Climate Changes Your Business
In addition, KPMG claims that the 18 sectors included in the report - even the three deemed to be in the "safe area" - are not sufficiently prepared to deal with the new risks associated with climate change.
The climate change risks that companies should be paying more attention to are physical, regulatory and reputational risks as well as the emerging risk of litigation; yet the scope and potential impact of these risks appears to be under-estimated across all sectors.
Industries may be relatively safe, they may be in the danger zone, or they may be in between - but wherever they are, risks tend to be underestimated, notes the report.
Entitled "Climate Changes Your Business" is one of the most comprehensive analysis of its kind to date. Its findings are based on a review of 50 authoritative published studies addressing the business risks and economic impacts of climate change at sector level. The published reports have been analyzed and a ‘risk score’ for each sector has been assessed. At the same time, the business sectors have been rated according to their preparedness for climate change impacts.
The report grouped sectors into three areas, dependent on the risks they face and their preparedness. Due to the way the figures were compiled, these rankings effectively represent what financial institutions and businesses themselves think about climate change risks.
While the oil and gas sector is far better prepared than any of the other sectors in the ‘danger zone’, the climate change issues it faces make it the riskiest of all the 18 sectors. By contrast, transport is a far less risky sector but its level of preparedness is the worst of all the 18.
However, further analysis of the results by KPMG suggests that even the sectors in the "safe haven" may not be as safe as they would like to think. The food and beverages sector, for example is supposedly a low risk sector yet recent events have shown that this industry is highly vulnerable to climate related risks such as increases in agricultural input costs.
When considering how businesses report on these risks, it is striking that businesses consistently appear to gloss over certain climate risks even where they have well established management techniques for dealing with other forms of risk, states the report. Companies should seek to improve their understanding of how such risks affect their business and they must also mitigate such risks. It pays to be prepared. Companies which understand their climate risks will be best placed to manage those risks - and measured using data compiled in the latest completed round of the independent Carbon Disclosure Project.
The full report, Climate Changes Your Business, can be downloaded at www.kpmg.nl/sustainability
You can return to the main Market News page, or press the Back button on your browser.