Thank you for the invitation to participate in the 2020 IIF Annual
Membership Meeting. I am pleased to share my perspective regarding the
current regulatory and policy initiatives in the area of sustainable
finance. My remarks are being made in my capacity as co-chair of the
Task Force on Climate-related Financial Risks (TFCR), which is part of
the work of the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision. I should note
that my prepared remarks and subsequent comments made as part of the
panel discussion may not necessarily reflect the views of the Basel
Committee or its members, or those of the Federal Reserve System or the
Federal Reserve Bank of New York.
The Basel Committee's mandate is to strengthen the regulation,
supervision and practices of banks worldwide with the purpose of
enhancing financial stability. It is the primary global standard setter
for the prudential regulation of banks and provides a forum for
cooperation on banking supervisory matters. As part of its work, the
Committee exchanges information on developments in the banking sector
and financial markets to help identify current or emerging risks for the
global financial system.
The Committee noted that climate change may result in physical and
transition risks that could potentially impact the safety and soundness
of individual financial institutions and have broader financial
stability implications for the banking system.
In February 2020, the Basel Committee established the TFCR to
undertake work on climate-related financial risks. I am acting as a
co-chair of the task force, along with Frank Elderson, Executive
Director of Supervision at the Netherlands Bank.
In the first phase of work, the TFCR conducted a stocktake of
members' existing regulatory and supervisory initiatives on
climate-related financial risks. The results of the stocktake were
published in April 2020. I am pleased to share some of the key findings
from that work.
All respondents noted that climate change may result in risks that
could potentially have financial stability implications for the banking
system. The majority of authorities considered it appropriate to address
climate-related financial risks within their existing regulatory and
supervisory framework. In addition, a large majority of members have
conducted research related to the measurement of climate-related
financial risks. At the same time, respondents identified a number of
operational challenges in developing a robust framework to assess risks,
including data gaps, methodological challenges and difficulties in
mapping the transmission of climate risks to the banking system. The
report also noted that a majority of authorities have taken measures to
raise awareness of climate-related financial risks among banks.
Approximately two fifths of members have issued, or are in the process
of issuing, more principles-based guidance regarding climate-related
financial risks. However, it is important to note that the majority of
members have not factored, or have not yet considered factoring, the
mitigation of such risks into the prudential capital framework.
The stocktake was conducted before the pandemic. After the Covid-19
outbreak, we understood that members needed to focus resources on
addressing immediate financial stability priorities related to the
pandemic. At the same time, Covid-19 further highlighted the importance
of mitigating the risks of events with potentially severe global
impacts. The Basel Committee is therefore continuing its work in this
area.
To take the work forward, the TFCR is following a gradual and
sequential approach from a banking supervisory perspective, with a
current focus on understanding climate risk transmission channels as
well as methodologies for measuring and assessing these risks. The TFCR
plans to complete these fundamental research initiatives by mid-2021.
Building on this analytical work, the TFCR will consider the extent
to which climate-related financial risks are incorporated in the
existing Basel Framework, and identify effective supervisory practices
to mitigate such risks. The TFCR does not currently have a view on
potential prudential treatments or supervisory expectations related to
the mitigation of climate-related financial risks.
As we are discussing today, there is a multitude of initiatives under
way among a wide range of international forums, central banks,
academics and private sector stakeholders to study climate-related
financial risks, and coordination at the global level would be
beneficial. The TFCR is actively monitoring related initiatives in order
to leverage such work and facilitate information-sharing across
parallel initiatives to the extent possible. The Basel Committee is an
observer on the Network for Greening the Financial System (NGFS), which
is chaired by Frank Elderson, my co-chair on the TFCR. This allows the
two bodies to coordinate and ensure synergies wherever possible. The
Committee also engages with the Financial Stability Board and other
international standard-setting bodies to share information and
contribute to global coordination in the area of climate-related
financial risks.
In order to inform our work, the TFCR is also engaging directly with
the private sector. Over the past two days, the TFCR held two industry
outreach events with internationally active banks to learn about
practices in the banking sector. This dialogue was informative and
productive. We learned that banks are attempting to gauge the financial
risks arising from climate change, and are trying to integrate oversight
of these risks into their overall risk management framework. There are
many different instruments and measurement methodologies being
considered, including scenario analysis, stress testing and heat maps.
As many methodologies are still at an early stage of development, and
some might be idiosyncratic and adapted to certain business models,
collective efforts will be needed to bridge the knowledge gap and
inspire consistent and comparable efforts among stakeholders and
jurisdictions.
I am encouraged that the financial sector recognises the value of
coordinated efforts, including through this year's IIF Annual Membership
Meeting, which provides us a great opportunity to tackle ESG issues
together, exchange information and share knowledge among different
stakeholders. The TFCR and the Basel Committee are committed to being
part of this important global conversation going forward.
BIS