Climate disclosures: a global risk driver in financial lines

K
Kennedys

Contributor

Our lawyers handle both contentious and non-contentious matters, and provide a range of specialist legal services, for many industry sectors including insurance and reinsurance, aviation, banking and finance, construction and engineering, healthcare, life sciences, marine, public sector, rail, real estate, retail, shipping and international trade, sport and leisure, transport and logistics and travel and tourism. But we have particular expertise in litigation and dispute resolution, especially in defending insurance and liability claims.
Climate change is a global issue and can only be truly tackled successfully by a unified approach.
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UK | Europe | Asia Pacific | USA | Latin America and the Caribbean

COP26 brought global communities together to accelerate action towards the goals of the Paris Agreement and the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change. However, the focus of the November 2021 conference was not solely government climate pledges; the spotlight was very much on the global private sector in terms of net-zero commitments as well.

Global investment and commitment to climate change has therefore never been so significant for corporates, their boards, and in turn their financial lines insurers.

What COP26 reinforced was that climate change is a global issue and can only be truly tackled successfully if a unified approach is taken by all global stakeholders. With mandatory climate disclosures becoming law in the UK (effective from 6 April 2022) and the United States Securities & Exchange Commission (SEC) announcing its long awaited climate disclosure rule on 21 March 2022, this report provides a snapshot of the approach towards climate disclosures in some of the jurisdictions in which Kennedys operates, before focusing on what this means for our policyholder and insurer clients in the financial lines arena.

"D&Os must understand shifting regulatory and societal expectations and ensure the company responds. The spotlight will be firmly on any non-compliance, resulting in both legal and reputational vulnerability for companies and D&Os - and increased risk for their insurers.

Jenny Boldon, Partner, London

Read other items in Professions and Financial Lines Brief - May 2022

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