By Sagarika Chatterjee, Director of Climate Change, the PRI
Mark Carney and Villeroy de Galhau didn’t mince their words with their climate warning to central bankers at the launch of a new report by the Network for Greening the Financial System (NGFS): “If some companies fail to adjust to the new world, they will fail to exist.”
The heads of the two of the world’s major central banks urged greater collaboration between nations on climate change and said that policy makers and prudential supervisors cannot afford to ignore the issue.
This is why the NGFS came together in 2017 - and so the launch of their first comprehensive report is a significant moment. It gives six recommendations on what central bankers, supervisors and regulators can do on climate change.
The six recommendations are:
The report also identifies two different types of risk: transition and physical. This aligns with the recommendations of the Task Force for Climate-related Financial Disclosures, something which is broadly supported by investors.
Mark Carney has told central bankers that they cannot ignore climate change.
While this may not be as eye-catching as the recent global climate strikes by schoolchildren, for investors, the report underscores a major shift in the mindset of the guardians of stability. Now, nearly 30 central banks and supervisors see climate change as a source of financial risk within their remit and are collaborating to advance action on this.
For investors, greater harmonisation of approaches towards climate risk across central bankers, supervisors and regulators will assist in clearing confusion and enable consistent corporate disclosures.
This follows a flurry of activity on the matter. Already this week, the UK’s Prudential Regulation Authority (PRA) published a final supervisory statement on enhancing banks’ and insurers’ approaches to managing the financial risks from climate change. The statement highlights that “few firms are taking a strategic approach that considers how actions today affect future financial risks” and therefore the PRA “intends to embed measurement and monitoring of these expectations into its existing supervisory framework”.
Likewise, the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA), an observer member of the NGFS, recently published a climate change survey of regulated entities. This concluded that “APRA’s supervision activities will be enhanced, as the assessment of climate change risks is integrated into ongoing supervision activities. APRA expects to observe continuous improvement in the awareness and action of regulated entities.”
The PRI anticipates that the NGFS’s climate risk thinking will increasingly influence country-level expectations of banks, insurers and large investors.
We believe the recommendations will
a) encourage alignment of central banks’ own portfolios with responsible investment and
b) advance a strategic approach towards climate risk within financial markets.
With the IPCC special report on 1.5C highlighting we have only 12 years to safeguard the climate, follow-up implementation in co-ordination with investors is essential. As a member organisation with over 2,000 signatories, many of whom see climate as a material risk, the PRI can support implementation by encouraging:
Source: PRI