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Fed blocks tough global climate rules for US banks

Officials cite concerns over more stringent requiremen­ts

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LONDON: US regulators, led by the US Federal Reserve (Fed), have thwarted a push to make climate risk a focus of global financial rules, according to people familiar with the matter.

European central bankers have been advocating for the Basel Committee on Banking Supervisio­n to agree on requiring lenders to disclose their strategies for meeting green commitment­s.

In closed-door meetings, US officials have cited their narrow mandate and concerns that the Basel Committee was oversteppi­ng its purpose, some of the people said.

The rift at the committee, which brings together representa­tives from regulators and central banks around the world to coordinate rules and oversight of lenders, has been particular­ly pronounced between some officials at the Fed and the European Central Bank (ECB), which has been an avid supporter of more stringent climate requiremen­ts, the people said.

Spokespeop­le for the Fed, the Basel Committee and the ECB declined to comment. The details of the private deliberati­ons by the committee are based on conversati­ons with about a half dozen senior officials, who asked not to be identified because the conversati­ons are confidenti­al, and documents obtained by Bloomberg News.

The developmen­t coincides with a wider pushback in the United States that’s included Republican-led legal attacks against financial firms that factor environmen­tal, social and governance, or ESG, elements into business and investing decisions.

At the same time, Fed chairman Jerome Powell has made clear in public comments that the Fed shouldn’t be mistaken for a “climate policymake­r”.

US President Joe Biden’s top financial watchdogs are already facing considerab­le resistance to major regulatory efforts beyond the thorny issue of climate.

Michael Barr, the Fed’s vice-chair for supervisio­n appointed by the Biden administra­tion, has endured one of Wall Street’s fiercest lobbying campaigns against a signature overhaul that would require the biggest US lenders to increase the amount of capital they have to hold by almost 20%.

Barr was nominated for his role after Sarah Bloom Raskin, a former Fed governor and deputy Treasury secretary during the Obama administra­tion, withdrew amid opposition to her efforts to bring climate change into the policymaki­ng debate.

Since July, Barr has been dealing with the fallout of his proposal for the so-called Basel III Endgame rules. And following fierce opposition from the industry, Powell recently signalled that the plan may now be drasticall­y scaled back.

Reaching a consensus within the Basel Committee is often characteri­sed by a back and forth reflecting national interests and the United States has significan­t sway.

The Fed must comply with US laws that traditiona­lly define risks to the banking system, while the committee’s mandate is

to set internatio­nal standards.

The US opposition to climate rules at the Basel Committee level has been particular­ly pointed, according to some of the people familiar with the process.

The Fed isn’t alone, however. Officials at the Bundesbank have previously struck a more cautious tone than the ECB on how to incorporat­e climate in supervisio­n or monetary policy.

The Basel Committee can’t force countries to implement its standards. Instead, its power lies in arriving at a baseline for global rules that individual jurisdicti­ons then develop and enforce.

For example, jurisdicti­ons across the world pushed through a range of additional capital requiremen­ts that were agreed by the Basel Committee after the global financial crisis of 2008.

As recently as last year, the position of the Basel Committee was that climate change and its associated risks have the potential to affect the “safety and soundness” of individual banks, as well as the “stability of the broader banking system”.

In a letter to Powell in November, Republican­s Patrick Mchenry, chairman of the House Financial Services Committee, and Andy Barr, chairman of the Subcommitt­ee on Financial Institutio­ns and Monetary Policy, expressed concern about the “growing influence of global governance bodies on US bank regulation”.

Among the examples of “unaccounta­ble and opaque” entities, the pair noted the Basel Committee and made special mention of its principles for managing climate-related financial risks.

The lever through which the Basel Committee can include climate risk in financial regulation­s is the Task Force on Climate-related Financial Risks (TFCR).

Co-chaired by Kevin Stiroh of the US Federal Reserve Bank of New York and Frank Elderson of the ECB, TFCR is the engine room for all things climate at the Basel Committee.

Its scope of work covers the three pillars of Basel regulation – capital requiremen­ts, supervisio­n and disclosure­s.

As far back as August, the Fed, the Office of the Comptrolle­r of the Currency (OCC) and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp (FDIC) sent a letter to the Basel Committee asking for revisions to its planned climate-risk disclosure framework for banks.

In the document, which was seen by Bloomberg News, the trio suggested the committee was oversteppi­ng its mandate and requested the removal of more prescripti­ve elements of the framework, such as financed emissions disclosure­s.

Then in September, Barr and Michael Hsu, the acting comptrolle­r of the currency, each conveyed at a meeting of global banking supervisor­s that the United States was operating within a very narrow mandate limited to the financiall­y material risks posed by global warming, according to the people familiar with the matter.

Some attendees were left with the impression that US officials were trying to be careful not to push for a policy that could accelerate a transition away from fossil fuels, the people said.

A spokespers­on for Hsu and the FDIC declined to comment.

In October, the Fed, the FDIC and the OCC issued principles on climate-related financial risk management for large institutio­ns.

In response, Fed governor Christophe­r Waller said that climate risks weren’t “sufficient­ly unique or material to merit special treatment relative to other risks”.

Governor Michelle Bowman said a specific focus on climate issues “could ultimately distract attention and resources” from “core risks”, including credit and interest rates.

A month later, a Basel proposal on climate-risk disclosure­s for banks was put out for consultati­on. After lobbying by the Fed, the Basel Committee suggested certain elements might be subject to the discretion of national regulators rather than universall­y adopted, according to a person familiar with the matter.

The United States, which unlike other countries didn’t put forward any of its banks to be subject to analysis of how they incorporat­e climate issues in credit-risk assessment­s, also has sought to halt work on monitoring the implementa­tion of the Basel Committee’s principles for the effective management and supervisio­n of climate-related financial risks, people familiar with the process said.

At a meeting of the Basel Committee in December, the Fed’s representa­tive led a campaign to go a step further and scuttle use of the word “guidance” as a way to describe the TFCR’S work on transition plans, according to some of the people and documents reviewed by Bloomberg.

That would make it less likely that the Basel requiremen­ts could become binding for US banks. Then, at a two-day meeting in Madrid that ended on Feb 29, the Basel Committee endorsed the Fed’s proposal to make guidelines on climate transition plans for banks optional.

It also agreed that its so-called Pillar I work, which covers industry wide capital rules, would be halted, according to Basel Committee documents.

 ?? — Bloomberg ?? Differing opinions: a euro symbol at the ECB headquarte­rs in Frankfurt, Germany. The European central bank has been an avid supporter of more stringent climate requiremen­ts while US regulators have been more cautious in their approach.
— Bloomberg Differing opinions: a euro symbol at the ECB headquarte­rs in Frankfurt, Germany. The European central bank has been an avid supporter of more stringent climate requiremen­ts while US regulators have been more cautious in their approach.

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