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Businesses are not only driven to decarbonize their operations but also have to consider indirect climate impacts from financing and investments as the urgency of climate rises all around. Those are called financed emissions—the GHG emissions associated with loans, investments, and other financial products. With increasingly stringent pressure from regulators, investors, and universal ESG benchmarks, managing financed emissions is now a necessity and not an option.

This post discusses what financed emissions are, why they’re important, and how firms—in particular, financial institutions—should measure and report them.

What Are Financed Emissions?

Financed emissions are indirect Scope 3 emissions associated with assets a financial institution has supported—including equities, bonds, or project finance. For instance, if a coal plant is financed by a bank, the carbon emissions of the plant are considered partially the financed emissions of the bank.

A significant portion of a bank’s greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions arises from the companies they finance. Studies indicate that Investment-linked emissions can represent at least 95% of a bank’s total carbon footprint, often overshadowing emissions from their own operations.

Real-World Impact: Alarming Facts

A CDP report from 2023 revealed that Investment-linked emissions are more than 700 times the size of a bank’s operating emissions.

60 of the world’s largest banks together financed activities that were worth $4.6 trillion of fossil fuel growth between 2016–2022 (Rainforest Action Network).

BlackRock’s financed emissions carbon footprint is approximately over 330 million metric tons of CO₂e—larger than the emissions of Poland as a whole.

These figures reveal the disproportionate contribution of financial flows to global carbon pollution.

Why Financed Emissions Are Essential to ESG

Discounting Investment-linked emissions dilutes ESG credibility for firms that are pursuing net-zero emissions. Important reasons are:

Regulatory Push

Laws like the SEC’s climate disclosure regulation and the EU’s SFDR require more transparency on climate risks. 

Investor & Stakeholder Pressure

Institutional investors are increasingly requiring full-scope emissions reporting.  The 86 members of the Net-Zero Asset Owner Alliance (NZAOA), for instance, are required to decarbonize their operating and financial emissions by 2050. 

Reputational Risk

Reputational damage and charges of greenwashing may result from failing to disclose and address funded emissions. 

financed emissions

Key Industries Fueling Financed Emissions

Banking institutions secondarily finance some of the most carbon-heavy industries in the world:

  • Oil & Gas: Lending or investing in upstream drilling or refineries.
  • Coal & Mining: Bonding and loaning in favour of extractive activities.
  • Utilities: Lending to fossil-fuel-fired power plants.
  • Real Estate: Carbon emissions related to energy-wasteful commercial or residential real estate.
  • Transport: Aviation and shipping financed through leasing or structured loans.

Measuring Financed Emissions

PCAF provides the default method, which enables consistent carbon accounting. The process includes: 

1. Calculation of Attribution Factor

This is based on how much of a business a financial institution has invested overall. 

2. Data Quality Score

PCAF offers data quality scoring between 1 (best quality) and 5 (estimated or proxy).

3. Asset Class Categorization

Various techniques are employed for:

  • Listed equity and corporate bonds
  • Business loans
  • Project finance
  • Commercial real estate

Example: If Bank A finances $10 million in a $100 million oil project with 1 million tons of CO₂e emissions, then Bank A reports 10% or 100,000 tons of CO₂e as financed emissions.

How Clenergize Assists in Measuring and Mitigating Financed Emissions

At Clenergize , we offer a full range of AI-driven ESG solutions that assist banks, asset managers, and companies:

Automate Emissions Calculation

Our platform consumes investment and loan portfolio data and runs PCAF-compliant methodologies to automate tracking of financed emissions.

Benchmark Against Net-Zero Targets

We provide real-time benchmarking against guidelines such as SBTi Financial Sector Guidance, NZAOA, and GFANZ.

Decarbonization Strategies

Clenergize ESG+™ facilitates:

  • Sector-specific reduction paths for finance related emissions
  • Portfolio temperature alignment analysis
  • Scenario modeling with IPCC and IEA pathways

Impact Reporting

Our dashboards are connected to ISSB, CDP, and TPI frameworks for transparent stakeholder disclosures.

Challenges in Addressing Financed Emissions

  • Data Availability: Small and private entities can be short of emissions data.
  • Double Counting: Various lenders asserting identical emissions.
  • Inertia in Legacy Portfolios: Long-term fossil fuel positions are difficult to unwind.

Solutions

  • Get borrowers and investees to report emissions openly.
  • Use AI-based estimations in the absence of actual data.
  • Establish clear internal guidelines on portfolio decarbonization.

The Future of Financed Emissions

As climate finance frameworks mature, anticipate:

  • Mandatory Disclosure under ISSB and SEC regulations
  • Satellite and IoT-based automated ESG scoring
  • Portfolio climate stress-testing against physical and transition risk
  • Green Taxonomies to inform low-carbon investments

Conclusion

Financed emissions are the elephant in the room for financial institutions to achieve net-zero. With improving data quality and harmonization of standards, companies now have the tools required to quantify, manage, and decrease the carbon footprint of their capital.

With Clenergize ESG+™, we enable institutions to align capital with climate objectives.

Need to climate-align your investment portfolio? Reach out to Clenergize today to measure and lower your financed emissions.