The European Central Bank says banks will have to calculate their risk from climate change

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The European Central Bank says banks will have to calculate their risk from climate change

he European Central Bank said lenders in the region will have to calculate the risk they could face from climate change in both their lending and trading operations when they undergo a test next year.

Banks will have to predict how their balance sheets would evolve over 30 years as well as any related losses they could face in the transition to a more sustainable economy, according to a methodology published by the Central Bank on Monday.

The ECB is also calling on lenders to assess the impact of a theoretical sharp increase in the price of carbon emissions over a three-year period. In September, Bloomberg reported the inclusion of trading exposures.

In the latest stress test, to be run from March to July 2022, the ECB will take the most detailed look yet at the hit banks could face from climate mitigation policies that could put polluting companies out of business as well as extreme weather. The watchdog faulted the industry for being too slow in learning about risks related to climate change earlier this year citing patchy data and a lack of attention by executives.

The short-term part of the test assumes that carbon prices rise to $100 per ton in the period '2024, several years earlier than in scenarios developed by international central banks and regulators. While that is a tail risk, it has the benefit of testing the vulnerability of banks current exposures to a disorderly transition, the ECB said.

Such a sharp and unexpected increase in the price of carbon emissions or other indirect measures to curb emissions would hit carbon-intensive industries, while other parts of the economy would also see an indirect impact via production chains and other second-round effects, the ECB said.

The exercise, which is part of a wider review of how banks tackle climate risks, also includes questions on how much revenue you generate from carbon-intensive industries as well as the volume of emissions they finance. In addition to the scenarios on transition risk, banks will be asked to simulate the effect of physical risks, such as flooding, over a one-year horizon.

While European politicians are leaning on banks to steer funds away from polluting industries, the ECB has focused on ensuring that banks are prepared for risks in a hotter world. On Monday, the ECB reiterated that there won t be a higher increase in bank capital requirements from the test, but that lenders who cant grasp their risks could face a direct bar.