April 30, 2024
LN BUTTON

A new methodology for underwriting portfolios

In its latest report, the Chief Risk Officers Forum (CRO Forum) has analysed the carbon footprinting of insurance companies’ underwriting portfolios.

As asset owners and asset managers support international efforts on carbon reduction in line with the 2015 Paris Climate Agreement’s target of limiting global warming to well below 2°C, and pursue efforts to limit it to 1.5°C, many have announced decarbonisation measures, such as reducing exposure to carbon-intensive sectors. To support these actions, carbon footprinting has seen increasing popularity in the financial sector over the last few years, as a method of measuring and disclosing carbon emissions – of both own operations and investment portfolios.

A PRI-Novethic assessment conducted in 2017 found that 59 percent of the asset owners and 55 percent of the asset managers surveyed used a carbon footprint of their portfolio.

However, as these developments have broadly focused on investments, the opposite side of insurers’ balance sheets has received considerably less attention. Accordingly, carbon footprinting methodology quantifying the exposure of (re)insurers to carbon emissions from underwritten risks is currently underdeveloped, and the emissions associated with insurers’ core business remain unmeasured and undisclosed, even though it is possible to footprint where premiums are invested.

Despite the metric’s maturity for investment portfolios, caveats prevail, which are likely to also occur in the development of a carbon footprinting methodology for insurance liabilities. Current data challenges, affecting both the coverage and quality of existing data, still hinder a comprehensive uptake. Moreover, because a carbon footprint is a snapshot in time and not dynamic enough a measurement to analyse transition dynamics among economic players, or the potential of avoided emissions, it may be misleading to disclose carbon footprint alone – it should be accompanied by contextual, forward-looking information.

The new CRO report ‘Carbon footprinting methodology for underwriting portfolios’ summarizes a range of options, methodologies and barriers for the carbon footprinting of insurance companies’ underwriting portfolios. This will help insurers to work towards understanding the challenges and eventually disclosing the carbon intensity of their underwriting portfolios.

The CRO Forum focuses on developing and promoting industry best practices in risk management. Comprised of chief risk officers from multinational (re)insurance companies, it aims to represent the members’ views on key risk management topics, including emerging risks.

 

Previous Issue