Companies urged to look at climate change financial risks


Wednesday, 23 May, 2018

Companies urged to look at climate change financial risks

Australian businesses are being encouraged to work on better understanding climate change through a financial risk lens, or risk being left behind their global peers.

The Commonwealth Climate & Law Initiative (CCLI) released a series of papers — which coincided with the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) in London — explaining how company directors could be held liable for failing to manage the financial risks of climate change. The reports demonstrate a high level of uniformity across the corporate governance laws of four Commonwealth jurisdictions: Australia, the United Kingdom, South Africa and Canada.

Sarah Barker, MinterEllison Special Counsel for Climate Change Risk, worked with the University of Oxford in drafting the CCLI's Australian country paper. She explained why the laws of these four jurisdictions are particularly significant as companies and their directors wrestle with the implications of climate change for their business performance and prospects.

“Between them, Australia, Canada, South Africa and the UK account for a quarter of global pension assets. Their stock exchanges account for a third of the world’s listed fossil fuel assets and they are home to more than 10% of the world’s oil and coal reserves.”

Sarah Barker, MinterEllison Special Counsel for Climate Change Risk.

She continued by stating the new legal analysis is timely given the federal government’s recent response to the recommendations of the Senate Economic References Committee Inquiry into Carbon Risk Disclosure.

“That response clearly stated the government’s position that the Corporations Act, as it currently stands, accommodates corporate governance and disclosure of climate-related financial risks, and indicated support for the development of further guidance on point by ASIC and the ASX,” she said. “In addition, the government suggested that companies have regard to the Recommendations of the G20 Financial Stability Board’s Taskforce on Climate-Related Financial Disclosures.”

At the same time, investors and corporate regulators are demanding a step up in climate risk fluency from directors, and more meaningful disclosures in annual reports, including stress-testing and scenario analysis, a central plank of the G20 Taskforce Recommendations.

“The Australian Government’s response to the Senate Committee Inquiry may be perceived as a significant shift in domestic regulatory practice in some quarters — certainly for those corporations accustomed to viewing climate change as a singularly ‘environmental’, or only a long-term, issue,” said Barker. “But far from being a groundbreaking development, in reality it merely served to more closely align Australia’s regulatory position with that of other corporate or prudential regulators, treasuries and stock exchanges around the world.”

She noted that Europe continued to show leadership on this front. France introduced mandatory climate risk analysis and reporting requirements for pension funds, insurers and asset managers under Article 173 of the Energy Transition Law in 2016. A number of other European countries are actively considering mirror legislation. In the UK, legislators are currently considering whether to incorporate the G20 Taskforce Recommendations into their mandatory reporting laws.

In addition, in March 2018 the European Commission released its strategy for a financial system that supports the EU’s climate and sustainable development agenda, including a focus on incorporating sustainability into prudential requirements and enhancing transparency in corporate reporting.

“Australian company directors need to ensure that they view climate change through a corporations and securities law lens, rather than an ‘environmental’ lens,” Barker said. “The key takeaways from the federal government’s response to the Senate Inquiry are that our law already accommodates action in this area, and that further regulatory guidance can be expected. This is only reinforced by the Commonwealth Climate and Law Initiative’s conclusion that Australian corporate governance laws demand a proactive approach to the governance and disclosure of climate-related financial risks. If this is news to any business or board, they would be well advised to accelerate their understanding of the issue before enforcement proceedings begin to flow.”

Image credit: ©iStockphoto.com/Cristian Baitg

Related News

OCP and Fortescue to develop green hydrogen and ammonia in Morocco

OCP Group, a manufacturer of plant nutrition and phosphate-based fertilisers, and Fortescue...

Siemens announces Beyond 1% Summit in Sydney

The Siemens Beyond 1% Summit in Sydney in July will focus on accelerating digitalisation for...

UQ turns carbon dioxide into sustainable power

Researchers at the University of Queensland have built a generator that absorbs carbon dioxide to...


  • All content Copyright © 2024 Westwick-Farrow Pty Ltd