Two of Britain’s biggest banks were targeted by climate change protests yesterday as activists glued themselves to chairs and heckled board members. 

At Barclays and Standard Chartered’s annual general meetings protesters lambasted their failure to stop financing fossil fuels. 

At the Barclays meeting in Manchester, three people superglued their hands to chairs while 21 more interrupted chairman Nigel Higgins for more than an hour, saying it was ‘morally bankrupt’. 

Outrage: At Barclays and Standard Chartered's annual general meetings protesters lambasted their failure to stop financing fossil fuels

Outrage: At Barclays and Standard Chartered’s annual general meetings protesters lambasted their failure to stop financing fossil fuels

It was accused of ‘greenwashing’, a term for policies appearing to show action is being taken on climate change but which have no substance. At Standard Chartered’s meeting in London, protesters wore masks featuring the face of chief executive Bill Winters sporting devil horns. 

Extinction Rebellion and sister movement Money Rebellion claimed responsibility for the protests, which managed to go ahead despite strict security checks. 

Other shareholders not associated with the campaign groups also piled in. One asked whether Barclays would stop serving companies involved in the extraction of oil and gas. Higgins said: ‘No, not at the moment. We have to balance energy security, energy poverty and the climate.’ 

Campaigners claim Barclays is the ‘worst bank in Europe’ for funding fossil fuels, having ploughed £15.7billion into the industry in 2021. Standard Chartered financed the industry to the tune of £4.8billion last year. 

  • HSBC and Ping An executives are set to meet this month to discuss the Chinese insurer’s proposal that the bank should be broken up. Ping An, which is HSBC’s big- gest shareholder, last week called for the bank to look at ways to boost returns, which could include spinning off its Asian business.

This post first appeared on Dailymail.co.uk

You May Also Like

I tested supermarket pasta sauces from Asda, Sainsbury’s and Tesco – and one beats Dolmio

A SPAG bol or tomato pasta bake is a family tea-time favourite,…

STOCKS TO WATCH: ‘Short haul’ ride leaves easyJet feeling queasy

The announcement of the reopening of flights to the US last week…

JEFF PRESTRIDGE: An honest opinion on investing in Japan – go in for the long-term

Self-deprecating fund managers are few and far between, but I discovered one…

Cost of Living payment updates — Universal Credit and benefits claimants receive Xmas bonus; plus money-saving tips

Will you need to pay the Christmas bonus back? No, you won’t…