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Central Banking and Climate-Related Financial Risks

December 11 - 13
CEMLA Mexico City, Mexico

 

The course was organized by CEMLA, UNEP-FI, EUROCLIMA and the Florence School of Banking and Finance and was held person format in the city of Mexico City, Mexico on December 11-13, 2023. The total attendees were 33 representatives from 13 institutions and associates of CEMLA, representing 12 Latin-American countries.

The training course familiarized participants with the definition of climate-related risks and their interlinkages with financial risks as traditionally intended. Also explored the impact of climate change on assets’ price and value (and subsequently on banks’ balance sheets) as well as on the broader macroeconomic context. At the same time, the course highlighted the challenges of quantifying these risks and potential approaches to do so. And it touched the recently designed and applied tools, such as stress testing and scenario analysis. By drawing from authoritative examples and illustrations from various jurisdictions globally, it prompted participants to critically reflect on ways to rethink central banks’ analytical tools to tackle the risks and financial stability implications arising from climate change.

The sessions covered a snapshot of Climate-Related Financial Risks and deep-dive into selected tools to approach climate risks, like Climate stress testing at policy institutions, the systemic implications of climate-related risks and possible policy options: risk buffers, leverage ratios, countercyclical capital buffers held by Irene Monasterolo from the Utrecht University’s School of Economics and Katarzyna Budnik from the Stress Test Modelling Division at the European Central Bank. Also, the participants had the opportunity to learned about embedding climate goals within central banks’ mandates: ‘primary’ v. ‘secondary’ objectives, monetary and non-monetary policy tasks, session held by Agnieszka Smoleńska assistant professor at the Institute of Law Studies of the Polish Academy of Sciences. And in last instance they had an overview and comparison of sustainable finance instruments (green, social, and sustainability-linked bonds and loans, securitization), by Federica Agostini who is a Research Associate at the Florence School of Banking and Finance