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Japan’s SMFG likely to halt all new lending for coal power, sources say – Metro US

Japan’s SMFG likely to halt all new lending for coal power, sources say

A man walks past a sign board of Sumitomo Mitsui
A man walks past a sign board of Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation, part of SMFG outside its branch in Tokyo

TOKYO (Reuters) – Sumitomo Mitsui Financial Group (SMFG) is likely to halt new financing for any coal-fired power plants, sources close to the matter said, reflecting increasing pressure on Japanese lenders to cut coal funding.

While SMFG has said it would not finance new coal-fired power plants in principle, until now it has not ruled out funding projects considered to be more environmentally friendly, such as so-called ultra-supercritical (USC) power plants that burn coal more efficiently than older designs.

However, the company is now likely to remove that exception from its lending policy, meaning a complete halt to new finance for coal plants, said the two sources, who declined to be named as the information is not public.

Japan’s biggest banks are under pressure from global investors and environmental groups over coal funding. Prime Minister Yoshihide Suga has also pushed efforts to achieve net zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050.

“It’s a fact that the criticism from environmental groups has become so strong,” one of the sources said.

A spokesman for SMFG said that while nothing had been decided, it would review its policy for businesses and industries that could have a major impact on the environment.

An application for accreditation from the United Nations Green Climate Fund (GCF) – a global fund designed to fight climate change – was put on hold by SMFG last year after environmentalists said the fund should not work with a bank with coal exposure.

Bigger rival Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group Inc has stopped lending to coal power projects except under “special circumstances” based on a country’s energy policy and international agreements signed by Japan. No.3 lender Mizuho Financial Group Inc, meanwhile, has said it could fund coal projects that will be transformed into highly efficient power plants.

Mizuho shareholders last year rejected a proposal, backed by Nordic funds including Nordea Asset Management, which sought to rein in financing of coal projects in Asia.

Sources told Reuters last week that trading house Mitsubishi Corp has decided to pull out of an estimated $2 billion project in Vietnam.

U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres on Tuesday called on wealthy nations to end coal use by 2030, urging G7 nations to make that commitment by a leaders’ summit in June.

(Reporting by Takashi Umekawa; Additional reporting by Aaron Sheldrick; Editing by Edmund Blair and David Goodman)