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Article

20 Dec 2017

Author:
Jeff Nesbit, Climate Nexus, The New York Times

Commentary: Big Three rating agencies must incorporate climate risks in company policies

"When Climate Change Becomes a Credit Problem", 13 Dec 2017

...Moody’s Investors Service...announced...that it would give more weight to climate change risks in evaluating the creditworthiness of state and local governments...Governments must prepare for heat waves, droughts, flooding and coastal storm surges or face credit downgrades that will make it more expensive for them to borrow money for public services and for improvements in roads, bridges and other infrastructure...Even for governments that act to reduce their exposure to climate risks, the costs of doing so “could also become an ongoing credit challenge,” Michael Wertz, a Moody’s vice president, said.

...Credit agencies have been under pressure for years to give greater weight to the dangers posed by climate change as they evaluate the risks of government bonds...[T]here is a potential climate risk bubble in which an extreme weather event causes damages so catastrophic that taxpayers, insurers, lenders, states and municipalities suffer damages or losses of hundreds of billions of dollars and local and state government face downgrades in their credit worthiness, affecting their ability to borrow money...Smaller credit-rating and bond investor firms are already taking climate risks into account. But the Big Three rating agencies (the other two are Standard & Poor’s and Fitch Ratings) have been slow to take climate risks seriously...