Conference Paper

Climate Risk and Credit Allocation: A Study of Domestic and Foreign Banks in Türkiye

No.

ERF32AC_156

Publisher

ERF

Date

May, 2026

This study examines how banks in Türkiye adjust their lending in response to climate-related risks, with particular attention to ownership structures and home-country characteristics. Using firm-level credit data from the Turkish Credit Registry, we evaluate banks’ exposures to high-carbon (“dirty”) and low-carbon (“green”) sectors across domestic private, state-owned, and foreign institutions. We find a general contraction in lending to dirty sectors, driven primarily by private and foreign banks in the post-Paris Agreement period, while state-owned banks continue to support high-carbon industries. Foreign banks headquartered in advanced economies also reduce dirty-sector lending over time, although the stringency of home-country climate policy does not have a statistically significant effect. These findings indicate that both ownership structures and home-country institutional environments shape banks’ climate-related lending behavior in emerging markets. The paper offers the first systematic evidence from Türkiye on banks’ transition strategies, underscoring sectoral credit reallocation and cross-border influences in climate-aligned banking.
Climate Risk and Credit Allocation: A Study of Domestic and Foreign Banks in Türkiye

Authors

Yusuf Emre Akgündüz

Executive Director, Central Bank, Republic of Turkiye

Climate Risk and Credit Allocation: A Study of Domestic and Foreign Banks in Türkiye

Research Fellows

Seyit Mümin Cilasun

Professor of Economics, TED University

Climate Risk and Credit Allocation: A Study of Domestic and Foreign Banks in Türkiye

Authors

Canan Yildirim

Associate Professor of Finance, Department of Finance...