New Report: Global Banks Financed Fossil Fuels with $8.7 Trillion Since the Paris Agreement, $906 Billion in 2025 Alone
AI-summarised brief · reviewed before publication
The 17th edition of the Banking on Climate Chaos report reveals that 65 major banks financed fossil fuels with $906 billion in 2025, an 8% increase from the previous year. Since the Paris Agreement, these banks have committed $8.7 trillion to fossil fuel companies. JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America are the top two fossil fuel funders, with $58 billion and $47 billion in 2025, respectively. The report highlights a surge in financing for companies expanding fossil fuels, incompatible with limiting global warming to 1.5°C. U.S. banks' share of global fossil fuel financing increased to 32%, while European banks show a downward trend.
💡 Why It Matters
- · Banks' continued fossil fuel financing poses a direct risk to investors' portfolios, threatening stable insurance markets and the broader economy.
- · A handful of decision-makers at major banks are driving over a third of global fossil fuel financing, handing record profits to fossil firms while passing costs to vulnerable populations.