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Federal
Fossil Free Financing Act of 2023
Source: Congress.gov  ·  2,952 words in original text
This bill requires large banks to create and follow plans to reduce the greenhouse gas emissions they finance through their investments and loans. The bill amends banking laws to make sure banks align their financing with climate science targets and report on their progress to Congress.
Bank holding companies with at least $50 billion in total consolidated assets The Federal Reserve Board The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Workers and communities affected by shifts away from fossil fuel industries Congress
Large banks must submit emission reduction plans to the Federal Reserve every two years that include plans to reach zero financed emissions by January 1, 2050 (Sec. 2(c)(1)(A)). Large banks must reduce financed emissions by 50 percent by January 1, 2030 and stop all fossil fuel financing by January 1, 2030 (Sec. 2(c)(1)(B) and (E)). Large banks must stop financing new or expanded fossil fuel projects by January 1, 2023 and stop thermal coal financing by January 1, 2025 (Sec. 2(c)(1)(C) and (D)). Banks that fail to submit acceptable plans or meet requirements face penalties including asset sales and possible termination of federal deposit insurance (Sec. 2(e)). The Federal Reserve must report to Congress on current financed emissions levels, trends, needed reductions to meet climate targets, and equity impacts on workers and communities (Sec. 4(b)).
Banks with at least $50 billion in assets must now reduce greenhouse gas emissions from their investments and loans according to science-based targets. Plans cannot use carbon offsets to meet goals. Banks must prioritize withdrawing funding from projects that harm low-income and minority communities. The Federal Reserve gains new authority to reject emission plans and require banks to sell assets if they do not comply. The Federal Reserve and Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation gain new oversight powers to enforce these requirements.
Financed emissions: greenhouse gas emissions a bank causes through investments, loans, or other financial services to other companies or projects, measured in metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent Fossil fuel financing: investment in companies that get at least 15 percent of revenue from oil, natural gas, coal or any significant related activity, or investment in fossil fuel projects Fossil fuel project: a project designed to explore, extract, process, export, transport oil, natural gas, or coal, or build related infrastructure like wells, pipelines, terminals, refineries, or power generation facilities New or expanded fossil fuel project: a fossil fuel project that would increase proven reserves, pipeline throughput, or coal combustion for electricity generation Covered bank holding company: a bank holding company with at least $50 billion in total consolidated assets Carbon offsets: calculated and traced reductions or removal of greenhouse gases used to offset another entity's emissions Deforestation risk commodities: globally traded goods from natural forests where extraction contributes significantly to converting forest to agriculture or other uses Natural forest: a forest ecosystem with a significant percentage of native tree species and more than 10 percent tree canopy cover over at least 0.5 hectares Greenhouse gas: carbon dioxide, methane, nitrous oxide, nitrogen trifluoride, hydrofluorocarbons, perfluorocarbons, and sulfur hexafluoride
Not specified in bill text
Important: This plain English summary was generated by AI and is provided for informational purposes only. It is not legal advice. Always consult the official bill text on Congress.gov or a qualified attorney for legal matters.