A CSR strategy based on four pillars
The Banque de France was one of the first French public institutions to define a CSR strategy, thanks initially to the strong overlap between CSR concerns and its mandate as a central bank (education of the public, sound financing of the economy, etc.). Its new CSR 2021-24 strategy has four main pillars:
- Acting to preserve the environment
- Acting to foster HR inclusion and collaborative initiatives
- Acting as a corporate sponsor in areas related to our missions
- Leading by example in our investments and procurement for a sustainable economy
Find out more
- CSR Charter
- CSR Book
- Table of indicators - Annual report (in French)
- Banque de France Diversity and Inclusion Charter
- Banque de France Workplace Gender Equality Index (in French)
- Responsible Investment Charter (in French)
- 2024 Sustainability Report – Sustainability actions of the Banque de France and the ACPR
Acting to preserve the environment
We have been striving to reduce our environmental footprint since 2008 and have now extended this commitment with three new objectives:
- Pilot and implement a carbon neutral strategy
- Engage the directorates and staff in reducing our carbon footprint
- Use our resources sustainably and help to preserve biodiversity
We also encourage participative approaches, especially for projects to reduce our environmental footprint. Staff are invited to take part in these initiatives through in-house challenges and intrapreneurship (laboratory gardens, digital sobriety, re-use of shredded banknotes, marketplace for swapping and giving away items).
Our commitment to net zero
We have set ourselves ambitious reduction targets for our greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions for 2024 and 2030, continuing the efforts made since 2014. The next milestone is 2024, when we aim to have cut our GHG emissions by at least 15% compared with 2019, over a reporting scope that, at this stage, includes energy use, business travel, staff commuting to work, waste and fugitive emissions mainly linked to leaks of refrigerant gases from air conditioning systems.
Our energy and digital sobriety approach
We are contributing to the national energy sobriety plan and have defined a clear roadmap with concrete targets for our energy use. We are raising staff awareness of energy sobriety through training, workshops and other tools. To encourage digital sobriety, staff now have access to a personal digital profile where they can monitor and limit their use of our messaging systems. We are also working to reduce the environmental footprint of our IT systems and adopting sustainable practices in our application development.
14.7%
Reduction in GHG emissions in 2021 compared with 2019 over the defined reporting scope
23.6%
Reduction in GHG emissions in 2022 compared with 2019 over the defined reporting scope
32,058
Total Banque de France GHG emissions in 2022, in tCO₂e (ADEME methodology)
By the end of 2022, more than 50% of Banque de France staff had taken the online training course on climate challenges. 800 had taken part in one of the Climate Fresk workshops organised by the 38 Banque de France staff trained to hold these sessions. Our target for 2024 is for over 75% of staff to have received training on climate challenges.
In 2021, all staff were provided with a personal digital profile. In 2022, two new indicators were added: the number of pages printed and the number of emails sent between 7 p.m. and 7.30 a.m. (outside normal working hours).
5,065
Number of staff trained on climate challenges in 2022
9,800
Number of staff who used their personal digital profile in 2022
Acting to foster HR inclusion and collaborative initiatives
Our commitments:
- Promote diversity in our hiring and guarantee equal treatment for all
- Guarantee career-long employability for staff
- Co-construct a working environment that fosters wellbeing and initative-taking
Our commitment to equality and diversity
We have already surpassed our goal of having 35% of female staff in management roles (the figure was 38.5 % at end-2024) and are continuing our work to close the gender pay gap. In governance, our target is for at least 40% of our Executive Committee members to be female by 2024, four years ahead of the legal deadline . We are also committed to keeping the share of disabled staff in our workforce at a minimum of 6%.
Our action to improve employability and create a balanced working environment
The skills needed to carry out our different activities are changing. As a result, we have signed a career management agreement with our social partners, along with a company-wide training and skills development plan that goes beyond legal requirements.
Regarding the working environment, we have signed agreements to foster remote working and create a better work-life balance.
38.2%
Share of women holding a management position at the Banque de France at the end of 2024 (up from 23% in 2017)
93/100
The Banque de France’s gender equality index score in 2024. The average for French companies with over 50 staff was 88/100
80%+
More than 80% of Banque de France staff have signed a remote working agreement
7.33%
Share of people with disabilities in the Banque de France’s workforce in 2024
Acting as a corporate sponsor
The Banque de France has set itself two main objectives for 2025:
- Roll out our corporate sponsorship strategy
- Get staff involved in our corporate sponsorship
The Banque de France uses corporate sponsorship as a tool to serve the public interest. Its main sponsorship focuses are:
Cultural heritage
We strive to preserve and enrich the Bank’s historical heritage (buildings of historical interest, collections, etc.) and make it accessible to the general public (European Heritage Days, exhibitions, organisation of concerts). We also aim to promote our cultural heritage and its links with the Banque de France’s history, key figures in its past and France’s economic and monetary history.
Social and economic inclusion
Our corporate sponsorship in this field focuses on the social integration of vulnerable segments of the population and the socio-economic development of local territories, in partnership with local general interest associations, economic partners and actors from the social and solidarity economy.
The ecological transition
We support projects linked to preserving the environment and nature and guiding the energy transition.
The different forms of corporate sponsorship
Our corporate sponsorship can take different forms, at both national and regional level:
- Financial sponsorship: cash donations
- In-kind or industrial sponsorship: gifts of goods or of the use of goods, loan of works of art or items from the Bank’s collections, provision of services
- Skills sponsorship: provision of staff to work free of charge and during their normal working hours
1 728
Number of charitable projects undertaken by individual staff
483
Number of Banque de France corporate sponsorship projects since 2021
Acting through our investments and our procurement
We aim to lead by example in our investments and procurement, and involve all staff and directorates in our approach. Our objectives are to:
- Deploy SPASER (Scheme for the Promotion of Socially and Environmentally Responsible Purchasing)
- Implement our responsible investment strategy
A responsible investor
We are continuing to reinforce our responsible investment policy for our own funds and pension liabilities portfolios, which are the sole responsibility of the Banque de France.
A responsible buyer
We are also continuing to apply our responsible procurement policy, with the aim of encouraging suppliers to commit to reducing their carbon footprint. 559 of our suppliers have signed our Responsible Procurement Charter. At the end of 2024, 95% of our procurement procedures incorporated environmental and societal considerations in the form of criteria or clauses.
SPASER
In January 2024, the Banque de France published SPASER (Scheme for the Promotion of Socially and Environmentally Responsible Procurement), reaffirming its commitment to using procurement to support the ecological transition, professional inclusion, business ethics and corporate resilience.
SPASER lays out a three-year roadmap that includes adding environmental performance criteria to our tenders and social clauses to our contracts, along with targets for the use of products from the circular economy.
The scheme also places strong emphasis on training procurement staff, equipping buyers and order placers with the knowledge and skills to navigate these new priorities, which require specific expertise. It is also a useful complement to the Banque de France’s Responsible Procurement Charter, which was published in 2019.
Together, these frameworks provide a much broader set of tools to promote our CSR goals, while also recognising and encouraging similar action from the companies we work with, especially in reducing their environmental impact.
Factoring extra-financial criteria into our project engagement and follow-up
We have taken the innovative step of incorporating extra-financial criteria into our internal investments (IT projects, real estate and industrial investments). Our goal is to ensure staff fully understand the impacts of their choices.
The approach offers several benefits:
- It ensures investment decisions are consistent with the Bank’s business strategy and CSR
- It formalises and emphasises the social, societal and environmental impacts of investments
- It provides tangible and quantifiable criteria that can be integrated into decisions
- It allows project managers to actively contribute to the Banque de France’s strategy
Extra-financial analysis is now a key part of our governance process for operational investments, in addition to the financial analysis approach.
We are also working to ensure all IT projects take into account digital sobriety and eco-design considerations.
2°C
Temperature alignment of the corporate bond component of the Bank’s pension liabilities portfolio, with a target of 1.5°C by 2026
1.5°C
The equity component of the own funds and pension liabilities portfolios has been aligned with a 1.5°C temperature target since the end of 2023
Updated on the 17th of July 2025