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9/10/2022

Remarks Prepared for Delivery by Under Secretary of the Treasury Nellie Liang at the Office of Financial Research’s Cl…

U.S. DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Remarks Prepared for Delivery by Under Secretary of the
Treasury Nellie Liang at the Office of Financial Research’s
Climate Implications for Financial Stability Conference
September 9, 2022

Iʼm very pleased to be here today to help open this OFR research conference on a very timely
and consequential topic – climate-related financial risks and its implications for financial
stability.
At the outset, Iʼd like to thank the papersʼ authors, the panelists, and the OFR team that are
contributing to this program. It is a great forum for us to learn from each other, stimulate
new ideas, and help policymakers and financial regulators design policies to make the financial
system more resilient to climate change, and to help produce the data that financial market
participants need to make better informed decisions.
Studies document that the economic and financial costs of climate change have been
increasing significantly, especially in recent years. In 2021, the National Oceanic and
Atmospheric Agency documented that there were twenty billion-dollar-or-more weather and
climate disasters, which caused a combined $145 billion in damage. That was a 50 percent
increase in damage costs from 2020. Scientific consensus indicates that the world must cut
emissions in half by 2030 to avoid the most extreme consequences of climate change. In an
executive order last year, President Biden has put forward a US emissions reduction target in
line with that imperative.
The financial system has a critical role to play in the broader economy-wide strategies to
reduce emissions. Financial regulators and standard setters have a responsibility to make the
financial system more resilient to climate change. With Treasury, they are taking important
steps. The Financial Stability Oversight Council (FSOC) issued a report in Oct 2021 with more
than 30 recommendations for its members to address emerging threats to financial stability
from climate change. The recommendations were aimed at two objectives: to increase the
resilience of the financial system and to improve information. Specifically, the report
recommended that financial regulators take actions so that they and the financial firms they
supervise can better assess and measure climate-related financial risks. It also recommended
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9/10/2022

Remarks Prepared for Delivery by Under Secretary of the Treasury Nellie Liang at the Office of Financial Research’s Cl…

that regulators improve data quality and disclosures so that investors could have the
information they need to make better-informed investment decisions.
Since then, Treasury and the domestic financial regulators have been working to implement
these recommendations. For example, FSOC has created inter-agency working groups to
bring together the agencies and leverage their e orts to improve data quality and availability,
data infrastructure, climate risk metrics, and scenario analysis. The OFR is co-leading the
groups related to data, and also is rolling out a climate data hub and analytics pilot program
to help FSOC agencies gain more e icient access to climate data and analytical tools.
In addition to FSOC e orts, Treasury has a number of other initiatives. For example, at the
federal government level, Treasury is engaged with other agencies to assess risks to the
federal government budget from climate risk and incorporate shocks arising from weatherrelated events and climate change into government macroeconomic forecasts. In addition, it
is assessing climate risks and challenges faced by households, especially in low-income and
historically disadvantaged communities, through the Financial Literacy and Education Council,
and will publish a report on climate risk as a challenge to American household finances.
As Treasury works to measure and address climate-related financial risks, weʼre also actively
involved in broader e orts to use fiscal policy to address the root causes of climate change
and accelerate the transition to a net-zero economy. The Inflation Reduction Act recently
passed is the largest investment the US has made to fight climate change. The Act will
strengthen incentives to help mobilize private capital to accelerate a transition to clean
energy. It puts us on a credible path to reduce emissions by around 40% by 2030.
Research, such as that presented here today, are important for regulators and policymakers
to better understand private behavior and how incentives can help to manage climate-related
financial risks. For example, papers today will study how a bank's climate commitments, the
tax code, or borrowersʼ scope disclosures a ect their cost and availability of credit, and the
sensitivity of market-based measures of financial firmsʼ stress to climate risks. In terms of
economic activity, papers today will look at how climate events are a ecting revenues and
productivity, and methods for how to estimate the e ects on global GDP of transition risks
away from coal. In addition, the presentations will bring out advancements in how to
understand sustainability in the social cost of carbon calculations, a key knowledge input for
moving our investments and our economies toward net zero.
Thank you again to the organizers of todayʼs program and to the researchers and panelists
who are participating today. I look forward to the presentations and discussions.
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