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Newsflash

Bank of England publishes key elements of its 2021 CBES

18 Jun 2021

The Bank of England has published its ‘Key elements of the 2021 Climate Biennial Exploratory Scenario’ to help explore the financial risks posed by climate change for some of the UK’s largest banks and insurers.

For more background information, we have previously covered this topic in our earlier Newsflash.

The Bank of England (BoE) has invited ten insurers to participate in the exercise, including four life firms, five general insurance firms, and one composite insurer, as well as seven banks/building societies and a selection of ten Lloyd’s managing agents.

The BoE’s desired outcomes of this exercise are to:

  • Quantify the financial exposure of participants (and the broader financial system) to climate-related risks, including the assessment of any systemic risk that may arise as a result of climate change;

  • Understand the challenges to participants’ business models from these risks; and

  • Help participants in enhancing their management of climate-related financial risk, consistent with expectations outlined in Supervisory Statement 3/19.

The BoE intend this to be a learning exercise for all. As climate modelling expertise is not yet fully embedded (or, indeed, developed) this exercise is intended to improve the capabilities of both the BoE and participants. It is not intended that the results will be used to set capital requirements but may inform the Financial Policy Committee’s (FPC’s) approach to system-wide policy issues and the Prudential Regulation Authority’s (PRA’s) approach to supervisory policy.

The CBES will have two parts:

  1. First, firms are asked to test the vulnerabilities of today’s balance sheet; and
  2. Firms are asked how they might change their business (and mitigate risks) as businesses adapt over the duration of the scenarios.

In this newsflash, we look at the implications of the CBES for participants and for other PRA-regulated insurers.

Download our publication where we cover the following topics:

  • What are the scenarios?
  • Liability assumptions
  • Counterparty analysis
  • Carbon pricing
  • A sizeable qualitative questionnaire
  • What next?

If you would like to discuss with one of our specialists, please get in touch.

Newsflash - Bank of England publishes key elements of its 2021 CBES

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