2021.11.08
Citibank Korea committed to supporting ESG drive in corporate sector
By Choi
Jae-hee, The Korea Herald - Citibank Korea, the South Korean unit
of Citigroup, has ramped up efforts to gain an upper hand in sustainable
financing, focused on environmental, social and governance factors, to support
local companies’ ESG management, the lender said Sunday.
Sustainable financing refers to a bank’s financial
services, ranging from loans to bonds, designed to provide financial support
for sustainable economic activities and projects of private companies or public
entities. The prolonged COVID-19 pandemic has made local companies aware of the
need to incorporate a high level of ESG in their operations.
The balance of Citibank Korea’s sustainable financing
transactions in the January-June period recorded $8.1 billion, nearly a third
of parent company Citigroup’s total ESG-related financing in Asia, which
amounted to $25 billion. The Korean subsidiary posted the largest volume of
sustainable financing among the banking group’s 16 Asian units, including
China, Japan, Hong Kong and India.
The lender’s strong ESG performance, which is aimed at
its annual strategic goal of being the “Best ESG Bank,” announced in August,
came in line with Citigroup’s commitment to net-zero greenhouse gas emissions
by 2050.
To speed up its ESG activities, the bank in June
launched an intraboard committee responsible for promoting the incorporation of
ESG criteria into the company’s business portfolios and developing ESG-related
financial products as well as educational programs.
Along with sustainable financing, the foreign bank has
also launched a series of virtual meetings since the second half of last year,
whereby its corporate customers have consultations with the lender’s global
experts regarding ESG management.
ESG-oriented companies’ overseas expansion is also part
of the bank’s major long-term goals. In partnership with the Korea Trade
Insurance Corp., known as K-sure, it has offered loan benefits for businesses
in green areas, which are trying to make inroads into global markets.
Meanwhile, in a move to cooperate with global
communities in combating global climate change, the lender signed a partnership
with the Korean office of global conservation group World Wide Fund for Nature
last year and donated $250,000 for the organization’s campaign dubbed “Change
Now for Tomorrow,” launched in 2018 to encourage companies to embrace
sustainable business management.
While supporting companies’ ESG drives, Citibank Korea
has also rolled up its sleeves to beef up its own ESG capacity, especially in
terms of corporate governance practices. Women now hold 38 percent of executive
positions at the lender, as of November, the highest figure among the nation’s
commercial banks. Last year, CEO Yoo Myung-soon was tapped to lead the bank as
the first female chief to lead the US lender’s local unit.
Source: http://news.koreaherald.com/view.php?ud=20211107000235&md=20211108003004_BL