The departures of British banking giants HSBC and Barclays this summer spelled the definitive end for the beleaguered Net Zero Banking Alliance (NZBA). The global coalition has now officially announced its immediate shutdown, confirming that the loss of these and other key members had made its mission impossible.
The alliance had been in a state of managed decline for months, a process that began with a political earthquake in the United States. The re-election of Donald Trump and his administration’s anti-environmental policies created a hostile atmosphere for corporate climate action, empowering an “anti-woke” backlash against member banks.
The first and most damaging blow came from Wall Street. The six largest US banks, fearing political retribution, made a collective decision to withdraw from the NZBA. This move, which included industry leaders like JPMorgan Chase and Bank of America, fatally undermined the alliance’s global authority.
While the US exit was the initial cause, the departures of HSBC and Barclays were the final symptoms of a terminal illness. For HSBC, the move followed its own decision to water down and delay its climate targets, indicating a broader trend of backtracking on environmental commitments among major banks.
The response to the shutdown has been mixed. Sustainable investment advocates have expressed deep disappointment, viewing it as a failure of leadership. However, activist groups like Reclaim Finance were not surprised, arguing that the voluntary alliance was always a weak construct. They see its demise as a crucial step toward a more honest conversation about the need for forceful government regulation to decarbonize finance.