A shared understanding of how climate change affects the economy can be the basis for global action. To help inform and guide policy across the globe central bankers and supervisors have developed climate scenarios. This is the final post in a series on the occasion of COP27.
Climate change is happening right now, and is already having an
impact on us all, though not everywhere in the same way. But do we share
a common understanding of how climate change affects our economies and
our financial systems? And what impact it has on growth, inflation or
unemployment? Without a common language for climate risks it will be
difficult to agree on urgently needed common policy responses. To help
build such understanding, central bankers and supervisors have joined
forces as the Network for Greening the Financial System (NGFS).
While
the ECB and other central banks and supervisors from around the world
are not in the driver’s seat to implement climate policies, they should
play an important role to address climate change within their mandates,
rigorous analysis being a key tool. The NGFS has thus developed,
together with leading academic climate institutions, a common picture of what our economies might look like under different assumptions. These are called “climate scenarios”.
The
NGFS climate scenarios combine, for the first time, the analysis of
transition, physical and macro-financial risks. We describe how these
climate scenarios can help policy-makers, financial institutions and the
public to deal with the uncertainty ahead.
Shedding light on plausible futures ahead
Put
simply, climate scenarios ask crucial questions like ‘what can happen?’
and ‘what should happen?’ The scenarios are like key pieces of a mosaic
that offer glimpses into possible futures. In this way, it is possible
to look up the expected economic loss for a specific country – let’s say
Spain or Morocco in any year between now and 2100 – under different
assumptions. The scenarios are available through an online public
platform, free of charge. Check them out on the NGFS Scenario Portal.
Importantly,
the NGFS scenarios are not forecasts. Instead, they aim at exploring a
range of plausible futures for financial risk assessment in an
environment of radical uncertainty...
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