The time to take low-carbon transition risks seriously is now
Thursday 18 February 2021
EPFL, 11 February 2021 - A successful climate policy means preparing for unintended adverse
impacts, such as job losses in declining energy sectors or potential
environmental impacts of scaling up renewables. That’s the message of
EPFL researchers in their latest policy brief that provides a roadmap
for anticipating and mitigating the risks of transitioning to a
low-carbon economy and society. It calls on decision-makers to plan
ahead and take systematic action. On February 19th, the United-States will rejoin the Paris Agreement. This will kickstart a year of intensifying policy activity ahead of the United Nations Climate Change conference (COP26) in November, when countries will re-commit to their emissions reduction goals. “The
early signs are that 2021 could be the most important year for action
on climate change since 2015,” says Aengus Collins, deputy director of
EPFL’s International Risk Governance Center (IRGC). “A growing number of
countries and organisations are committing to ambitious decarbonisation
goals. The pace is picking up and it is crucial not to let progress be
derailed.” The most pressing global task is to ensure these
reduction goals are met to avoid the worst impacts of global warming.
However, Collins cautions that decarbonisation has adverse consequences
of its own. These negative impacts are small compared to the
consequences of missing the climate targets. But being unprepared for
them threatens to slow or derail the transition, for example if they
become the focus for opposition to climate policies, as happened with
the gilets jaunes in France. “Every effort should be made to
ensure that climate policies succeed,” Collins says. “This includes
thinking ahead about unintended disruptions that climate policies may
lead to in some countries and communities.” To gain understanding
and plan for these adverse impacts, or “transition risks”, EPFL’s
International Risk Governance Center (IRGC) brought together a
multi-stakeholder group of experts last September. The resulting policy
brief, entitled Risk governance and the low-carbon transition, defines
eight categories of transition risk: economic, financial, societal,
environmental, technological, energy-related, geopolitical and
corporate. Crucially, this report highlights the need to deal with these
more systematically – instead of individually – so that important
interconnections are not missed. It is unique in its focus on an
integrative approach to transition risks, stressing that tailoring
solutions to individual risks will not be sufficient, and that
policymakers and researchers need to grapple with the complex
interconnections that tie these risks together. “Climate change
demonstrates the importance of thinking in terms of how complex systems
operate,” explains Collins. “A similar mindset is needed with transition
risks. Integrated policy-making is needed, nationally and
internationally, to identify, assess and manage these risks. The purpose
of IRGC’s report is to help drive successful climate action. The report
calls on decision makers to anticipate potential disruptive
side-effects of the transition so that they can plan ahead to mitigate
them,” explains Collins. “The transition risks are not just economic and
financial, but also social, political, and environmental.” Now is the time to take risks that arise from low-carbon transitions seriously EPFL’s
IRGC brief comes when evidence is mounting that the pace of the
low-carbon transition is picking up ahead of COP26. A growing number of
countries and regions have set or are planning legal net-zero target
dates, including the EU, France, Hungary, Japan, New Zealand, South
Korea, Sweden and the United Kingdom among others. Pressure is also
building on companies to do more. Leading asset managers are threatening
to divest from companies without adequate transition plans in place. In
the Netherlands, Shell is being taken to court in an effort to force an
accelerated shift to renewable energy. There is a growing sense that a
tipping point may have been reached. “All the indications are that
the transition to a low-carbon economy and society will continue to
accelerate. This makes it crucial for countries and organisations to be
prepared,” urges Collins. “We see this already in a country like
Australia, which needs to a prepare for a potential plunge in demand for
its coal exports as key trading partners transition toward renewable
energy.” Identifying transition risks should be a priority The
risks associated with the low-carbon transition have been gaining
policy attention. The financial sector was an early mover, with the Taskforce on Climate-related Financial Disclosures (TCFD)
recommending a regime of corporate disclosures to increase
transparency, enable better decision-making by investors and facilitate a
smooth and predictable transition. In the European Union, jobs are a
key focus and the €17.5 billion Just Transition Fund (JTF) will be used to support EU regions facing socio-economic disruption as fossil fuel-dependent sectors are wound down. These
and similar policy moves show that transition risks are on the radar of
key institutions. But on a global scale, there is a lack of systematic
focus. This is potentially a weak point in preparations for achieving
climate goals. In terms of the actions that are needed, one of IRGC’s
key recommendations is for governments and organisations to identify and
assess the transition risks that might impact them, so there is a
clearly picture of where vulnerabilities lie. Another important step is
to widen the rollout of policy responses that seem to work, such as “cap
and dividend” proposals that use carbon tax revenues to protect those
on lowest incomes. Other recommendations made in the report include
learning from past transitions, developing institutional capacity and
building resilience in key systems. “The more prepared that
governments and organisations can be for transition risks, the more
likely it is that climate policies will succeed,” concludes Collins. IRGC The
International Risk Governance Center at EPFL (Ecole polytechnique
fédérale de Lausanne) helps to improve the understanding and governance
of systemic risks that have impacts on human health and safety, the
environment, the economy and society at large. IRGC’s mission includes
developing risk governance concepts and providing risk governance policy
advice to decision makers in the private and public sectors on key
emerging or neglected issues. It emphasises the role of risk governance
for issues marked by complexity, uncertainty and ambiguity, and the need
for appropriate policy and regulatory environments for new technologies
where risk issues may be important. Authors:
Hillary Sanctuary,
IRGC
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