The two reports discuss transmission channels of climate-related risks to the banking system, and the measurement methodologies of climate-related financial risks.
      
    
    
      
- Climate risk drivers can be captured in traditional financial risk 
categories, but additional progress is needed to better estimate these 
risks.
- The reports provide a conceptual foundation for the Basel 
Committee's next phase of work to identify potential gaps in the Basel 
Framework and consider measures to address them.
The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision today publishes two analytical reports: Climate-related risk drivers and their transmission channels and Climate-related financial risks – measurement methodologies.
 
These reports contribute to the Committee's sequential approach to working on climate-related financial risks and follow the Committee's 2020 stocktake on members' existing initiatives.
 Both reports leverage extensive reviews of existing literature, 
including publications by scientists, academics, central banks, 
supervisory authorities, discussions with large banks, and the work of other international forums such as the Network for Greening the Financial System and the Financial Stability Board.
 
The reports are intended to be read in tandem. Climate-related risk drivers and their transmission channels explores how climate-related financial risks arise and affect both banks and the banking system. Climate-related financial risks – measurement methodologies
 provides an overview of conceptual issues related to climate-related 
financial risk measurement, and describes banks' and supervisors' 
current and emerging practices in this area.
 
Taken together, the reports conclude that climate risk drivers can be
 captured in traditional financial risk categories. But additional work 
is needed to connect climate risk drivers to banks' exposures and to 
reliably estimate such risks. While a range of methodologies is 
currently in use or being developed, challenges remain in the estimation
 process, including data gaps and uncertainty associated with the 
long-term nature and unpredictability of climate change. As these 
challenges are addressed, the ability to estimate and effectively 
mitigate climate-related financial risks will improve.
 
Building on this analytical work, the Committee will investigate the 
extent to which climate-related financial risks can be addressed within 
the existing Basel Framework, identify potential gaps in the current 
framework and consider possible measures to address them. The Committee 
will undertake further work in three broad strands simultaneously 
spanning regulatory, supervisory and disclosure-related elements for the
 banking system.
				 BCBS
      
      
      
      
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