U.S. regulator calls climate change a systemic risk
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[September 09, 2020] (Reuters)
- Climate change poses a "slow motion"
systemic threat to the stability of the U.S. financial system requiring
urgent action from financial regulators, including the Federal Reserve
and the Securities Exchange Commission.
That is one of the findings of a landmark report commissioned by the
U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission and put together by a panel
convened about 10 months ago by Rostin Behnam, one of two Democrats on
the five-member CFTC.
The panel's 35 members, including representatives of Goldman Sachs Group
Inc , BP Plc, the Dairy Farmers of America, and The Nature Conservancy
among others, approved the report on Tuesday.
"The physical impacts of climate change are already affecting the United
States, and ... the transition to net-zero emissions may also impact
many segments of the economy," the 196-page report said.
"Both physical and transition risks could give rise to systemic and
sub-systemic financial shocks, potentially causing unprecedented
disruption in the proper functioning of financial markets and
institutions."
A sudden shift in perceptions of the risks from frequent wildfires and
intense hurricanes could bring a sudden drop in asset prices, for
instance, that cascades through a community and spill more broadly into
markets, the report said.
And because the COVID-19 pandemic has depleted household wealth,
government budgets and business balance sheets, the economy is more
vulnerable than before, it added, "increasing the probability of an
overall shock with systemic implications."
The report's release comes less than two months ahead of a national
election that pits Republican President Donald Trump, who says climate
change is a hoax, against Democratic challenger Joe Biden, who calls
climate change an "existential threat."
Its first recommendation is to "establish a price on carbon" that is
hefty enough to push businesses and markets to cut use of carbon
dioxide-producing fuels such as oil and gas. Taxing carbon would require
action by Congress.
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The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission logo adorns an office
door at the SEC headquarters in Washington, June 24, 2011.
REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst/File Photo
But the report's dozens of other recommendations amount to a call for a sweeping
rewrite of financial market rules and norms that could go forward without any
new laws and no matter who wins the presidency.
Among the proposals: requiring banks to address climate-related financial risks
and listed companies to disclose emissions, and to stress test community banks
for their resilience to climate change.
Regulators in Europe have worked for years on efforts to calibrate and mitigate
climate risks to financial markets.
Regulators in the United States, where politicians regularly cast doubt on the
fact that burning fossil fuels is affecting the earth's climate, have lagged far
behind on such work.
Only recently has the Federal Reserve begun to acknowledge the potential for
climate change to destabilize the financial system, and to think about possible
responses.
The report urges financial authorities to integrate climate risk "into their
balance sheet management and asset purchases, particularly relating to corporate
and municipal debt."
It also calls for them to do research into the financial implications of climate
change and join international climate-focused groups, such as the Network for
Greening the Financial System, all of which appear to specifically apply to the
Fed.
(Reporting by Ann Saphir in Berkeley, Calif.; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)
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