Publications Development finance

Workshop in London – ET Risk toolbox

9 February 2018 - Blog post - By : Morgane NICOL

UNVEILING THE ET RISK TOOLBOX:

SCENARIOS, DATA AND MODELS FOR RISK ASSESSMENT

 

March 8th, 2018 | 2:00 – 6:00 pm |20 Canada Square, London, UK

 

 

The ET Risk consortium is pleased to invite you to the London workshop “Unveiling the ET risk toolbox: scenarios, data and models for risk assessment”.

 

Join us and the 2° Investing Initiative  along with Kepler Cheuvreux, Carbon Tracker Initiative, the Oxford Smith School Sustainable Finance ProgrammeS&P GlobalS&P Dow Jones Indices, and The CO-Firm to discuss technical solutions around the use of scenarios in financial analysis, transition risk and asset-level data, and transition risk models.

 

The speakers will present recent developments on transition scenarios, asset level data and risk assessment models and provide insights on the integration of climate-related risks in company and valuation models. You are invited to join one of the breakout groups available later in the afternoon, allowing for a dive in one of these topics (see agenda details below).

 

Participation is limited to 50 attendees. We encourage you to register as soon as possible to reserve your place.The meeting will be held under Chatham House rules.

 

 

 

Programm : 

 

2:00 – 2:15 pm         Registration/Coffee

2:15 – 2:35 pm         The transition risk toolbox: scenarios, data and models  

Jakob Thomä, Director, 2° Investing Initiative

2:35 – 2:55  pm       Asset-level data 

 Ben Caldecott, Director of Oxford Sustainable Finance Programme, University of Oxford Smith School of Enterprise and the Environment.

2:55 – 3:15 pm       Company-level climate risk modelling and TCFD reporting

Nicole Rottmer; CEO, The CO Firm

3:15 – 3:35 pm       Scenario analysis in equity valuation models 

Samuel Mary, Senior Sustainability Research Analyst, Kepler Cheuvreux

3:35 – 3:55 pm    At the intersection of credit risk and energy transition risk Asset-level data

Lauren Smart, Managing Director, Global Head of Financial Institutions Business at Trucost, part of S&P Dow Jones Indices.

3:35 – 3:55 pm    Fossil fuel supply scenario analysis

Andrew Grant, Senior Analyst, Carbon Tracker Initiative

——-
4:15 – 4:30 pm    Coffee Break
——-
4:30 – 5:30 pm      Breakout groups

– Transition scenarios: needs and steps moving forward
– Asset-level data
– Risk models for the cement and steel sector

5:30 – 5:50 pm  ET Risk in the context of the HLEG recommendations on ESAS

Morgane Nicol, Mission lead – Financial regulation, Private Finance and Climate, I4CE

 

5:50 – 6:00 pm  Closing remarks 

To learn more
  • 11/08/2024 Foreword of the week
    COP29: From ambition to action

    This coming Monday will see the start of COP29 – formally the 29th session of the Conference of the Parties to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), in Baku, Azerbaijan. The edition is nicknamed “the finance COP” and is important on more than one account, not least as Trump’s victory likely leads to a change of course for the US on climate commitment.

    The volume and structure of the finance mobilised to support developing countries to transition to low-emission and climate-resilient economies tops the agenda.

  • 09/06/2024 Foreword of the week
    Gearing up the reform of the international climate finance architecture

    This autumn’s busy negotiation agendas, offer a window of opportunity to move the reform of the international climate finance architecture (IFA) up one level. This acceleration is urgent if we want to keep pace with the dramatic change in scale needed to finance the climate transition.  In 2023, developed countries announced that they had – for the first time since 2009 – achieved their USD 100bn/year climate finance target to support climate action in developing countries. Just two years later, this target is already obsolete, with needs for emerging and developing economies (excluding China) estimated at around USD 2.4 trillion per year by 2030. 

  • 07/02/2024
    Approaches to meeting the Paris Agreement goals: options for Public Development Banks

    Options for Public Development Banks. Since the adoption of the Paris Agreement in 2015, several public development banks (PDBs) have responded with structured approaches to align their operations with the Agreement’s expectations (as described in Section 1). However, many PDBs, particularly those in emerging markets and developing economies, are yet to adopt an approach to align with the Paris Agreement (i.e., Paris alignment). As entities whose investment mandates are established by the Parties to the Paris Agreement (i.e., national governments), PDBs have specific obligations derived directly from these Parties’ commitments to act across all policy and regulatory frameworks under their jurisdictions, including for state-owned or state-mandated institutions and agencies. Accordingly, PDBs are expected to operate in a manner that supports the achievement of the Paris goals. More specifically, they are obligated to integrate their activities within the Agreement’s implementation mechanism by providing financial, technical, and capacity building support that is entirely consistent with national low-emission climate-resilient development pathways.

See all publications
Press contact Amélie FRITZ Head of Communication and press relations Email
Subscribe to our mailing list :
I register !
Subscribe to our newsletter
Once a week, receive all the information on climate economics
I register !
Fermer