The report provides an alarming summary of the increasingly devastating impacts of climate change on societies and economies, their vulnerabilities and how we may adapt to inevitable climate change. UNEP FI’s Paul Smith provides a summary of the key implications for financial institutions.
This week the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) launched the second part of its 6th
Assessment Report, drawing on seven years of research from
peer-reviewed scientists.
Last August, the first part of the IPCC’s report
on the physical science basis of climate change provided unequivocal
evidence that human influence was responsible for global warming. The
report also gathered further evidence of the direct impacts of climate
change on the world’s natural cycles, underlining the impacts on natural
systems including more extreme and frequent droughts, extreme weather,
heatwaves, wildfires, landslide, to name but a few. This first report
also outlined a set of “shared socio-economic pathways” (SSPs), which
aim to estimate potential climate impacts according to different
climate, social and economic scenarios.
This second report outlines how far climate change has affected
societies and ecosystems, with future impacts expected to be more
devastating and pervasive than reported in the IPCC’s 5th Assessment Report,
published in 2014. Ecosystem impacts, in particular, are far greater
than previously reported, with many ongoing irreversible changes, such
as species’ extinction, habitat loss, changes to hydrological regimes
and impacts on coastal, mountain and polar ecosystems. The United
Nations’ Secretary General, Antonio Guterres, has described this report
as ‘an Atlas of human suffering and a damning indictment of failed climate leadership’. We pick out some of the key messages from this week’s report for the global finance sector:
1. Climate change will affect all regions, with impacts more far-reaching than previously thought.
Some of these impacts have already reached the limits of adaptation and
will be irreversible, which underlines the importance of acting now.
For financial institutions, no one sector will be unaffected by climate
change: there are no ‘safe havens’ from climate change.
2. Risk underpins the report’s framework for
understanding the increasingly severe, interconnected and irreversible
impacts of climate change. Understanding future climate impacts in the
future requires modelling which is itself based on parameters and
assumptions. Risk depends not only on modelling of climate hazards, but
also exposure and vulnerability to these hazards – variables which can
be controlled by adaptation measures. As discussed later, finance sector
responses to climate impacts depend on assessments of these
forward-looking climate risks and preferably disclosure of these risks
to enable investors, governments, and society to better understand the
potential impacts of climate change on businesses. Risk should also
inform adaptation solutions: risk mitigation and risk sharing are at the
heart of the report’s framing of adaptation and resilience, creating a
collaborative framework for institutions from the public and private
sectors, together with civil society.
3. Climate change is creating complex, compound and cascading risks
that are far more difficult to assess and manage than individual
physical climate risks. Multiple risks can interact and amplify risks
from individual climate risks, e.g. rising sea levels with increasingly
frequent and more powerful storms (Zscheischler, J. Westra, S., van den Hurk, B.J.J.M. et al., 2018), or the interaction of climate risks with other risks such as pandemics (Ranger N, Mahul O, Monasterolo I. 2021).
Such complex risk mechanisms can increase the complexity of modelling
and assessment and are rarely integrated into climate risk assessments,
potentially underestimating the potential financial impacts of medium-
to-long-term climate change. Furthermore, adaptation solutions that
address single risk factors and locations in isolation often lead to
maladaptation, which is difficult and expensive to unwind.
4. The mid- to long-term impacts of climate change may be multiple times higher than currently observed,
with the economic costs of climate change rising exponentially with
temperature rise. Reducing emissions should therefore remain the top
priority with a focus on action by 2030 in line with low-overshoot
pathways. High overshoot will lead to increased climate risks for
vulnerable regions and societies as well as irreversible impacts in
vulnerable ecosystems, such as polar, coastal and mountain regions.
This means implementing and delivering ambitious 2030 greenhouse gas
emissions targets.
5. Vulnerability to climate impacts is also widespread and
disproportionately affects already poor and marginalised communities and
regions. The report estimates that 3.3 to 3.6 billion people
live in contexts that are highly vulnerable to climate change, with over
1 billion at increased risk from coastal impacts alone. Billions more
will also be exposed to climate-sensitive transmissible diseases, with
dengue fever highlighted as a particular risk due to longer seasons and
wider geographic distribution. Vulnerability is exacerbated by
marginalisation, poor governance, poverty and unsustainable resource
use.
6. Transformational adaptation is necessary to
deliver successful climate resilient development. Just as economics need
to transform over the next decade in order to deliver the emissions
reductions necessary to limit global temperature rise to +1.5°C by 2100,
a more integrated and holistic approach is required to meet adaptation
needs. Current approaches are often piecemeal, localised and
incremental, designed only to respond to short-term risks or current
impacts.
7. Climate-resilient development is proposed as an
approach to achieve development goals while integrating adaptation
solutions and reducing greenhouse gas emissions. This approach has
multiple pathways and emphasises flexibility to adjust to changing
circumstances. Climate resilient development also emphasises
recognition of the role of ecosystem services and the importance of
inclusion across all sections of society. However, the window of
opportunity for climate resilient development narrows with every 0.1°C
rise in temperature: +1.5°C constitutes a ‘critical level’ above which
development pathways are increasingly constrained.
8. The role of government is critical.
The impacts of climate change cut across sectors and geographies,
requiring a strong coordinating role for government. Public institutions
can also create the enabling environment for adaptation action through
“institutional frameworks, policies and instruments that set clear
adaptation goals”. The report underlines the key role for instruments,
including budgetary allocations, statutory planning, monitoring and
evaluation frameworks. Perhaps most importantly for the finance sector,
the report highlights economic instruments intended to address market
failures, such as climate risk disclosure.
9. Climate change adaptation cannot be delivered without consideration of biodiversity and ecosystems.
Climate change has already caused substantial damage to ecosystems,
with losses irreversible in many cases. Pollution, unsustainable
land-use and overconsumption are exacerbating these pressures.
Temperature rise will increase the rate of extinction – for example, the
report estimates that very high extinction risk in biodiversity
hotspots will increase tenfold as temperatures rise from +1.5°C to +3°C.
Given their multiple roles in adaptation and mitigation, ecosystems are
crucial to climate resilient development, as well as providing
important services for water, food, bioenergy and public health.
Effective Ecosystem-based Adaptation (EbA) can reduce climate change
risks to people, biodiversity and ecosystem services, with multiple
co-benefits including carbon sequestration.
10. Financing adaptation is a huge challenge and
will require cross-government support with the development of new
business cases for drawing in private sector flows. As UNEP’s Adaptation Gap Report 2021
highlighted, the annual costs of adaptation in developing countries
alone will be $140-300bn by 2030. These are relatively dated figures
given that they were originally estimated for UNEP’s 2016 Adaptation Gap
report, and no comprehensive calculations have been made since then,
but it could be expected that those estimates have increased given that
climate hazards are becoming more frequent and more extreme than
previously thought – as highlighted in the IPCC’s Working Group 1 report
last year. Meanwhile, COP26 last year highlighted the failure to
deliver $100bn climate finance for both mitigation and adaptation by
2020, as promised in the 2009 Copenhagen Accord. Clearly the gap is
significant, widening with every passing year, and governments are
unable to meet this gap or even the more modest targets agreed over a
decade ago. Meanwhile losses from climate-related impacts continue to
mount – 2021 losses were estimated by Munich Re to be the second highest in history – and these financial impacts are a clear risk to societies, businesses and the economy.
UN EP FI
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