The banking, financial services, and insurance (BFSI) industry must simultaneously adapt to and mitigate the climate and broader sustainability emergency. With a mandate to address the long-term beyond most other sectors, BFSI has an economic and societal responsibility. In the absence of regulation that meets the emergency, financial institutions must take the lead in helping their clients and ecosystems transition—going far beyond their internal footprints. This report examines how emerging technologies—including artificial intelligence, the Internet of Things (IoT), blockchain, and advanced data analytics—will be critical to achieving new positive outcomes for the environment, society, and BFSI organizations.
Our insurance and banking frameworks at HFS also stress the need to work with communities and governments to address connected sustainability risks as the industry near- and long-term north stars.
There is a stark need for new product innovation aligned with sustainability in BFSI. Another recent paper explores this and much more in insurance. For instance, insurance carriers must revisit their product portfolios and rethink entire underwriting processes and product development to have any shot at interlinking the global sustainability context. An Allianz board member even went as far as to say recently that the climate crisis is on track to destroy capitalism.
BFSI institutions influence all 17 UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) across environmental, social, and economic dimensions—and such goals are top of mind in a convoluted world for executives (see Exhibit 1). To harness emerging technology effectively, firms must first identify their most material spheres of influence, both positive and negative, and clearly connect them to their organizational and sustainability goals (see Exhibit 2 and our outline).
Source: 117 BFSI executives from our broader 600+ Pulse survey, H2 2024
Some examples of internal BFSI sustainability include:
Many BFSI firms remain committed to achieving net-zero greenhouse gas emissions in their operations and portfolios despite exiting sustainability coalitions and changing their public-facing narratives.
But, as BFSI firms take steps to reduce their carbon footprints, their greatest potential impact will come from influencing the businesses and communities they serve.
Source: HFS Research, 2025
Advances in AI, quantum computing, and big data analytics will be essential for understanding climate risks and translating scientific insights into actionable financial decisions, products, and services (see Exhibit 3).
RSA Insurance’s advanced metrics database uses this data, combined with analytics, to support risk consultancy, pricing, underwriting, and customer-facing teams.
Source: 75 BFSI executives from our broader 600+ Pulse survey, H2 2024
BFSI institutions must not only build and execute their own sustainability transition plans but also support clients and partners in doing the same (see again our call here). Emerging technology is enabling financial firms to reward positive behavioral change, finance sustainable initiatives, and analyze the trajectories and roadmaps needed to meet sustainability:
The JPMorgan Climate Compass was an early example that fell short of becoming a loud example of the systemic change we need. JPM, and the whole BFSI sector, still has the chance to be bold. Although politics appears likely to keep it quiet for now, sustainability is left hoping financial firms follow through on their promises to remain committed to embedding sustainability goals into their long- and short-term planning.
The Climate Compass broke down the JPM trillion+ asset portfolio into key sectors and sources of emissions (such as energy or mining). The intent was to collaborate with key firms with systemic influence over industries to transition.
Many other BFSI firms have internal processes similar to those of JPM for engaging with clients, which is central to the long-term sustainability of their investments. However, few influential financial firms and institutions have yet to define an acceptable transition plan or actions.
Fourteen major financial organizations, including Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley, pledged support for tripling global nuclear energy capacity by 2050, along with industrial and digital companies.
Barclays, another of the 14, also operates a £500 million Sustainable Impact Capital portfolio to invest in early-stage technology companies focused on environmental innovation.
Commonwealth Bank of Australia (CBA) collaborated with the World Bank to issue ‘bond-i,’ the first global public bond created and managed using blockchain technology, streamlining the processes, reducing costs, enhancing transparency, and promoting sustainable financial practices.
BBVA has increased its sustainable finance target to €700 billion over the next five years, establishing a global finance unit focused on clean technologies and innovation.
By embracing technology, aligning with global sustainability goals, and collaborating with their clients and broader ecosystems, financial organizations across BFSI can ensure their long-term viability and play a central role in protecting and empowering the environment, societies, and economies.
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