Business Standard

Extreme weather puts ~6.2-trn bank debt at risk

- ARCHANA CHAUDHARY

An increase in extreme weather events such as floods, droughts and cyclones risk souring debt worth more than ~6.19 trillion ($84 billion) at the country’s biggest financial institutio­ns.

That’s according to leading nonprofit environmen­tal disclosure platform CDP. State Bank of India, the country’s largest lender, HDFC Bank, Indusind Bank, and Axis Bank are among the institutio­ns that reported climate risks to CDP in 2020, it said in its annual report released Wednesday.

The banks flagged exposure to environmen­tally sensitive businesses including cement, coal, oil and power. They also listed the effects of cyclones and floods on loan repayments in farming and related sectors. Lenders accounted for 87 per cent of the total risk, valued at about $97 billion, across 67 top Indian companies that responded to CDP. “Climate is the biggest risk to businesses in the long run. Financial institutio­ns are beginning to understand it,” said Damandeep Singh, New Delhi-based director of CDP India. “As investors look at funding companies based on environmen­tal, social and governance disclosure­s, we’ve seen many more companies report climate change risk.” The potential harm to agricultur­e echoes concerns raised by India’s central bank about the impact of climate change on farming, a sector that employs more than half of its citizens. At the same time, the world’s third-biggest emitter of greenhouse gases is relying on coal to help drive its post-covid recovery. CDP, which gathered the data on behalf of 515 investors with $106 trillion in assets, said it received responses from 220 small and large Indian companies.

State Bank of India, which is facing concerns from shareholde­rs and investors over its proposal to help fund the controvers­ial Carmichael coal mine in northern Australia, valued its total climate risk at ~3.83 trillion. The bank said it may “indirectly face reputation­al risks, should it be involved in lending to environmen­tally sensitive projects which may have significan­t public opposition.” SBI didn’t respond to a request seeking comment.

The second-highest risk was flagged by HDFC Bank, which estimated it had ~1.79 trillion of assets in danger — a 24 per cent increase from 2019. It said its calculatio­ns took into account compensati­on it would have to pay to employees in case of flooding and its exposure to farming, cement, coal, oil and power.

Smaller private banks Indusind, Axis and Yes reported lowered climate change risk compared to last year at ~46,600 crore, ~7,500 crore and ~2,000 crore respective­ly, citing more diversifie­d portfolios.

India was second in the Asia Pacific and sixth globally among CDP’S ranking of countries whose companies committed to sciencebas­ed targets for net-zero carbon emissions, the report showed. More than 50 Indian companies said they are preparing for future policy and regulatory changes by voluntaril­y committing to cutting their carbon footprint. Increased investor pressure and stronger disclosure norms are compelling companies to address climate concerns. Almost all of companies reported board-level oversight of climate-related issues, while some 84 per cent said climaterel­ated risks and opportunit­ies led them to alter plans for products and services.

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