Conducted as part of Willis Towers Watson’s Climate Risk and Financial Stewardship Summit, the survey polled 122 organisations including global banks, insurers, wealth and asset managers to gain fresh insights on progress made to assess and manage the impact of climate risk on their business.
Looking across the same five-year timeframe, few organisations who took part in the survey expect the level of risk associated with climate change to diminish, with more respondents (40%) predicting today’s level of risk facing their business will escalate over time.
With the pace of change far behind what is needed to keep global temperatures from exceeding 1.5°C of pre-industrial levels, survey respondents said that implementing a strategy to achieve Net Zero is the most common challenge to making this commitment (43%), followed by a lack of tools or data (32%).
In addition to future climate-related challenges facing the financial sector over the next five years, the survey looked at issues senior decision makers are having to deal with right now. Respondents cited transition (75%), reputational (63%) and social responsibility (57%) risks their organisations are prioritising today in order to bridge the gap and achieve Net Zero emissions.
Rowan Douglas, Head of Willis Towers Watson’s Climate and Resilience Hub, said: “Future climate risks are unprecedented and systemic, and the magnitude of the challenge is so huge and the moment so late that every lever is being explored to turn economies to meet the Paris targets. While the financial sector is well placed to take a lead, climate-related risk not only needs to be integrated into day-to-day risk management but also to steer the whole economic transition to a low-carbon and resilient future.”
Research from Carbon Disclosure Project (CDP) reveals the extent to which further action across company value chains is required, with nearly half (49%) of the world’s 500 biggest companies yet to conduct any analysis of how their portfolio impacts the climate. This is despite portfolio emissions of global financial institutions being on average over 700 times larger than direct emissions, according to CDP data.
Douglas said: “We are seeing an evolution in what Net Zero finance means for the financial sector and its stewardship role in a whole economy transition towards a climate resilient future. Meanwhile pressure from ambitious new climate targets and scrutiny from central banks, regulators, investors and the wider public continues to increase. To continue to thrive, financial institutions will need to adapt and align their portfolios with a Net Zero carbon world.”
The Climate Risk and Financial Stewardship Summit also follows the recent launch of Climate Transition Pathways, Willis Towers Watson’s accreditation framework that is designed to provide insurers with a consistent approach to identifying organisations that have robust transition plans aligned to the Paris Agreement and science-based targets for reducing global emissions.
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