In attempts to reach a common position on the review of prudential regulation for the European insurance sector, MEPs expressed starkly diverging opinions on whether and how to account for climate risks in the regulation.
The review of the Solvency 2 prudential regulation was proposed by
the EU Commission in September 2021 to update the capital requirements
for insurance companies to new economic circumstances.
While EU member states already agreed on a common position regarding
this regulation, the European Parliament is still far from a common
position.
Scrapping climate provisions
The draft position proposed by the centre-right member of Parliament
Markus Ferber was criticised by left and green MEPs for scrapping most
of the climate provisions that the EU Commission had proposed to include
in the prudential rules.
“The rapporteur’s choice to scrap almost all provisions related to
climate risk is quite a scandal in times of the Green Deal,” the green
member of Parliament Henrike Hahn told EURACTIV, adding that his
“approach to Solvency 2 is a denial of all the recent analysis showing
the interlinkages between climate change and financial stability.”
The concern is that as society acts against climate change, many
obligations or shares of companies in the fossil fuel industry would
become worthless. If insurance companies do not properly take into
account the risk of such “stranded assets”, this might pose a threat to
the stability of the insurance industry.
Are insurance companies careful enough?
However, Ferber told EURACTIV that he had “not seen any evidence that
insurance undertakings are systematically underestimating long-term
risks stemming from climate change.”
“In fact, insurance companies have a very strong business incentive
to capture long-term risks correctly and they have a good track record
of doing so,” he said, adding that insurance companies had good risk
models to cover climate and environmental risks.
He also warned of creating wrong incentives that might create a
“green asset bubble”, stressing that arguments should be based on risks
for financial stability.
In this argument, he is joined by the Greens’ Henrike Hahn. “We
demand that prudential regulation should be risk-based,” she told
EURACTIV.
“I certainly agree that it would be unwise to politicise the prudential framework for the insurance sector,” she said.
In her opinion, requiring insurance companies to explicitly take
climate risks into consideration would help provide a level playing
field for the insurance companies that already do this today.
Positions still “very far apart”
In the European Parliament’s committee on economic matters, Hahn is
not the only one to be dissatisfied with Ferber’s approach to the
Solvency 2 file.
“We need fundamental changes,” said the social-democratic lawmaker
Eero Heinäluoma during a debate on the topic on 31 August, citing
sustainability risks among other topics. Liberal policymakers also
suggested including sustainability risks.
As Ferber acknowledged during the debate in the committee, the positions were still “very far apart.”
Hahn, meanwhile, is confident that the European Parliament will adopt
a more climate-conscious position than the current draft. “I am glad to
see in the amendments of my colleagues that there is already some
considerable cross-party consensus on this issue,” she said.
EURACTIV
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