ABN AMRO
ABN AMRO Bank N.V., stylized as ABN AMRO, The third-largest bank of the Netherlands is located in Amsterdam, it was established during the financial crisis of 2007 through a merger of the former Fortis Bank Nederland and former ABN AMRO Holding N.V. In 2015 ABN AMRO was publicly re-listed through an initial public offering (IPO) by the Dutch government. In 2020 ABN AMRO had a total of 19,234 employees (FTEs) worldwide.[1] The banking company has 24 offices in the Netherlands and is active on 5 continents. Their current stock market value is 5.94 billion EUR and they have over 5 million private customers.
Company Structure
Executive Board and Executive Committee
- Robert Swaak (Chairman and CEO)
- Tanja Cuppen (CRO)
- Christian Bornfeld
- Frans van der Horst
- Daphne Kluis
- Pieter van Mierlo
- Rutger van Nouhuijs
- Gerard Penning
Supervisory Board
- Tome de Swaan (Chairman)
- Arjen Dorland (Vice-Chairman)
- Laetitia Griffith
- Michiel Lap
- Jurgen Stegmann
- Anna Storåkers
- Mariken Tannemaat
- Tjalling Tiemstra
Accountant
KPMG and EY
Operations
uitgebreidere beschrijving van het bedrijf en wat ze doen en of ze ABN AMROs business performance is made up out of Retail Banking, Commercial Banking, Private Banking, Corporate & Institutional Banking, and Group Functions. ABNO AMRO sells shares on the public stock market for around 12-13 EUR. Most of these shares, 50,1% of the total, are held by Stichting Administratiekantoor Continuïnteit ABN AMRO Bank (STAK AAB), the rest of the shares, 469,1 million, are held directly by NL Financial Investments (NFLI). ABN AMRO itself has not received NOW support but invests fraudulent cases regarding these subsidies.
Paris Agreement to Today
beschrijving van wat het bedrijf heet gedaan en misdaan sinds het akkoord van Parijs
Current Policies and Emissions
Beschrijving van de uitstoot van het bedrijf en eventuele beleid
Climate Plans
ABN AMRO Investment Solutions (AAIS) consists of around 80 investment specialists who offer investment products and solutions to ABN AMROs clients. Their Supervisory Board supervises the Managing Board, as well as the Group’s general course of affairs and its business.[2] They released a Climate Statement, and together with ABN AMRO stated that their purpose “Banking for better, for generations to come” aligns with the Paris Agreement’s goals. They pledged to have all their buildings achieve at least Energy Label A by 2023 and to be Paris Proof by 2030. They also state that they are subject to the French Law on Energy Transition and Green Growth,[3] recently they adopted further regulations through the Law of No. 2019-1147 regarding Energy and Climate.[4]
Conclusion
Beschrijving of de plannen in lijn zijn met 'Parijs'
Bedrijfsspecifieke Passage in 'de brief'
U heeft uw duurzaamheidsbeleid vastgelegd in het Annual Report 2020, het AIS Climate Statement 2021, en het LTECV Report 2021 .
Wij constateren dat uw ambitie is om al uw gebouwen in 2030 van minstens Energie Label A te voorzien. Het is duidelijk dat u daarmee niet transparant/duidelijk genoeg bent over uw plannen en ambities om binnen een anderhalve graden scenario blijft.
In uw plannen blijkt niet goed hoe u uw ambities gaat realiseren. Dat is een grote tekortkoming en dat maakt de ambitie niet geloofwaardig.
Daarmee draagt uw bedrijf bij aan gevaarlijke klimaatverandering en loopt u het materiële risico om mensenrechtenschendingen te veroorzaken.
References
- ↑ https://www.aandelencheck.nl/aandelen/abn-amro/medewerkers/
- ↑ https://www.abnamroinvestmentsolutions.com/en/about-abn-amro-investment-solutions/governance.html
- ↑ https://climate-laws.org/geographies/france/laws/law-no-2015-992-on-energy-transition-for-green-growth-energy-transition-law
- ↑ https://climate-laws.org/geographies/france/laws/law-no-2019-1147-on-energy-and-the-climate