FSB published a report to assist supervisory and regulatory authorities in developing their approaches to monitor, manage and mitigate cross-sectoral and system-wide risks arising from climate change and to promote consistent approaches across sectors and jurisdictions.
Its recommendations focus on three areas:
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supervisory and regulatory reporting and collection of climate-related data from financial institutions.
Consistent and comparable firm disclosures, based on a global baseline
climate reporting standard, provide a good starting or reference point
for the future development of regular standardised regulatory reporting
requirements. Authorities may also require more granular and specific
information for supervisory or regulatory purposes. The report includes
recommendations on the identification of authorities’ information needs,
reliability of data, use of common definitions and coordination towards
common regulatory reporting requirements.
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system-wide supervisory and regulatory approaches to assessing climate-related risks.
Supervisory and regulatory risk assessments and policies need to better
incorporate understanding of the channels through which climate-related
risks to financial institutions may be transferred across sectors or
borders. The report includes recommendations on how authorities’
approaches should account for the potential widespread impact of
climate-related risks across the financial system, including with
respect to use of scenario analysis and stress testing exercises.
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early consideration of other potential macroprudential policies and tools to address systemic risks. Microprudential
tools alone may not sufficiently address the cross-sectoral, global and
systemic dimensions of climate-related risks. The report presents some
of the early thinking on macroprudential policies and tools that could
complement microprudential measures, and trade-off considerations.
The FSB is inviting comments on its recommendations and includes a
set of questions for this purpose. The public consultation period ends
on Thursday 30 June 2022. The final recommendations, incorporating
feedback from the public consultation, will be published in Q4 2022.
FSB
© FSB - Financial Stability Board
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