Climate risk and financial systems: A nonlinear network connectedness analysis

J Environ Manage. 2023 Aug 15:340:117878. doi: 10.1016/j.jenvman.2023.117878. Epub 2023 Apr 26.

Abstract

To deeply analyze and understand the macro-financial impact of climate change, this paper investigates the effect of climate risk on systemic financial risks by employing a network approach. The results demonstrate that climate risk not only affects a single financial market but also induces risk co-movement, which aggravates potential systemic financial risks. Specifically, the system-wide connectedness across the financial system respectively increased by 2.52% and 1.76% after the withdrawal of the US from the Kyoto Protocol and the Copenhagen UN Climate Change Conference. The bond and stock markets are the primary transmitters of climate shocks, while the forex and commodity markets appear to be more sensitive to climate-related information. In addition, the vulnerability of financial asset price fluctuations to climate risk changes substantially over time. Quantile regressions reveal the positive impact of climate risk on total connectedness across the financial system. This study provides novel insight into how the financial system responds to climate-related information and how systemic risk dynamics materialize.

Keywords: Climate change; Climate risk; Network estimation; Systemic risk; Variance decomposition; Vector autoregression.

MeSH terms

  • Climate Change*