Commitment Phase Is Over. Now Comes the Test of Delivery.
Listen to the full podcast episode on YouTube, Spotify, and Apple Podcasts.
Two Banks, One Revealing Pivot
In April 2026, Scotiabank and Royal Bank of Canada both withdrew their 2030 interim financed emissions targets. Scotiabank went further, retiring its 2050 net zero goal entirely.
Both cited shifting policy assumptions, reduced data availability, and an investment environment in which, as RBC’s own research put it, investors “may still support change but aren’t demanding it as much.”
In their place: transition finance. RBC reports low carbon lending up forty-three percent since 2023. Scotiabank reports one hundred and fifty-four billion dollars extended toward climate-related financing since 2019.
Whether that is a replacement or a reframing is the question the article leaves open.
Reading It Several Times
Charlie Bronks is Group Head of Responsible Business at Crown Agents Bank, a London-listed financial services group operating in emerging and frontier markets. She led the bank’s B Corp certification, built its responsible business governance framework from the ground up, and serves as a board trustee of the UN Global Compact Network UK.
She read the article more than once before settling on her view.
“The obvious headline is that RBC and Scotiabank have retired their interim financed emissions targets. But the more interesting question is what it says about the evolution of sustainability itself.”
Her reading is not celebratory. But it is not straightforwardly critical either.
Being Inside the Transition
Charlie pushed back when the conversation framed the withdrawals as terminology. These banks have real influence over where capital flows. Retired targets create cover for continued fossil fuel lending regardless of framing.
But she also resists the reflexive reading. Exiting a client or a market because of its emissions profile does not reduce those emissions.
“Coming out of it completely doesn’t necessarily stop the problem,” she said. “Being part of the change is what we’re going to see a lot more of.”
The transition finance argument in its most honest form. What it struggles to answer is how an institution distinguishes genuine transition engagement from lending to the status quo with better language attached.
Evidencing Delivery in Frontier Markets
At Crown Agents Bank, responsible business is not adjacent to the commercial proposition. It is the commercial proposition. The bank operates where the trade finance gap runs to approximately two and a half trillion dollars. Many clients cannot be named publicly because they operate in environments where visibility creates risk. Payment failures in these corridors can be life-threatening.
“We’ve had clients come in and say: we chose you because of your sustainability credentials,” Charlie said.
UK government procurement now allocates ten percent of contract value to social value criteria. In a competitive tender between institutions with similar financial offerings, that ten percent is often determinative.
Show Me What You’ve Done
Her magic wand answer is structural.
“I would like to see organisations recognised not for making big promises, but for consistently helping clients transition responsibly.”
The Scotiabank and RBC withdrawals were commitments made when the policy environment supported them, removed when it did not. That fragility is the real story. Whether the accountability mechanisms being built, ratings, reporting requirements, procurement criteria, arrive fast enough to make evidenced delivery the industry standard before the next round of target withdrawals is, as of now, open.
Sponsored by...
truMRK: Sustainability Reports and Communications You Can Trust
👉 Learn how truMRK helps organisations strengthen the credibility of their reporting and communications.
Want to be a guest on our show?
Contact Us.
The Responsible Edge Podcast
Queensgate House
48 Queen Street
Exeter
Devon
EX4 3SR
Join 2,500+ Leaders.
Exploring how to build trust, lead responsibly, and grow with integrity. Get the latest episodes and exclusive insights direct to your inbox.
© 2026. The Responsible Edge Podcast. All rights reserved. The Responsible Edge Podcast® is a registered trademark.
Sponsored by truMRK
© 2026. The Responsible Edge Podcast









