The European Central Bank (ECB) has decided to pay more attention to both its effect on climate change and the effect of climate change on financial stability.
      
    
    
      
The ECB’s current position is unenviable. While trying to contain 
eurozone fragmentation, it is also expected to stare down inflation, 
despite having a very limited influence on both problems.
However, crises have the unfortunate propensity to not wait until 
it’s their turn to be dealt with – and the threat of climate change 
demands attention as it looms large.
Tilt towards more climate-friendly corporate bonds
“Within our mandate, we are taking further concrete steps to 
incorporate climate change into our monetary policy operations,” ECB  
president Christine Lagarde said in a press statement released on Monday
 (4 July).
More specifically, the ECB  decided to include climate considerations 
in its corporate bond holdings, in the assets it holds as collateral, 
and in the way it assesses risk.
Concerning the corporate bond holdings, the watchdog of the common 
currency announced it would “tilt” the bonds it holds on its balance 
sheet from highly polluting companies to companies with better climate 
performance. The ECB  and the national central banks of the eurosystem 
plan to do this through the reinvestment of the corporate bonds that are
 due in the coming months and years, starting from October 2022.
Reduce financial risks
The ECB  sees another point of leverage in the collateral that 
financial institutions have to put up when they get money from the 
central bank. In future, there will be limits on the share of assets 
issued by companies with a high carbon footprint that can be pledged by 
counterparties.
This move is aimed at reducing climate-related financial risks, for 
example by preventing a sudden fall in asset prices due to stranded 
assets that would undermine the stability of the eurosystem.
Moreover, the central banks will only accept collateral from 
companies and debtors that comply with the EU’s Corporate Sustainability
 Reporting Directive (CSRD) starting from 2026. The ECB  hopes that this 
requirement will incentivise companies to comply with EU rules.
Finally, the ECB  wants to strengthen its capabilities to assess 
climate-related issues, stating that “despite the progress already 
achieved by rating agencies, current disclosure standards are not yet 
satisfactory.”
Civil society wants the ECB  to act against ‘fossil-flation’
While the ECB  is the first major central bank to take such 
climate-related steps, it stresses that “the measures are in full 
accordance with the eurosystem’s primary objective of maintaining price 
stability.”
EURACTIV
      
      
      
      
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