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Monday, July 22 2019 - 10:00
AsiaNet
Insurers Take Decisive Step in Climate Risk Modelling Through Cross-sectoral Mobilisation
ZURICH, July 18, 2019 /PRNewswire-AsiaNet/ --

Stakeholders Set Priorities and Action Plan at Geneva Association Climate 
Change Forum

Developing and scaling up the integration of the next generation of risk models 
requires cross-sectoral collaboration, and the insurance industry plays a 
critical role as risk managers and investors. This was a key takeaway of the 
2019 Climate Change Forum held 11–12 July in London, organised by The Geneva 
Association, the global association of insurance companies, and sponsored by 
Tokio Marine Holdings.

The 2019 Climate Change Forum set out to build a roadmap for advancing and 
augmenting physical and transition climate risk modelling, focusing on core 
insurance, investment and asset management decisions. Participants included 
representatives of the insurance and asset management industries; regulators 
and rating agencies; members of the United Nations Environment 
Programme-Financial Initiative (UNEP-FI), the Financial Stability Board's Task 
Force on Climate Related Financial Disclosure (TCFD), the EU Technical Expert 
Group on Sustainable Finance and the Sustainable Insurance Forum Secretariat; 
climate scientists and risk modelling practitioners; and the co-chair of an 
Inter-governmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) working group.

Jad Ariss, Managing Director of The Geneva Association, said: "Companies in all 
economic sectors need climate information to mobilise investments for 
transitioning to a low-carbon economy. The insurance industry, with its 
leadership in risk modelling, can contribute significantly to the global 
private-sector response to the TCFD's recommendations and global sustainable 
finance initiatives – improving its own capacities and societal resilience at 
the same time."

Maryam Golnaraghi, Director of Climate Change and Emerging Environmental Topics 
at The Geneva Association, commented: "Mainstreaming climate risk is becoming a 
high priority for Boards and C-level suite executives with implications for 
accountability, corporate strategy, risk management, operations, investments as 
well as disclosure and reporting. There is a unique opportunity to enhance 
climate risk modelling and stress testing by leveraging the latest climate 
science. This Forum was an important step toward achieving consensus among 
leaders from 10 sectors on aligning priorities on a research and development 
agenda for the future." 

The Forum underscored the importance of raising awareness among Boards and 
C-level suite executives around the importance of climate risk integration. The 
insurance sector would benefit significantly from integrating the latest 
physical and transition risk in its risk analytics tools, linking to both sides 
of the balance sheet. There is a need for common definitions of terms – 
'resilience,' 'scenarios' and 'stress testing', for example – to enable 
cross-sectoral collaboration. There is also a need to scope physical and 
transition climate risk modelling initiatives and identify gaps, needs and 
potential areas of cooperation. Bridging the latest science and technologies 
with financial and core business decisions should be central to future 
initiatives. 

Review the GA's latest work on Climate Change and Emerging Environmental Topics

@TheGenevaAssoc

Logo: https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/928617/The_Geneva_Association_Logo.jpg 

Contact:
Pamela Corn
Acting Head of Communications 
+41-44-200-4996
pamela_corn@genevaassociation.org

SOURCE: The Geneva Association
Translations

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