BOE Says Climate Transition Will Cost UK Banks, Insurers Billions

The Bank of England said UK banks and insurers face climate-related losses of £209 billion to almost £334 billion over the next three decades depending on how quickly the government acts to shift the economy toward net zero emissions.

Source: Bloomberg | Published on May 25, 2022

climate change and higher insurance rates

The UK central bank said the financial system is well placed to absorb those losses, though many of them in the worst case scenario will be passed on to consumers, with the poorest people in society hit hardest.

The findings were outlined in the bank’s first ever stress test to assess how the financial services industry will cope with efforts to transition the economy away from fossil fuels and toward cleaner forms of energy. Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s government is at the forefront of a global push to rein in climate-damaging greenhouse-gas pollution.

“Climate change will inevitably drive losses for banks and insurers, even in a scenario where governments around the world take swift and early action,” Sam Woods, chief executive officer of the BOE’s Prudential Regulation Authority, which oversees banks and insurers, said in a speech released along with the stress tests on Tuesday.

The findings also are aimed at encouraging government policy makers to clarify regulations that will drive the economy toward “net-zero,” which will require a historic shift in investment away from polluting industries and toward things like renewable and nuclear energy. The BOE notes that financial system losses on aggregate will be lower if the transition is orderly than if no more measures are enacted.

HSBC Holdings Plc, Barclays Plc, Lloyds Banking Group and Nationwide Building Society were among the banks participating. Insurers included Aviva, Legal & General, Allianz, Direct Line and AIG. Fitch Ratings Inc. said toughest test of its kind in the world.

Fernando de la Mora, managing director at Alvarez & Marsal, said the results are unlikely to have direct consequences for firms’ solvency requirements or capital distribution strategies. But he predicted add-ons to companies’ pillar two requirement levels in future.

The BOE did not release the results for individual firms. It said the exercise uncovered “significant” data gaps showed that this sort of climate analysis remains in its “infancy.”

The test was based on three scenarios that assume early, late and no policy action on the climate over 30 years, as designed for central banks globally by the Network for Greening the Financial System. It’s meant as an “exploratory exercise” and won’t be used to set capital requirements, though the BOE expects banks to carry out their own annual climate assessments.

Losses were lowest if policy makers take “early action” to curtail climate change, boosting the cost of carbon emissions and resulting in a relatively small increase in global temperatures. Under that scenario, the hit to banks would be under £100 billion and insurers just over that level.

A worst-case scenario where no additional action is taken and climate change is allowed to proceed unchecked, losses for banks would be lower but insurers would have to absorb more than £200 billion of costs.

“At worst, we might end up under-capitalizing banks and insurers for risks they face, raising questions about their overall resilience,” Woods said. “Or we could end up over-capitalizing them inefficiently, reducing their ability to support the transition.”

The UK central bank test is the “world’s toughest yet,” with more demanding standards than France’s climate test last year, according to the credit rating company Fitch Ratings.

“It assumes higher peak carbon prices and greater global warming, and it limits credit for the management actions that firms could take to mitigate the effect of the scenarios on their business models,” Fitch said in a note released ahead of the results.