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I4CE Newsletter - Bank and Capital requirements
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As the main financier of the French and European economies, banks play a key role in financing the transition. Their current contribution in France is in the order of 8 billion euros per year, but this will need to more than double according to estimates by I4CE. To accelerate this shift for banking institutions and to prevent their increasing exposures to climate risks, the debate has tended to revolve around whether or not there is a need to reform prudential requirements. The purpose of these requirements is to safeguard financial stability and to protect banks in crisis situations, by obliging them to hold reserves against different risks.
For some, prudential requirements must be increased when banks finance activities that are harmful to the climate. For others, they should be reduced for so-called "green" activities. While the debate continues between supporters of a Green Supporting Factor and a Penalising Factor, and while this debate remains too often theoretical, I4CE has launched a study to quantify the concrete impacts of these proposals on the financing of the low-carbon transition and the economy in general. Discover the results of this study, as well as our latest publications, in our weekly newsletter.

#I4CE_Report

#New Report I Indexing capital requirements on climate : what impacts can be expected?
I4CE has conducted the first quantitative study on Green Supporting or Penalising factors. It shows that, while they can be a response to a risk issue, their impact on the financing of the transition is likely to remain limited. Other possible reforms are to be explored and favored, which receive much less attention, such as the obligation for banks to set up transition plans.

#2minOn

#Video: 2 minute on Prudential requirement
To index capital requirements on climate, would it allow to better finance the low-carbon transition? Julie Evain from I4CE presents the main results of the study in two minutes.  

#I4CEvent

Coming soon: #Webinar on the impacts of GSF and PF on transition financing
I4CE and Finance For Tomorrow are organising a joint webinar to discuss proposals for reforming prudential requirements in Europe. More details are to come. Stay tuned!

 

#I4CExpertViewPoint

Where do the five new IPCC scenarios come from?

In its new strategy, the Commission commits to help Member States to assess their climate investment gap and to measure financing flows. I4CE, which has been carrying out such an exercise for France for several years, is pleased that this proposal is back in the spotlight. This is an opportunity to reread this former publication by I4CE and the European Environment Agency, which, back in 2016, reviewed the value of such exercises.

#Tweets of the month

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