Bank of England Governor identifies three areas of improvement in creating a sustainable finance system.
By Paul A. Davies and Michael D. Green
On September 24, 2019, the Bank of England (BoE) published two speeches given by its governor, Mark Carney, in which he calls for climate change-related risks and resilience to be brought into
the heart of financial decision-making. Both speeches — one delivered to the UN General Assembly and the other at an insurance industry event — outline three key areas of improvement that Mr. Carney identifies as being necessary to bring climate change into mainstream financial decision-making: disclosure, risk management, and returns. This blog discusses each of these three areas, as well as the policy options that Mr. Carney views as necessary to implement the required changes.
Comprehensive Climate Disclosure
Mr. Carney first discusses the importance of improving corporate disclosure of climate-related risks and opportunities. He highlights the Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosures (TCFD) as an example of a comprehensive, practical, and flexible framework for risk disclosure, and also notes that supporters of the TCFD control balance sheets totalling US$120 trillion (indicating potentially high demand for such a regime).