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The Carbon Principles

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Carbon Principles are a series of guidelines established by three leading Wall Street banks—Citigroup Inc., JP Morgan Chase, and Morgan Stanley—to assess the risks in financing electric power projects in terms of climate change. These principles call for "enhanced diligence" in evaluating electric power industry borrowers in terms of their use of energy efficiency; renewable and low-carbon distributed energy technologies; and conventional and advanced generating technologies. These guidelines were announced in February 2008 to address the increasing public concern over the plans to create over one hundred coal power plants in the United States.[1]

The Climate Principles are of a similar framework for the climate change practice of the financial sector. This is a comprehensive industry framework for a response to climate change and has been adopted by Crédit Agricole, Munich Re, Standard Chartered, Swiss Re and HSBC. The Carbon Principles are a development of consultation with the U.S. electricity utilities sector.[2]

References

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  1. ^ "The Principle Matter: Banks, Climate and The Carbon Principles". issuu. January 19, 2011. Retrieved November 10, 2017.
  2. ^ "The Principle Matter". Bank Track. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |url= (help)
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