Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumBank Of Canada Declares Climate Breakdown A Financial Risk. So, Now What?
This month, the Bank of Canada released its 2019 Financial System Review. For the first time, it listed climate change as one of six major vulnerabilities facing Canadas economy. Its significant given that for years, the bank has been virtually silent on the issue. In fact, until March of this year, not a single member of the banks leadership team had publicly mentioned the words climate change for two years. Now, the Bank has identified the physical and transition risks of climate change as vulnerabilities facing Canadas financial system, mentioned in the same breath as household debt and housing market imbalances.
This is important because when the bank speaks, people listen especially those making investment decisions worth millions, if not billions, of dollars. It is easy for Bay Street or Alberta Premier Jason Kenney to dismiss warnings about climate risk when they come from think tanks or environmental NGOs. It is a lot harder to ignore those warnings when they are coming from the Bank of Canada, known for its data-driven reports and inherently cautious nature an institution acutely aware that its words move markets.
The banks section on climate change in the financial system review discussed both physical issues, such as extreme weather, as well as transition issues, such as sudden policy moves, being triggered by a changing climate. An issue highlighted as a particular concern is the limited understanding of climate-related risks in financial markets. The bank warns that the lack of transparency around carbon exposure with much of it left up to companies to disclose on a voluntary basis could lead to mispricing and ultimately increased costs of transitioning to a low-carbon economy.
The Bank of Canadas statements bring it in line with other central banks such as the Bank of England and the European Central Bank, which have been increasingly sounding the alarm about the need for the global financial system to properly account for, and disclose, climate risk.
EDIT
https://www.theglobeandmail.com/business/commentary/article-the-bank-of-canada-declared-climate-change-a-financial-risk-now-what/
Moostache
(9,895 posts)For anyone paying attention, very soon it may be time to divest your finances from the current economy and begin investing heavily on the ground floor of the new economy. I can see a future where companies will be acutely aware of how much energy they use and track it as religiously as profits are now.
When the CEOs are given a new responsibility - an environmental AND fiduciary responsibility - in order to receive their bonuses, then you will long last see true "market solutions" brought to bear on the issue...which would have been outstanding 20 years ago or even highly encouraging 5 years ago...but now?
Game, set and match is not in humanity's favor I am afraid...we are rearranging deck chairs on Titanic as the iceberg looms.
Boomer
(4,168 posts)Too bad time is running out in leaps and bounds.