ÌÇÐÄÊÓÆµ


How banks affect the environment and the role your money plays in it

bank
Credit: Unsplash/CC0 Public Domain

When you think about your environmental footprint, what comes to mind first? Maybe the flights you take, the car you drive or whether you choose the train instead. Perhaps it is the plastic you try to avoid, the clothes you buy or the food on your plate. But what about your money—how often do you think about where it is kept and what it supports?

are a part of our everyday lives. We use them to receive salaries, make transactions, pay bills or take out loans and mortgages. Yet behind every transaction lies a that quietly shapes not only our economy but also—less visibly—our planet. The way banks operate can influence which industries thrive, which decline and how businesses affect the environment.

Banks worldwide function on what is called . Under this system, when we make a deposit, the money is not simply stored in a vault. Banks use most deposits to issue loans—for housing, businesses or infrastructure—keeping only a small portion as reserves.

Some require a fraction of the deposits to be held as minimum reserves, but many countries, including and no longer impose such a requirement. As a result, banks decide how much of the deposits they will hold as reserves while the remainder facilitates lending to borrowers.

But decisions about lending are powerful. Since banks can decide where credit goes, they can also influence where new money enters the economy. To put it simply, lending for housing can expand the property market, financing can support low-carbon infrastructure, while funding or oil and gas extraction may risk locking in over decades.

These choices affect which sectors see lower borrowing costs and greater capital flows. Banks serve as stewards of economic growth, and as such, as stewards of environmental impact.

Yet a large share of bank lending goes to carbon-intensive sectors. For example, between 2021 and 2024, the worldwide allocated around US $3.29 trillion (£2.45 trillion) to , compared to about US $1.37 trillion to sustainable power, including solar, wind and related infrastructure.

Similarly, BloombergNEF's recent shows that for every dollar that the world's leading banks invest in oil, or coal, only 89 cents are invested in low-carbon energy companies. Even in the face of the climate crisis, green financing still lags behind.

Does it matter where we bank?

Banks have traditionally due to the sector's strong profitability and reliable credit ratings. However, as more capital flows into renewable projects, it the low-carbon transition, reducing financing costs and lowering perceived risks.

With this in mind, perhaps it is time to consider whether the bank we select could subtly influence environmental outcomes.

Individuals might feel small compared with the might of the banking sector, but they really could influence these dynamics through their choices. Most people would assume that their deposits play only a minor role, but collectively they represent vast sums of money.

To illustrate this, in August 2025 alone, UK households' deposits with banks and building societies increased by in July 2025. These deposits would include funds in current accounts, and ISAs.

The sums involved are huge, yet our banking decisions are rarely framed as environmental ones—even though they are part of the broader system that directs capital flows. Each depositor's choice contributes, however modestly, to the overall pattern of where credit flows.

An individual account may not shift global outcomes on its own. But many small choices, made by millions of people over time, can shape incentives and expectations. Understanding how banks operate, what they finance and how transparent they are, is another way our financial decisions intersect with climate realities.

Provided by The Conversation

This article is republished from under a Creative Commons license. Read the .The Conversation

Citation: How banks affect the environment and the role your money plays in it (2025, October 28) retrieved 6 November 2025 from /news/2025-10-banks-affect-environment-role-money.html
This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Explore further

Why banks consider renewable energy to be a riskier investment than fossil fuels

0 shares

Feedback to editors