Understory: the Official Blog of RAN

What is the carbon footprint of my checking account?

RAN released a new report today, “Financing Global Warming: Canadian Banks and Fossil Fuels“, which calculates for the first time the carbon footprint from financing of fossil fuels by 7 leading Canadian banks – RBC, TD, Scotiabank, BMO, CIBC, Desjardins and Vancity.  Along with the report, we also launched a new website, climatefriendlybanking.org.

The report results are striking.  The half a million tonnes of CO2 operational emissions – the greenhouse gas emissions from running their buildings, employee travel and the like – are completely dwarfed by the 625 million tonnes CO2 of financed emissions resulting from their $155 billion in financing of fossil fuels, which are the principal driver of climate change.  A lot of this money is flowing into expansion of the tar sands, one of the largest and dirtiest fossil fuel projects on the planet.

But what does this mean for the typical Canadian bank customer.  Every dollar we deposit with banks, they can leverage into $10-15 in new loans and financing.  Are banks using your money to finance fossil fuels and global warming?  We created a special checking account carbon calculator where customers of any of the seven banks we studied can enter the average amount of their deposit accounts (or the amount they wished they had!) and measure its carbon footprint in kilos of CO2 per year.  It turns out where you bank can have a big impact on the climate.  Switching $10,000 in deposit accounts from the biggest carbon Bigfoot bank, Scotiabank, to the low-carbon climate friendly leader, Vancity (Canada’s largest credit union), would reduce your annual carbon footprint by 1.4 tonnes of CO2, a very meaningful reduction.

Learn more at www.climatefriendlybanking.org

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4 Responses to “What is the carbon footprint of my checking account?”

  1. Glenda Says:

    Wow – what a great idea. Does anyone know of this kind of info somewhere for Australia?

  2. Chris Fried Says:

    Where can I find info on carbon impacts of American banks?

  3. Brant Says:

    Chris. Unfortunately, there’s no comparable data on the US Banks–yet.

  4. What’s the Carbon Footprint of my Checking Account? « It’s Getting Hot In Here Says:

    [...] What’s the Carbon Footprint of my Checking Account? Published by brant0, November 20th, 2008 Act Locally , Dirty Energy , global warming Crossposted from the Understory [...]

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