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Bank failure to manage climate risks poses threat of extinction

The European Central Bank has waned of the grave transition risks for banks that fail to prepare for a low carbon economy.

2 comments

Bank failure to manage climate risks poses threat of extinction

Editorial

This content has been selected, created and edited by the Finextra editorial team based upon its relevance and interest to our community.

In a blog post marking the publication of a report on 'Risks from misalignment of banks’ financing with the EU climate objectives', ECB board member Frank Elderson,  says it is crucial for banks to identify, measure and − most importantly − manage transition risks, just as they do for any other material risk.

"Eight years ago in Paris, global leaders reached a landmark agreement, committing to limit the global temperature increase to below the calamitous threshold of two degrees Celsius. Alarmingly, the latest scientific evidence indicates that we are currently on a global heating path of 3°C," he states. "Through the risk-based lens of a banking supervisor, this is seriously concerning - the longer we wait to transform our economy, the more disruptive the transition and the greater the risks that will materialise on banks’ balance sheets."

A recent ECB analysis of 95 banks covering 75% of euro area loans shows that currently banks’ credit portfolios are substantially misaligned with the goals of the Paris Agreement, leading to elevated transition risks for roughly 90% of these banks. The analysis shows that transition risks largely stem from exposures to companies in the energy sector that are lagging behind in phasing out high-carbon production processes and are late in rolling out renewable energy production.

Additionally, 70% of these banks could face elevated litigation risks as they are publicly committed to the Paris Agreement, but their credit portfolio is still measurably misaligned with it, notes Elderson.

"It is therefore vital that these banks do more work with their counterparties to ensure the companies they finance do not prevent them from living up to their net-zero commitment," he says. "This is more relevant than ever, considering that climate litigation has skyrocketed in recent years. Globally, some 560 new cases have been filed since 2021 and increasingly also targeted at corporates and banks."

As it stands, many banks are significantly exposed to transition risks and generate over 60% of their interest income from counterparties in carbon-intensive sectors.

Elderson warns: "Transition planning must become a cornerstone of standard risk management, as it is only a matter of time before transition plans become mandatory."

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Comments: (2)

A Finextra member 

Europe has less than 10% of the world population (and the UK has less than 1% of the world population). Until China, India, the United States, Indonesia, Bangladesh & Pakistan (50% of the world population) agree to reduce their polution emmisions, Europe is urinating in the wind.

A Finextra member 

Add the costs of getting to net zero for Europe to the costs the banks will shoulder to move their portfolios to a compliant status, and the costs of building all the renewables, and the costs of installing all the EV chargers and the increased cost of insurance for EV's for Write off for battery damage accidents (that ICE drivers will be picking up as well as EV drivers) and the loss of income when the sun dont shine, or the wind dont blow, and the cost of mothballing Nuclear and burning Lignite in Germany, and you have a real Enviroshambles going on!  Especially as the developing world will want their bite of the carbon pie (see French Guiana and Suriname for details).... We are exporting our carbon production to China, India, Thailand etc..... Bring on Hydrogen and Toyota's new engine please!  Bankers wont get us out of this, Scientists will!   Banks should fund science!

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