The real issue here is not that the ECB takes a very sizeable risk by pursuing climate objectives but rather, that it cannot afford not to. And by doing so, it helps establish just how urgent climate change is.
By far the biggest innovation in the
recent monetary policy strategy review of the European Central Bank
(ECB) is the emphasis that it puts on climate change issues. The ECB
joins other central banks, like the Bank of England, in appreciating
that as a big player in the financial system it has at least an
obligation to consider the issue.
But can it do more than just consider it?
It is not difficult to understand why the ECB wants to be an active
player in this fight. Climate change will affect the types and magnitude
of investments that are needed. As such it will affect price stability,
the main objective of the ECB but also financial stability. Similarly,
the risk profile of the assets that the ECB holds in its balance sheet
will be affected by climate change and policies to counter it.
Therefore, the ECB will at the very least want to try and control for
the types of risks that it takes and ideally would want to tilt them in
the direction of greater sustainability.
What is less clear however is what it can do about it. In in a recent paper, the ECB outlines an action plan.
It talks first about data. Measuring and
gathering data on the effects of climate change in the economy and how
policy influences these effects is crucial to our understanding. Then it
is about how the euro area and the financial system at large are
exposed to climate risks. Do credit ratings adequately reflect those
risks? Last come the tools. Models and ways of measuring price stability
will need to account for climate considerations that are complex and
difficult to track.
The ECB is very ambitious when talking
about its role in fighting climate change. But it is important to
appreciate two difficulties.
The first is that while the science of
climate change leaves little room for doubt, our understanding of the
economic impact is, by contrast, minimal. We know the impact of certain
policies, but know much less about their cost and indeed how to
implement them. Therefore, designing policy paths across decades, the
appropriate time frame here, is extremely difficult.
The second is that while central banks no
doubt have a role to play in helping with climate change, the real
battle has to be fought by other policy makers, and indeed by the public
at large, today and in the future.
In the latest World Energy Outlook,
in preparation for the COP26 in Glasgow, the International Energy
Agency talks about how the goal of net zero emissions is both critical
as well as formidable. But it also talks about repeated pledges and
implementation gaps. It talks about how current net zero pledges and the
policy efforts they require are not in sync and how further delays will
make it even more difficult to catch up later. Climate policies are
therefore ridden with credibility problems. Problems that are due to its
nature, namely being a global public good that requires global
coordination, and being subject to the tragedy of the horizons, the
inability to make the right investments today that will affect future
generations.
Can the ECB contribute to improving this
credibility? Or, will the ECB by contrast, suffer the consequences of
that lack of credibility, namely see a loss of reputation as others fail
to meet climate objectives at the right speed?
In order to be able to answer this, the
ECB will have to think very carefully about how it will account for its
climate ambitions....
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