls about suicides, stabbings and shootings and the long delays before ambulances reach patients.The pressure is so intense that 27% of control room staff in ambulance services across Britain have left their jobs over the last three years, NHS figures show.Many feel overwhelmed by the demands of their roles, unsupported by their employers and powerless to help patients who are facing life-or-death emergencies, according to a report by Unison, with some resigning within a year of starting the role.Call handlers get so stressed that they took an average of 33 sick days a year each between 2021/22 and 2024/25, data obtained by the union also showed. That is far higher than the average four days taken off sick by workers in the UK overall

about 23 hours ago
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Grooming gangs in UK thrived in ‘culture of ignorance’, Casey report says

A culture of “blindness, ignorance and prejudice” led to repeated failures over decades to properly investigate cases in which children were abused by grooming gangs, a report has said.As the government announced a public inquiry into the scandal, Louise Casey said for too long the authorities had shied away from the ethnicity of the people involved, adding it was “not racist to examine the ethnicity of the offenders”.Lady Casey said she found evidence of “over-representation” of Asian and Pakistani heritage men among suspects in local data – collected in Greater Manchester, West and South Yorkshire – and criticised a continued failure to gather robust data at a national level.The home secretary, Yvette Cooper, confirmed the government would accept all 12 recommendations of Casey’s rapid review, including setting up a statutory inquiry into institutional failures. This marked a significant reversal after months of pressure on Labour to act

1 day ago
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Carer’s allowance: woman who won case against DWP calls for end to ‘sickening harassment’

The mother of a teenager with cerebral palsy has demanded an end to the “sickening harassment” of unpaid carers after a significant legal victory against the government.Nicola Green, 42, was pursued by the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) for more than a year after she was accused of fraudulently claiming nearly £3,000 in carer’s allowance.When Green insisted she was innocent, the DWP wrote to her employer without her knowledge to try to recoup the sum from her pay.The part-time college worker, whose 17-year-old son has a number of health conditions, appealed against the fine before a tribunal judge, who quashed it in barely 30 minutes last month.Speaking after her legal victory, Green said she had been treated “like a criminal” by the DWP over the £2,823

1 day ago
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Ministers plan to use NHS app to expand clinical trials as part of UK-wide drive

The government is aiming for a significant expansion of clinical trials in the UK, and plans to use the NHS app to encourage millions of people in England to take part in the search for new treatments.Patients will eventually be automatically matched with studies based on their health data and interests, via the app. The plans envisage alerting them to the trials using smartphone notifications.NHS trusts that fail to meet targets on trials will also be publicly named, and the best performers will be prioritised for funding, as part of improvements designed to restore Britain’s global reputation for medical research.The strategy is one of the first to emerge from the government’s forthcoming 10-year health plan for England

1 day ago
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My father died in a care home and all I got was denials and excuses | Letters

The situation at The Firs care home in Nottinghamshire, which was shut down in April, is dreadful for patients, families and staff (‘How did it get to this?’ What happens when care in a residential home breaks down, 7 June). But the Care Quality Commission (CQC) is not the only body to blame for failings like this.It can’t investigate individual complaints – this is mostly down to the local government and social care ombudsman (LGSCO), but also the parliamentary and health service ombudsman (PHSO). It depends on who funds the care; in theory the same care home could be dealing with two ombudsman staff unaware of each other. Both are equally damned on Trustpilot with overwhelmingly negative reviews

2 days ago
cultureSee all
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Speaking out on Gaza: Australian creatives and arts organisations struggle to reconcile competing pressures

3 days ago
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Adam Hills: ‘I knew I should have gone to the King’s birthday but I really wanted to go to rugby training’

3 days ago
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Andrew Lloyd Webber is ‘hot again’ –with help from new kids on musicals block

4 days ago
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How to Train Your Dragon to Neil Young: your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead

4 days ago
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British Library to reinstate Oscar Wilde’s reader card 130 years after it was revoked

4 days ago
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The Guide #195: How Reddit made nerds of us all

4 days ago