ECB urges banks to 'step up' climate risk management by AFP Staff Writers Frankfurt (AFP) July 8, 2022 The European Central Bank on Friday called on banks to improve their preparations for future environmental risks as it published the results of its first "climate stress test". Banks in the eurozone "must urgently step up efforts to measure and manage climate risk", the ECB's supervisory chief, Andrea Enria, said in a statement. Launched in January, the stress test gauged the impact of different transition scenarios and "extreme weather events" on banks' business. The exercise, in which 104 banks participated, showed that "around 60 percent" did not have the necessary assessment frameworks and many "lack relevant data" to assess climate risks in their portfolio, the ECB said. In the short term, 41 of the banks that provided projections faced around 70 billion euros ($70.8 billion) in losses in a "disorderly" scenario, where the cost of carbon emissions rose quickly. But the figure likely underestimated banks' exposure due to the "scarcity of data" and simplified modelling, the ECB said. A more orderly transition led to lower losses for banks, the report concluded. In all, "almost two-thirds of banks' income from nonfinancial corporate customers stems from greenhouse-gas-intensive industries", it said. The conclusions of the stress test did not have any direct impact on banks' capital requirements. The ECB expected banks to learn from the stress test and "take decisive action" to better prepare for future climate risks, said Frank Elderson, the vice-chair of the central bank's supervisory arm. Earlier this week, the ECB unveiled plans to "decarbonise" its bond holdings and make its monetary policy more climate-friendly. The steps by the ECB's governing council "aim to better take into account climate-related financial risk" and "support the green transition".
Global effort to police 'greenwashing' begins to take shape Paris (AFP) July 8, 2022 Companies have been calculating their carbon footprints since the early 2000s and just over one in three of the world's 2,000 largest public corporations have now set goals to become carbon neutral or emissions-free by mid-century or sooner. Even Saudi Aramco - the world's biggest oil major - has pledged to achieve "operational net-zero" carbon emissions by 2050, just days before the United Nations climate summit last year. But with such self-set deadlines still a long way off and varying def ... read more
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