The Basel Committee of banking regulators from G20 and other economies proposed climate-related disclosures by banks to make it easier for investors to also compare climate exposures at lenders, and ensure banks hold enough capital to remain stable.
The proposals provide more detailed banking sector climate-related disclosures to supplement broader corporate disclosures agreed at the global level by the International Sustainability Standards Board.
Not all countries will apply ISSB disclosures, however, and it is unclear how Basel's disclosures would dovetail with corporate climate disclosures the European Union has finalised.
Draft U.S. corporate climate disclosures from the Securities and Exchange Commission face heavy pushback from companies which want to ditch the inclusion of so-called Scope 3 greenhouse gas emissions produced by a company's customers.
"For banks, financed emissions are often the most significant part of their total GHG emissions."
Persons:
Amanda Perobelli, Huw Jones, Tomasz Janowski
Organizations:
Committee, International Sustainability, Union, Securities and Exchange Commission, Thomson
Locations:
Amazonia, Nova Xavantina, Mato Grosso, Brazil, Basel