Te Pūtea Matua is responsible for maintaining a stable financial system to promote the prosperity and well-being of New Zealanders. As climate change poses risks to the stability of the financial system, we have a role to play in ensuring entities manage their climate-related risks, says Kate Le Quesne, Director of Prudential Policy.
For example, insurers may face unexpectedly large claims because of more frequent and more severe adverse weather events. Similarly, banks may see growing losses on loans to companies whose business models are no longer viable as the climate changes.
"The Guidance sets out our expectations of how regulated entities should be identifying, managing, and monitoring climate related risks. The Guidance is not prescriptive, as entities are best placed to decide how to apply it to their business models and strategies," Ms Le Quesne says.
"In March last year, we consulted with the sector on draft Guidance. Thanks to the valuable feedback we received, the Guidance has been updated to include more examples, reduce overlaps with other guidance and draw more links to existing parts of the prudential regime.
"We have also changed the layout to match that of the Aotearoa New Zealand Climate Standards, which are issued by the External Reporting Board and set out the separate climate-related disclosure regime. Aligning the two sets of documents is designed to make things easier for anyone reading both, but our Guidance does not give advice to entities on how to go about climate-related disclosure.
"We are grateful for the feedback we received and look forward to hearing how entities use the Guidance to manage their climate-related risks. As risk management practices, climate-related risks and legislation are ever-evolving, we will continue to update the Guidance from time to time," says Ms Le Quesne.
More information
Managing climate-related risks: guidance for prudentially regulated entities (PDF, 819 KB)
Managing climate-related risks consultation