Long-awaited climate risk reporting rules from the US Securities and Exchange Commission issued in the days before CERAWeek arrived against the background of high expectations mixed with widespread consternation about the details of the rule. The world’s largest and most sophisticated capital market will for the first time now obligate reporting on material climate risks from large publicly-listed corporations, but the rules also shied away from creating a new reporting process with higher compliance hurdles but arguably greater climate impact. As industry, investors, capital allocators and the global financial and regulatory community absorb the details of the new SEC climate risk rules, S&P Global has gathered a cross-section of experts to discuss initial reactions and map out the diverse pathways for action by affected firms.
Extreme weather events are increasingly damaging and costly at the country level, and countries will likely see increasingly significant financial costs over the coming decades. Join S&P Global Sustainable1 to understand how to effectively price these risks and develop adaptation and resilience strategies at the sovereign level.
S&P Global experts present their latest research and discuss topics on energy transition, energy security and trends shaping the global economic and energy landscape.