NGFS and INSPIRE launch a joint research project
2021-04-15
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Paris, April 6th 2021
Today,
the NGFS and the International Network for Sustainable Financial Policy
Insights, Research, and Exchange (INSPIRE) – one of the NGFS research
stakeholders – announced the launch of a joint Study Group on
‘Biodiversity and Financial Stability’.A
growing number of central banks and supervisors have recognised the
need to extend their focus from climate change to the challenges of
addressing the implications of broader nature-related risks and the
conservation of nature and biodiversity. Doing this will involve
understanding the impact of finance on the provision of key ecosystem
services as well as the consequences of biodiversity loss for financial
stability. To respond to this emerging agenda, the Study Group will
conduct a programme of research and dialogue to address these challenges
and propose recommendations for action and further inquiry. The goal of
the research initiative is to establish an evidence-based approach to
how central banks and supervisory authorities could fulfil their
mandates in the context of biodiversity loss, with a focus on land-use
and deforestation.Frank Elderson, Chair of the NGFS and member of the ECB’s Executive Board: “Companies
are highly dependent on the services that ecosystems provide, but may
at the same time have a harmful impact on the environment. The financial
risks that stem from a loss in biodiversity are a serious threat to the
financial sector that urgently require better understanding by policy
makers and regulators to which the new NGFS/INSPIRE Study Group will
provide an important contribution.”This
project will be co-led by the Chair of the NGFS Workstream on Research
(overseen by Dr Ma Jun, managed by Dr Tianyin Sun) and INSPIRE (overseen
by Prof Nick Robins, managed by Dr Simon Dikau). The Study Group will
comprise researchers from both NGFS members and INSPIRE.Dr
Ma Jun, Chair of the NGFS Research Workstream, co-Chair of the G20
Sustainable Finance Study Group, and Chairman of China Green Finance
Committee: “Of
systematic importance but poorly understood is the impact of
biodiversity loss on the economy and financial system. The joint
NGFS/INSPIRE research initiative on ‘Biodiversity and Financial
Stability’ is formed to improve this understanding, by exploring the
dependencies among and impact transmission through the ecological
systems, economic activities, and financial stability.”Professor Nick Robins, Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment: “2021
is a crucial year with the Biodiversity COP as well as the Climate COP.
The Study Group will complement existing initiatives by setting out
recommendations that financial authorities can take in the near-term as
well as produce a long-term research agenda on biodiversity.”The
NGFS, launched at the Paris One Planet Summit on 12 December 2017, is a
group of central banks and supervisors, which on a voluntary basis are
willing to share best practices and contribute to the development of
environment and climate risk management in the financial sector, and to
mobilize mainstream finance to support the transition toward a
sustainable economy. The NGFS brings together 89 central banks and
supervisors and 13 observers. Together, they represent five continents
and around 75% of global greenhouse gas emissions, and are responsible
for the supervision of all of the global systemically important banks
and two thirds of global systemically important insurers. The NGFS is
chaired by Frank Elderson, member of the ECB’s Executive Board. The
Secretariat, headed by Morgan Després, is provided by Banque de France.The
International Network for Sustainable Financial Policy Insights,
Research, and Exchange (INSPIRE) is an independent research network
built to support the central banks and supervisors of the Network for
Greening the Financial System (NGFS) in its work to manage climate and
environmental risks and mobilise finance to support the transition to a
sustainable economy. The INSPIRE secretariat is co- hosted by the
Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment at the
London School of Economics and Political Science and the ClimateWorks
Foundation. It is guided by an Advisory Committee and has commissioned
over 30 research projects across a range of critical themes.