Since June 2016, the European Central Bank (ECB) has injected around 67 billion euro into the Eurozone economy to fund corporate bond purchases. This is part of a money creation programme known as ‘quantitative easing’, a scheme aimed at stimulating the Eurozone economy through the purchase of corporate bonds. However, in the name of growth, this programme supports companies at the heart of the climate crisis.

Among the list of corporations favoured by the ECB are some from the dirtiest industries on the planet. The bank has not revealed how much has been spent on the bonds of individual firms. But oil and gas companies, such as Shell, Total and Repsol, appear to have received particular support, along with car makers and highway firms. Shell bonds have, for example, been bought eleven times since the inception of the programme. And while carbon industry bond purchases make up as much as 68 per cent of some national central bank investments within the scheme, there are very few renewable energy investments visible across the lists of bond purchases.

In other words, only six months after European countries signed the Paris Agreement, the ECB began to pour cheap money into the pockets of huge companies which can already comfortably access capital markets, and whose businesses are - by their nature - destructive to the climate and therefore the lives and livelihoods of people worldwide.

Whatever the ECB’s logic in selecting these bonds, such a programme cannot be justified in the context of the ongoing climate emergency. All institutions of the European Union and all of its member states have a responsibility to fight climate change. Investing billions of euros in carbon-intensive industries clearly works against the goal of halting disastrous climate change.

There is little evidence to show that the ongoing corporate purchases by the ECB do anything other than provide cheaper money for corporations. Apparently, the money simply ends up as additional income for a few wealthy shareholders, while job-creating small and medium-sized companies are being sidelined.

Properly designed economic policies, in contrast, could help to support socially and environmentally-beneficial projects, which the traditional banking sector has been unwilling to invest in.

It is time to change that.

As a first step, we demand transparency. It is unacceptable that the ECB is not prepared to reveal its purchases to the public. The public has a right to know which companies benefit from the ECB programme and, in particular, how much money gets spent on bonds of individual companies.

Secondly, we demand a change of course. Stop funding fossil fuels. There needs to be full alignment of the EU’s bond purchasing strategy and its social and environmental objectives, which include meeting the Paris climate targets.

Thirdly, we are asking decision makers in Europe to develop an alternative: we need a strategy under democratic control, that steers investments towards job-creating industries and sets us on the right course to combat the climate crisis.

Signatories:

350.org (EU/global)

Action from Ireland (Ireland)

ActionAid (UK)

Alternativa antimilitarista de Las Palmas (Spain)

Ander Europa (the Netherlands, Belgium)

Asociación Canaria de economía alternative (Spain)

ATTAC Deutschland (Germany)

ATTAC España (Spain)

ATTAC France (France)

ATTAC Ireland (Ireland)

ATTAC Norge (Norway)

ATTAC Österreich (Austria)

Bankwatch (EU)

Bio Consom'acteurs (France)

Bond Beter Leef Milieu (Belgium)

CADTM (EU)

Carbon Market Watch (EU)

ChristianAid (UK)

CIDSE (EU)

Climate Action Network, CAN (EU)

Collectif des Tables Rondes Citoyennes (France)

Collectif Roosevelt (France)

Confederación Intersindical (Spain)

Corner House (UK)

Corporate Europe Observatory (EU)

Counter-Balance (EU)

Debt Resistance UK (UK)

Ecologistas en Acción (Spain)

End Ecocide on Earth (EU-global)

Engineers without Borders (Spain)

ENTREPUEBLOS/ENTREPOBLES/ENTREPOBOS/HERRIARTE (Spain)

EPSU, European Federation of Public Service Unions (EU)

European Alternatives (EU)

Fairfin (Belgium)

Focus Association for Sustainable Development (Slovenia)

Fondation Nicolas Hulot (France)

Friends of the Earth Cyprus (Cyprus)

Friends of the Earth Europe

Friends of the Earth Finland (Finland)

Fundacja "Rozwój TAK - Odkrywki NIE" (Poland)

Global 2000 - Friends of the Earth Austria (Austria)

Global Forest Coalition (EU-global)

Global Witness (UK)

Health and Environment Alliance (EU)

Institut Veblen (France)

International Institute for Law and the Environment, IIDMA (EU)

La Confederación General del Trabajo de España (Spain)

Leave it in the Ground Initiative (EU)

Les jours heureux (France)

Miljöförbundet Jordens Vänner (Sweden)

Monetative (Germany)

Mouvement Écologique (Luxembourg)

New Economics Foundation (UK)

NOAH - Friends of the Earth Denmark (Denmark)

Notre affaire à tous (France)

Parroquia do Cristo da Victoria (Spain)

Plataforma Cantabria por lo Público y Contra los Recortes (Spain)

Plataforma Rural (Spain)

QE for People (EU)

Re Common (Italy)

REDESSCAN: Red canaria en defensa de los servicios sociales (Spain)

ReINFORM (the Netherlands, Greece)

Réseau international des Dialogues en humanité (France)

SOMO (the Netherlands)

Stamp Out Poverty (UK)

System Change - Not Climate Change (Austria)

transform! Europe (EU)

Transnational Institute (EU/global)

Transport & Environment (EU)

Trócaire (Ireland)

Urgewald (Germany)

World Future Council

WWF European Policy Office

Young Friends of the Earth Scotland (Scotland)

ZERO – Association for the Sustainability of the Earth System (Portugal)

Zukunftskonvent (Germany)