The results speak volumes: the Paris financial centre plays a key role in the climate transition, and concrete progress has been made in combating climate change since the Paris Agreement was signed in 2015.
The
ACPR (French Prudential Supervisory and Resolution Authority) conducted
a pilot climate study in order to assess the resilience of French
economic operators, especially banks, to raise the awareness of
financial institutions of the importance of incorporating climate change
risks, and to identify areas for improvement in terms of data and
resources.
The ambitious stress testing exercise Stress tests are exercises aimed at checking an entity's
resilience to a set of risks associated with a given issue. They are
transparent exercises and the scenarios are made public, as are the
methodology and results. offered by the ACPR covered an
unusually long time frame for a stress test (30 years), covered more
than 50 economic sectors, and was based on innovative assumptions such
as dynamic assessments. The participating banks worked hard to ensure
that the results were representative.
According
to these results, French banks are resilient in the variety of
scenarios considered in the pilot study, with exposure to climate change
risks deemed "moderate." This is because French banks are deeply
committed to supporting a responsible yet concrete climate transition,
as confirmed by the ACPR, which stated that "The exposure of French
banks to sectors that are the most impacted by transition risk, as
identified in this exercise (extractive industries, manufacture of coke
and refined petroleum products, oil, agriculture, etc.), is relatively
low."
Potential
areas for improvement were also clearly identified, with the twofold
aim of avoiding an uncontrolled increase in cost of risk and a delay in
the climate transition. For this reason, banks are incorporating
increasingly detailed risks generated by climate change in their
assessment of financial risks.
Furthermore,
from now through 2050, banks will support the transformation of their
corporate clients engaged in a climate transition plan, and will thus
have a significantly different CO2 emissions profile and credit risk
profile than those described in the ACPR scenarios.
Overall,
the simulation served as a basis for establishing research that will
help a growing number of supervisors around the world develop a common
foundation of climate risk knowledge and assessment. The results of this
unprecedented stress test should be viewed as a basis for a global
approach through which the transition can be successfully completed.
1 Stress tests are exercises aimed at checking an entity's
resilience to a set of risks associated with a given issue. They are
transparent exercises and the scenarios are made public, as are the
methodology and results.
FBF
© FBF - French Banking Federation
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