Chapter 3 Flashcards
Climate Risk
- TR
- PR
TCFD
Taskforce on Climate related Financial Disclosures – singles out physical and transition risk as main source of climate risk
PR hazards
- acute -weather related (floods, hurricanes, wildfires, etc.)
- chronic - long-term trends (rising average temperatures, rising sea levels, etc.)
TR hazards
- policy and legal (ex: C taxes)
- technology (technological change - renewable E)
- market (trend towards S products)
- reputational
TR consequences
in the face of these hazards (driving factors) different kinds of assets and companies will have different levels of:
- exposure
- vulnerability
TR exposure
F sense: assets and firms that are in a vulnerable place or setting
ex: warehouse in a coastal area exposed to sea level rise
Facility level - high emissions assets
corporate level - firms dependent on emissions
TR vulnerability
- propensity/predisposition of the asset/firm to suffer adversely from its exposures to hazards; ease of reducing
ex: at facility level vulnerability to physical climate risk depends on physical infrastructure (two neighboring factories in a flood zone - one may have flood pumps installed)
- ease of reducing/ eliminating emissions
ex: lack of preparedness for company’s transition to climate mitigation/adaptation; facility incorporating hydrogen based production instead of stranding
facility level - extent of ability to decarbonize
corporate level - viability/robustness of transition plan
PR exposure
facility level - anything in hazard zone
corporate level - firms with facilities/supply chains in hazard areas
PR vulnerability
facility level - extent of adaptive infrastructure (flood pumps, fire breaks)
corporate level - viability of contingency plans; access to insurance
Stranded assets
assets that have suffered from unanticipated / premature write-downs, devaluations or conversion to liabilities
getting data for PR is not easily accessible - easier to assess exposure than vulnerability
exposure: need location of facilities and can then assess physical risk exposure
vulnerability: ultimately refers to facility level preparedness (ex: does facility in flood prone area have flood walls?)
Insurance availability is crucial to mitigate F losses for physical risk
if insurers pull out of vulnerable areas so will corporations - leaving vulnerable area without insurance
Opportunity: corporate sector can partner with government and insurers to find solutions that allow for burden and profit sharing
–> companies could be rewarded for staying in certain areas or could partner with communities to build adaptive infrastructure
–> insurers could work with firms and communities to encourage uptake of adaptive measures (through premium discounts) and share expertise on resilience