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  • April 2025
  • Article
  • Nature Energy

How Central Banks Manage Climate and Energy Transition Risks

By: Esther Shears, Jonas Meckling and Jared Finnegan
  • Format:Print
  • | Pages:9
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Abstract

Central banks have begun to examine and manage climate risks, including both transition risks of moving from fossil fuels to clean energy and physical climate risks. Here we provide a systematic assessment of how and why central banks address climate risks on the basis of an original dataset of central banks across the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development and Group of 20. We show that central banks vary substantially in the extent to which they re-risk fossil fuel investments and physical risks and de-risk clean energy investments. Our analysis finds that central bank climate risk management is not associated with a country’s economic exposure to transition risks, but instead with its climate politics. The results suggest that central banks may not be solely independent risk managers but also actors that respond to political demands. As such, central banks may reinforce national decarbonization policy, while not correcting for the lack thereof.

Keywords

Banks and Banking; Risk and Uncertainty; Climate Change; Transition; Risk Management

Citation

Shears, Esther, Jonas Meckling, and Jared Finnegan. "How Central Banks Manage Climate and Energy Transition Risks." Nature Energy 10, no. 4 (April 2025): 470–478.
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More from the Authors

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    Coordinating the Energy Transition: Electrifying Transportation in California and Germany

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    • 2024
    • Nature Communications

    State Capacity and Varieties of Climate Policy

    By: Jonas Meckling and Ari Benkler
    • July 2024
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    The Home State Effect: How Subnational Governments Shape Climate Coalitions

    By: Jonas Meckling and Samuel Trachtman
More from the Authors
  • Coordinating the Energy Transition: Electrifying Transportation in California and Germany By: Nicholas Goedeking and Jonas Meckling
  • State Capacity and Varieties of Climate Policy By: Jonas Meckling and Ari Benkler
  • The Home State Effect: How Subnational Governments Shape Climate Coalitions By: Jonas Meckling and Samuel Trachtman
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