Standard Bank becomes a founding signatory to the Principles for Responsible Banking
Standard Bank, Africa’s largest financial services organisation, has become a founding signatory to the UN Principles for Responsible Banking – a framework aimed at driving sustainable economic development and ensuring the prosperity of current and future generations.
More than 100 banking CEOs from five continents, along with UN Secretary-General António Guterres and the UN Environment Programme Finance Initiative, launched the Principles for Responsible Banking at the annual UN General Assembly in New York on Sunday.
Sola David-Borha, Standard Bank Group’s Chief Executive for Africa Regions, signed the Principles document on behalf of the group, which played a role in developing the framework over the past two years.
“The Principles align with Standard Bank’s purpose: to drive Africa’s growth and uplift her people by doing business the right way. They also support the group’s drive to maximise our social, economic and environmental impacts,” David-Borha says. “Standard Bank sees an opportunity to have a significant impact across the continent, given that we have the largest African footprint of all participating banks.”
The Principles for Responsible Banking are designed to help banks align their business strategies with society’s goals – as expressed in the UN’s Sustainable Development Goals and the Paris Climate Agreement – thereby laying the platform for a sustainable banking system. They require banks to embed social, economic and environmental considerations in their processes, practices and decision-making.
All signatory banks are required to conduct impact analyses to identify their biggest potential positive and negative contributions to the societies, economies and environments in which they operate. Based on these analyses, banks must then identify strategic business opportunities to increase positive and decrease negative impacts. Each bank must then set at least two targets that address their biggest impact areas, and work towards achieving them.
Importantly, transparency forms a key element of the Principles – all banks must report their progress to the public. This comes as customers, investors and the broader public increasingly advocate that banks take ownership of the direct and indirect impacts of their funding activities.
Given the significant role that banks play in society, fostering the trust of all stakeholders is more important than ever.
“The launch of the Principles signifies a critical evolution in how the banking industry engages with and accounts to our stakeholders,” David-Borha says.
Standard Bank has identified seven impact areas the group aims to focus on, based on the markets it operates in. These are: job creation and enterprise development; education; financial inclusion; health; environment and climate change; infrastructure development; African trade and investment.
However, Standard Bank Mozambique has already made progress in these areas. In July the bank launched a "Tree Planting" campaign.
In job creation and business development, the bank has opened in August 2017, its business incubator in Maputo, which develops initiatives aimed to help young entrepreneurs and start ups structure business ideas to solve everyday problems simply and creatively.