Taking action how to identify and prioritise climate change risks to your business
12 May 2022
12 May 2022
Climate change is driving unavoidable business change and disruption. Leading organisations are evaluating change impacts on their legacy business, proactively designing adaptive strategies to seize the opportunities, and optimise their pathways to their net zero future. In an earlier paper by the Ashurst Aurecon Alliance, we identified three areas of focus for business leaders to transform risks posed by net zero targets into opportunities. Here, we delve into how climate change risks can be identified, prioritised and reframed to support strategic decision-making and drive business success.
For many organisations, asset owners and investors, climate change poses significant financial challenges and opportunities, with mitigation and adaptation required now to avoid the prospect of increasingly damaging impacts in the future. It would be difficult to find an enterprise risk assessment in 2022 that doesn’t feature climate change as a strategic risk. Leading companies are taking a prudent approach to pursuing a multidisciplinary, whole-of-enterprise appreciation of how climate change has affected their strategic context, what impacts change and/or uncertainty is having on their business, and what strategic risk management approaches will be adopted to increase agility and resilience. In many cases, this includes mapping the path to net zero as an early ‘must-have’.
Organisations need to develop climate change risk management strategies that drive, maintain and ideally increase competitive advantage, while reducing the chance of negative effects. However, the large-scale and long-term nature of climate change makes identifying where to begin challenging, especially in the context of preserving risk and return profiles, competing operational demands and capital allocation. For business, climate change can be conceived as a ‘transverse risk’, which influences the likelihood and consequence of existing risk exposures. Given the need for businesses to manage climate related risks in all forms, the question quickly becomes: How does an organisation take something as broad and prolonged as climate change and figure out where to start taking action?
Place your business at the centre of the climate change risk problem, rather than the risk itself. For example, extreme rainfall could be a climate change risk, but restricted supply chain caused by extreme rainfall is the more meaningful risk to the business. So, extreme rainfall only needs to be managed or mitigated to the extent that the supply chain can continue fulfilling business objectives. A business-centric approach to managing climate change risk creates a framework for organisations to begin breaking down climate change in a way that is relevant to the business and connects climate resilience with operational objectives.
The way to break down climate change risk into decision-useful pieces is through a resilience-based approach to risk management. Resilience-based approaches focus on enterprise purpose, performance objectives, critical value drivers and risk appetite by prioritising and managing types of failure rather than identifying and managing discrete risks.
The following three steps outline how to frame climate change risk using a resilience-based approach. By virtue of its business focus, this approach excels in bridging gaps between the C-suite and climate change risks, which are characterised by long delays between cause and effect, often hiding the totality of climate change risk exposure and consequently, the need to take action.
These three steps begin a process of creating a link between climate change and the strategic decision-making of the organisation, providing a framework to assess and manage climate change risk in a way that is meaningful and valuable to decision-makers, stakeholders, investors and customers.
Authors: Elena Lambros (Ashurst Risk Advisory), Michael Duggan (Ashurst Risk Advisory), Michael Tafe (Aurecon), Ben McGarry (Aurecon)
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