Banks do not fully meet ECB expectations on disclosure of climate and environmental risks; Significant gaps remain despite progress since first assessment in 2020; Supervisors informed banks of shortcomings and publish examples of good practice
The European Central Bank (ECB) today published an updated assessment of the progress European banks have made on disclosing climate and environmental risks as set out in the ECB’s November 2020 guide. Although there have been improvements since the ECB’s first assessment in late 2020, no bank fully meets the supervisory expectations.
Regulation of climate and environmental risk disclosures will become
stricter in the coming years, with market participants and the public
increasingly expecting more information. Banks therefore need to adjust
their practices without delay.
The ECB’s updated assessment covered 109 directly supervised banks
and focused mainly on disclosures at the highest level of consolidation.
Supervisors analysed banks’ most recent public information available by
1 November 2021 as well as documents that were part of the ECB’s 2021 climate risk self-assessment exercise.
Compared with 2020, more banks now disclose meaningful information
on climate and environmental risks. For example, more than 70% of the
assessed banks, as opposed to just over 50% in 2020, now explain how
their board oversees those risks. However, the overall level of
transparency is still insufficient. Roughly 75% of the banks do not
disclose whether climate and environmental risks have a material impact
on their risk profile, even though around half of the banks that fail to
do so have indicated to the ECB that they view themselves as exposed to
such risks. And almost 60% of the banks in the sample do not describe
how transition risk or physical risk could affect their strategy.
Banks’ disclosure of key metrics is also not sufficiently in line
with supervisory expectations, with only around 50% publishing key
performance or risk indicators on climate and environmental risks. In
addition, only 15% disclose Scope 3 financed emissions, which cover the
emissions that occur along the entire value chain of business
activities, including those of counterparties linked to lending
portfolios.
Furthermore, many banks do not sufficiently substantiate their
climate and environmental risk disclosures. For example, almost 30% of
the banks that have committed to aligning their exposures with the Paris
Agreement do not provide any information to back this up. As a growing
number of banks commit to net zero initiatives, users of bank
disclosures will increasingly seek more detailed information on banks’
progress and on the ensuing risks should they fail to align.
Supervisors also identified good practices that banks employ, which
confirms the sector’s ability to adjust. For example, one bank aiming
for net zero emissions in its portfolio by 2050 published several
interim targets and the progress made toward them, as well as underlying
methodologies and scenarios. Also, some banks disclose dashboards on
the performance of their loan books in various transition sectors, such
as power generation, oil and gas, or automotive, using a science-based
transition pathway.
The ECB has sent individual feedback letters to the banks explaining
their main shortcomings and expects them to take decisive action. This
should also help banks prepare for new regulatory requirements such as
the European Banking Authority’s binding standards on Pillar 3
disclosures of environmental, social and governance risks. The ECB will
review banks’ climate and environmental disclosures again at the end of
2022.
Having included climate and environmental risks in its supervisory priorities for 2022-24, the ECB is carrying out several climate-related supervisory activities this year. These include its first ever climate risk stress test and a thematic review
on how banks incorporate climate and environmental risks into their
processes. In parallel, the ECB is gradually integrating climate and
environmental risks into its regular supervisory methodology, which will
ultimately impact Pillar 2 capital requirements.
SSM
© ECB - European Central Bank
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