May 27, 2021

CASTEN, SCHATZ REINTRODUCE LEGISLATION TO ENSURE U.S. FINANCIAL SYSTEM IS PREPARED FOR CLIMATE CHANGE

WASHINGTONToday, Congressman Sean Casten (D-IL) and U.S. Senator Brian Schatz (D-HI) introduced the Climate Change Financial Risk Act of 2021. The legislation will direct the Federal Reserve ("Fed") to conduct stress tests on large financial institutions to measure their resilience to climate-related financial risks.

Climate change poses a grave and imminent threat to the stability of our financial system. It is essential that our regulators establish parameters so that our financial institutions adequately prepare for and respond to these risks. Equipped with President Biden's Executive Order to analyze and mitigate climate risks, our regulatory agencies must now take concrete steps," said Casten. "Our bill will move us forward toward safe guarding our financial system—from direct losses caused by draughts, wildfires, and sea level rise to market volatility and erosion of investor confidence."

"Risk is risk—we should not be treating some risks differently from others just because they're hard to quantify. Our federal regulators are legally obligated to ensure a stable and efficient financial system, and that means reducing the risk of a climate-driven financial crisis," said Senator Schatz. "The Biden Administration recognizes that climate change poses systemic financial risks, but our regulatory agencies still lag their international peers in integrating climate into their supervisory work. This bill will push the Fed to start treating climate risks with the seriousness they warrant."

Climate change is increasing the frequency and severity of extreme weather events like floods and wildfires. It is also changing long-term climate patterns in ways that will lower labor productivity, devalue assets, stress agricultural yields, and ultimately affect every sector of our economy. These impacts will pose risks for financial firms and the global financial system.

Financial institutions face the risk of direct losses from severe weather events and fundamental changes like drought and sea level rise—for example, lower property values from increased flooding. They also face risks from market volatility, an erosion of investor confidence, and changes in carbon-intensive asset values resulting from government policies and consumer preferences. Unlike its counterparts in the United Kingdom, the Eurozone, and other jurisdictions, the Federal Reserve is not yet conducting specific climate scenario analysis as part of its supervisory regime.

The Climate Change Financial Risk Act would require the Fed to establish an advisory group of climate scientists and climate economists to help develop climate change scenarios for the financial stress tests.

With the input from the advisory group, the Fed will create three stress test scenarios: a 1.5 degree Celsius warming scenario; a 2 degree scenario; and a "business as usual" scenario, which assumes a higher level of warming if there are no climate policies in place. For each scenario, the Fed will quantify the ways in which climate-related physical and transition risks could disrupt the economy and global business operations. The Fed will conduct stress tests every two years on the same large financial institutions that are currently subject to Comprehensive Capital Analysis and Review (CCAR) stress tests—i.e., firms with more than $250 billion in total consolidated assets (and some with assets over $100 billion, if the Fed deems it necessary to promote financial stability).

The biennial tests will require each covered institution to create and update a qualitative remediation plan, which will describe how the institution plans to evolve its capital planning, balance sheet and off-balance sheet exposures, and other business operations to respond to the most recent test results. Fed objections to a remediation plan would limit the institution's ability to proceed with capital distributions until it improves its plan. However, institutions would not have to increase their current capital based on the results of a climate stress test.

Based on these same scenarios, the Fed will also partner with the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation to design a nonbinding exploratory survey, which will assess the ability of sub-systemic banks (those with more than $10 billion in assets) to withstand climate risks. The Fed will administer the survey every two years and report on the results in aggregate. Survey participants will remain anonymous in the report and will not face adverse consequences on the basis of their responses.

In the Senate, Schatz's legislation is cosponsored by U.S. Senators Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.), Cory Booker (D-N.J.), Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.), Chris Van Hollen (D-Md.), Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), Patty Murray (D-Wash.), Alex Padilla (D-Calif.), Michael Bennet (D-Colo.), and Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.).

Companion legislation has been introduced in the House of Representatives by U.S. Congressman Sean Casten (D-IL) and is cosponsored by Scott Peters (D-CA), Mike Levin (D-CA) and Mike Quigley (D-IL).

"The climate crisis is a systemic threat to our financial system and broader economy. But the time for merely acknowledging this risk has ended. The Climate Change Financial Risk Act would require the Federal Reserve to actually mitigate the risk and ensure the financial system is resilient to climate-related shocks," said Gregg Gelzinis, associate director for economic policy at the Center for American Progress. "The stress tests established by the bill would probe the vulnerability of large financial firms to both the physical and transition-related risks associated with climate change and would require firms to develop clear and actionable plans to reduce those vulnerabilities over time. It's time for financial regulators to execute their missions. We need a financial system that can handle oncoming severe weather events and environmental changes, while serving as a source of strength to the economy during the clean energy transition. This bill is a major step in that direction."

"The climate crisis poses significant financial risks to the stability of capital markets," said Steven M. Rothstein, managing director of the Accelerator for Sustainable Capital Markets at the nonprofit Ceres. "U.S. financial regulators have already begun work to quantify and manage these risks, but we need to move much more quickly. We commend Senator Schatz and Representative Casten for reintroducing this legislation and laying out a clear role for the Federal Reserve Board to address climate-related financial risks. This proposal will provide the clarity and analysis needed to help the financial industry make informed decisions and accelerate the transition to a net-zero emissions economy."

"Climate-related stress testing of financial institutions would strengthen the resilience of these institutions, on which so many companies and, by extension, employers and the general public depend," said Paula DiPerna, special advisor at CDP. "This would also enable the long-term strategic planning necessary for financial institutions to mitigate their exposure to climate risks."

The Climate Change Financial Risk Act is supported by the Center for American Progress, Ceres, Public Citizen, and Americans for Financial Reform.

As a former clean energy engineer and entrepreneur, combatting the climate crisis is one of Congressman Casten's highest priorities.