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ECB steps up climate work with focus on green transition, climate and nature-related risks


30 January 2024

  • Increasing impact of climate crisis on economy and financial system drives need for more action
  • ECB reaffirms commitment to ongoing climate actions and will review them regularly
  • Three focus areas to guide work for 2024 and 2025: implications of green transition, physical impact of climate change, and nature-related risks for the economy and financial system

The European Central Bank (ECB) has decided to expand its work on climate change, identifying three focus areas that will guide its activities in 2024 and 2025:

  1. the impact and risks of the transition to a green economy, especially the associated transition costs and investment needs;
  2. the increasing physical impact of climate change, and how measures to adapt to a hotter world affect the economy;
  3. the risks stemming from nature loss and degradation, how they interact with climate-related risks and how they could affect the ECB’s work through their impact on the economy and financial system.

“A hotter climate and the degradation of natural capital are forcing change in our economy and financial system. We must understand and keep up with this change to continue to fulfil our mandate”, said ECB President Christine Lagarde. “By broadening and intensifying our efforts we can better understand the implications of these changes and, in doing so, help to underpin stability and support the green transition of the economy and the financial system.”

To this end, the following concrete measures have been agreed.

The decision to step up efforts in these areas follows the ECB’s stocktake of its climate actions since launching its 2022 climate agenda, and an adjustment of its work plan in the light of the changing environment and improvements in data availability and methodologies.

The work planned for these focus areas will complement the ECB’s current climate-related actions in its ongoing tasks, including monetary policy and banking supervision. The ECB will improve its climate-related indicators, risk monitoring and disclosures, and continue to contribute to the development of climate-related policies in European and international fora. Looking ahead, the ECB remains committed to regularly reviewing these actions to ensure they are fit for purpose and contribute to fulfilling its mandate.

A comprehensive overview of the planned work programme for 2024 and 2025 is available in the Annex and more information can be found on the ECB’s website.

For media queries, please contact Verena Reith, tel.: +49 69 1344 5737.

Notes

  • The ECB needs to account for the effects of climate change in the conduct of its tasks within its mandate. Additionally, without prejudice to its price stability objective, the ECB must support the general economic policies in the European Union, with a view to contributing to a high level of protection of and improvement in the quality of the environment. This includes the goals of the European Climate Law. Under Article 11 of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union, the ECB is also required to integrate environmental protection requirements into the definition and implementation of its policies and activities.
  • The ECB introduced climate change considerations into its monetary policy framework following its strategy review in 2021.



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