The Net Zero Banking Alliance (NZBA), an initiative proudly convened by the UN Environment Programme, has had its short life canceled by politics. The global group has been forced into an immediate shutdown after a politically motivated exodus of its most important members left it unviable.
The alliance was launched with the goal of providing a bank-led, UN-backed framework for decarbonization. However, this model proved no match for the political forces unleashed by Donald Trump’s re-election. His administration’s pro-fossil fuel agenda created an “anti-woke” backlash that put US banks in an impossible situation.
The beginning of the end came when the six titans of Wall Street—including JPMorgan Chase, Citigroup, and Bank of America—all decided to cancel their memberships. This was a strategic move to avoid political conflict, but it effectively canceled the NZBA’s chances of success by removing its most influential participants.
The cancellation wave went global. European and Japanese banks, seeing the organization’s diminished state, followed suit. The recent decision by UK lenders HSBC and Barclays to also cancel their involvement was the final confirmation that the project was over.
The short life and sudden death of the NZBA serve as a stark lesson. While the UN can convene such groups, it cannot protect them from the realities of national politics. Critics now argue that the focus of international bodies and activists must shift from encouraging voluntary corporate alliances to pushing for binding international treaties and robust national regulations on climate finance.