The paper provides recommendations for choosing metrics:
- To fully understand a bank’s contribution to the low-carbon transition, there needs to be more comprehensive reporting on activities related to climate problems in addition to climate solutions. Banks should not be reporting on their contribution to climate solutions without also reporting on their contribution to the climate problem.
- Banks should consider the criteria of completeness, context, fair share, and transparency when evaluating and choosing metrics to assess climate progress.
- GHG accounting approaches, including project emissions and financed emissions, are the most useful for asset classes when the use of proceeds is known. Financed emissions may also be useful to provide a high-level picture of a bank’s exposure to emissions.
- A green or brown metric is recommended when a bank wants to understand both its significance of exposure to climate solutions and problems in relation to each other.
- The current discussions on the climate progress of banking exhibit strong regionality. Therefore, the best selection of accounting and reporting metrics may vary regionally. Peer comparisons and stakeholder outreach can be important aspects for performance tracking.
- Most importantly, in spite of evolving climate-friendliness assessment practices, banks should not wait to begin measuring and disclosing metrics on climate progress and tracking performance. Meaningful and practical metrics are currently available for numerous asset classes, and banks can improve their approach over time as more useful metrics become available.