Skip to main content
Netherlands News in English

Main navigation

  • Top stories
  • Health
  • Crime
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Tech
  • Culture
  • Sports
  • Weird
  • 1-1-2
Image
ING Bank
ING Bank - Credit: Photo: wujekspeed/DepositPhotos / DepositPhotos - License: DepositPhotos
Business
Nature
ING
global warming
Climate change
fossil fuel
renewable energy
Arnaud Cohen Stuart
Wednesday, 23 March 2022 - 16:30

Share this article:

ING stops funding oil and gas drilling

ING will immediately stop financing the search for and exploitation of new oil and natural gas fields. The bank also wants to invest more money in developing renewable energy provided by wind farms or solar panels, for example. In just under three years, ING intends to increase the funding of these projects by half, the bank announced. In doing so, the bank says it will contribute to achieving the Paris climate goals.

ING is not leaving the fossil energy sector altogether. The financial group still provides credit for oil and gas pipelines, for example, to secure the energy supply. The bank will also continue to finance work in existing oil and gas fields.

According to ING's head of business ethics, Arnaud Cohen Stuart, the bank is following the International Energy Agency (IEA) recommendations with the announced steps. The IEA warned last year that no new oil and gas fields could be mined if global warming is to be limited to 1.5 degrees. But if the development of existing oil and gas projects is halted completely, the production of those fuels will drop too quickly, Cohen Stuart said.

ING has a portfolio of 3.5 billion euros in funding the upstream activities of companies in the fossil fuel industry. That involves searching for and mining oil and gas, among other things. The bank wants this loan book to be at least 12 percent smaller in 2025 than 2019. In 2040, the portfolio must be more than half smaller than in 2019.

At the same time, ING is increasing its renewable energy funding by a tenth every year compared to 2021. This may concern loans that end up in its own portfolio, but that does not have to be the case. The bank now has 7.3 billion euros in loans and investments in things like solar energy or wind energy.

More like this

Image
Eemshaven power plant RWE
Dutch emissions increased in 2025; Climate goals further out of reach
Image
Shell's rapid rechargers located at a converted filling station in Rotterdam. December 2022
Shell to invest up to $15 billion in renewables by 2026
Image
Wind turbines seen through the smoke and chimneys of oil refinery Pernis in Rotterdam
Dutch greenhouse gas emissions dropped 5% in Q1 of 2026
Image
A Shell fuel tanker truck
New lawsuit against Shell as oil and gas giant takes step to increase fossil fuel mining
Make NL Times your top Google source

Follow us:

Latest stories

  • Over 170 noise complaints filed during Boothstock festival in Rotterdam’s Kralingse Bos
  • Amsterdam landlord: full repairs after Osdorp explosion to take weeks to months
  • Utrecht to review marathon timing, route after heat-related death of 22-year-old runner
  • Max Verstappen finishes fourth in Spain as Lewis Hamilton claims first Ferrari win
  • Fourth suspect arrested in Heemstede synagogue terror plot

Top stories

  • Warm air set to lift temperatures late in June, but July outlook turns uncertain
  • Residents return to Amsterdam-Osdorp homes after blast injures seven
  • Video: Dozens evacuated in Scheveningen after major fire at fish-smoking facility
  • Dutch military tests camp design for Russian war prisoners in Marnehuizen
  • E. coli boil water advisory for 200,000 in Dordrecht, Zwijndrecht, Hendrik-Ido-Ambacht

© 2012-2026, NL Times, All rights reserved.

Footer menu

  • Change Privacy Settings
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Partner Content