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Barclays CEO Says It’s Misguided to Go ‘Cold Turkey’ on Oil

Barclays CEO Says It’s Misguided to Go ‘Cold Turkey’ on Oil

(Bloomberg) -- The chief executive of Barclays Plc said it would be unrealistic for the finance industry to heed growing calls from climate activists to abandon fossil-fuel clients from one day to the next.

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As the global economy tries to achieve net zero emissions, “it can’t go cold turkey” on the oil and gas industry, Barclays CEO CS Venkatakrishnan told Bloomberg’s Anna Edwards at the Bloomberg Sustainable Finance Forum in London on Tuesday.

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While Barclays is “very much moving away from” coal and oil, the “reality is that for quite some time, fossil fuels will be with us” and that’s especially true of natural gas, he said. The “glide path” toward cleaner energy is long.

He joins a growing chorus of Wall Street CEOs from Citigroup Inc.’s Jane Fraser to JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s Jamie Dimon and Goldman Sachs Group Inc.’s David Solomon, who have all cautioned that a complete withdrawal from fossil fuels comes with unacceptable energy security risks. KKR & Co. founder Henry Kravis recently accused climate protesters of underestimating the scale of the transition needed.

Their warnings come as banks and asset managers find themselves at the receiving end of vocal — and sometimes violent — protests in response to their support of fossil fuels. A case in point is Citigroup, whose Manhattan headquarters are currently the target of what activists say will be a months-long campaign against the bank.

At the same time, banks face bans in a number of Republican-led US states due to their alleged “boycott” of the fossil fuel industry. Barclays, which has also been targeted in such campaigns, finds itself caught between two extremes, according to Venkatakrishnan.

As examples, the Barclays CEO cited a Texas ban that hit the bank’s municipal bond business. Not long after, Barclays found itself targeted by a number of UK universities, “saying they didn’t want to do business with us because we were not green enough,” he said.

Barclays is facing some “extremes” but the business “will manage,” Venkatakrishnan said. “It’s part of being a large, diversified bank.”

Wall Street Weighs In

It’s a “complicated world, and as a global bank, you’ve got to navigate that,” said Ilan Jacobs, managing director and head of UK government affairs at Citigroup, at the same forum.

“You have to support our clients through” the energy transition, he said. “And ultimately, these competing interests that you have to manage is stuff that we have to work on with our clients very closely.”

JPMorgan, which is both the biggest underwriter of ESG debt and the fourth-largest arranger of fossil-fuel bonds so far this year, is now accustomed to getting “a lot of noise from both sides,” said Chuka Umunna, head of EMEA ESG & green economy investment banking at Wall Street’s largest lender.

“We’re kind of caught in the middle,” he said at the same forum, during which he was heckled by a protester in the audience.

“We’ve got to be clear about what our role is in this,” he said. “Our job is not to sit in judgement on clients and what they’re doing.”

Barclays this year created a dedicated team of more than 100 bankers to focus on financial products and deals pegged to the energy transition. The unit, which brings together bankers from power markets, natural resources and sustainable and impact investment banking, is one of many being built across global banks all keen to get a foothold in what could become a multitrillion-dollar market.

Earlier this year, Barclays pledged to halt the direct financing of new oil and gas projects, and to restrict financing for companies that focus exclusively on fossil-fuel exploration and extraction. And like a number of its European peers, the UK bank is stepping up pressure on energy clients to adjust their business so they can be treated as transition assets.

(Adds more context around comments from Barclays and JPMorgan.)

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