Blake Goud Blake Goud

Short-term climate scenarios can provide an input to help rewire the financial system

The Network for Greening the Financial System (NGFS) has released its first short-term climate scenarios. These are designed as a tool to evaluate the impact of climate change on the financial sector over a period that is in line with the policy and planning horizons for most businesses and governments.

The dynamic of climate change as a source of economic and financial risk did not emerge naturally. It arose as a result of two hundred years of historical emissions, and the process of generating those emissions involved significantly unequal sharing of the benefits. For the process of addressing the impacts of climate change, the costs should be similarly skewed towards developed countries to produce an equitable outcome for humanity. 

Although there are some limitations of short-term climate scenarios in capturing the most likely outcome, they can be useful if users acknowledge the limitations and don’t allow their expectations of future climate risk to be anchored to either the most optimistic or pessimistic scenarios. These tools also shouldn’t be used in a vacuum because they could create unintended consequences for OIC markets and other emerging & developing markets by inhibiting flows of investment and climate finance that are already insufficient. 

If short-term scenario analysis is instead viewed as a way to prioritise projects based on their ability to mitigate climate change, support the transition or invest in adaptation, then it may be able to play a more constructive role. The efforts to ‘rewire finance’ will still be necessary to reduce barriers to the flow of finance to OIC markets and others that are EMDEs, and efforts to improve the realism of outcomes covered by short-term climate scenarios will be more fruitful in directing capital where it can be most effective.

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Blake Goud Blake Goud

Making sustainability work for OIC financial institutions & Islamic finance

Systemiq Ltd. released a “Blue Whale Inquiry” seeking to combine insights into the current challenges facing sustainability gathered from 50 leaders. The resulting report outlines a range of changes across business, governments, NGOs and the financial sector to reinvigorate sustainability for the next stage of advancement towards global goals. It also includes a frank discussion of the challenges, but also potential breakthrough areas where past efforts could bear fruit even in an environment full of headwinds.

For the financial sector, three of the key catalysts highlighted are breaking the hold of short-term financial returns on decision-making, leadership among the Global South countries through adoption and delivery on more sustainable economic models, and the use of technology including AI to avoid “being trapped in an acronym-heavy compliance regime” that has developed within ESG.

For financial institutions in OIC markets seeing recalibration of externally imposed sustainability disclosure standards, there may be value in concentrating efforts on practices that provide a better balance between investor expectations and other stakeholder needs. For Islamic Finance, the greatest opportunity may lie in leaning into the discussion of ethics that other financial sector stakeholders are wary of tackling. It may be more advantageous to be able to talk authentically about ‘just’ outcomes as the economy-wide climate transition accelerates, as our planetary debts come due.

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Blake Goud Blake Goud

A step-change: how a systemic risk buffer could benefit transition finance

The financial consequences of climate change and the necessary transition to global Net Zero by 2050 have made it difficult for financial institutions to change the way they make decisions quickly enough. A working paper published by researchers at the European Central Bank provides evidence for how the financial sector could be insulated from any losses by creating a systemic risk for the entire sector.

Until now, most of the regulatory responses to the risks associated with climate change have been incentives for non-financial companies to make green investments, greater disclosure by corporations and financial institutions about their financed emissions, and climate stress-testing exercises by central banks and supervisors.

The Systemic Risk Buffer was developed to reflect the overall level of near-term transition risk exposure of the financial institution – within the coming three years — and not be linked to individual green or dirty assets. Instead of adjusting the risk weighting of individual exposures, as a green supporting factor or dirty penalizing factor would do, it groups financial institutions into buckets based on the potential transition risk relative to their risk-weighted assets.

Using the collected data for calibrating a systemic risk buffer provides a tangible use for the stress tests and a data-guided way to balance the risk of financing climate-exposed sectors with the short-term gain that banks have by continuing to provide financing. Transition risk buckets offers substantial leeway for banks to finance companies transitioning activities from unsustainable to sustainable activities without facing increases in their capital requirement.

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Blake Goud Blake Goud

Climate and nature will be integrated into banking supervision in OIC markets faster than most banks expect

WWF have released their latest update to their evaluation of central bank and financial supervisors’ policy responses on sustainability, climate and nature issues. Among the six OIC countries covered (Indonesia, Malaysia, Morocco, Saudi Arabia, Türkiye and the UAE), there was wide variability in the ways that sustainability, climate and nature risks are being addressed. Policy responses among OIC countries and across the 47 countries covered showed no correlation with countries’ income levels.

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