FAB unveils net-zero transition plan in 2026

emirates7 - First Abu Dhabi Bank (FAB) has released its 2026 Transition Pathways Update. On Earth Day 2026, the report highlighted that FAB’s sustainable and transition finance activities contributed to nearly 4 million tonnes of CO₂ of avoided emissions in 2025.

It also outlined continued progress in advancing the bank’s sustainability agenda and the progress of its Net Zero Transition Plan, reinforcing FAB’s commitment to playing a leading role in the global shift to a low-carbon economy.

FAB continues to align its strategy with national climate priorities, embedding sustainability across its business model, risk framework, and client engagement approach. At the core of the plan are four pillars: Client Engagement and Sectoral pathways, Climate Risk Management and Portfolio Steering, Operational Decarbonisation and Sustainable Finance Mobilisation.

The report outlined FAB’s approach to measuring, managing and reducing climate and nature‑related impacts across its operations and financing portfolio. It also demonstrated how the bank is translating its net zero and nature‑positive commitments into tangible, measurable actions.

FAB reduced Scope 1 and 2 emissions intensity per FTE by 35 percent since 2019. This has been driven by energy‑efficiency initiatives, increased use of cleaner grid electricity, and the integration of clean energy certificates across key locations. A formal net-zero action plan has been established to deliver the Group’s 2030 operational decarbonisation targets.

The bank introduced a bespoke transition maturity assessment and escalation framework, enabling more targeted, risk‑based engagement with high‑emitting clients. Coverage under this framework is being progressively expanded, with the number of assessed clients expected to double between 2024 and 2025.

FAB remained on track against its 2030 pathways across eight high‑emitting sectors, supported by improved client disclosures and early transition actions.

The bank's financed‑emissions pathways have been re‑baselined to 2023 from 2021, strengthening credibility and alignment with the current portfolio while reinforcing the bank’s medium‑term decarbonisation trajectory.

Additionally, FAB mobilised AED114.4 billion in sustainable and transition finance in 2025, directed toward climate mitigation solutions such as renewable energy, energy efficiency, green buildings and clean transport, as well as climate adaptation initiatives.

The bank showed strong progress towards its AED500 billion sustainable and transition finance target: Since 2022, FAB has facilitated AED381 billion in sustainable and transition finance, achieving 76 percent of its AED500 billion 2030 target.

FAB also issued landmark transition‑labelled instruments, including the first low‑carbon energy bond globally and the first blue bond by a GCC financial institution, supporting energy transition, water and wastewater infrastructure.

The bank also published the region’s first TNFD‑aligned disclosure, issued blue bonds aligned with ICMA principles, and expanded nature‑related risk considerations within its ESG assessments and sectoral policies, strengthening sustainability in banking and supporting a nature‑positive future.

FAB served as Principal and Official Banking Partner of the IUCN World Conservation Congress 2025, advancing discussions on nature finance, biodiversity, water, and the climate‑nature nexus in collaboration with governments, investors and clients.

In Abu Dhabi, FAB supported coral reef restoration through partnerships with Archireef and the Environment Agency – Abu Dhabi (EAD), deploying 400 reef tiles and transplanting 800 coral fragments to support marine ecosystem recovery.

Shargiil Bashir, Group Chief Sustainability Officer at FAB, said, “The 2026 Transition Pathways Update demonstrates how FAB is embedding transition across every facet of our business, from our own operations to our client relationships and capital allocation. In line with the UAE’s climate ambitions, we are committed to supporting a low-carbon, nature-positive future through disciplined decarbonisation, structured client engagement, and scaled sustainable finance.”