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handle is hein.crs/govegbz0001 and id is 1 raw text is: Congressional
A   Research Service
Climate Change and U.S. Financial
Regulators: Overview and Recent Actions
Updated August 26, 2021
Under the Biden Administration, financial regulators have announced a range of new measures to address
financial risks associated with climate change. The Department of the Treasury, the Securities and
Exchange Commission (SEC), and the Federal Reserve have each announced new steps:
 The Treasury's announcement covers a range of issues including public spending,
macroeconomic effects, and international cooperation.
 The SEC's addresses investor disclosure requirements relating to climate risks and the
classification of funds marketed to investors as environmentally friendly.
 The Fed's relates to lending risks for individual financial institutions and to systemic
financial risks related to climate change.
This Insight provides an overview of these actions and how they interrelate.
Background: Financial Sector Climate Risks
An international standard-setting body, the Financial Stability Board, has noted that climate change can
affect financial stability and asset prices either through physical risks such as more damaging storms and
wildfires or through transition risks in which changes in government policies or market perceptions might
lead to sudden asset price changes. By some estimates, assets held by fossil fuel companies globally could
drop between $250 billion and $1.2 trillion or become stranded assets in a possible transition away
from fossil fuels.
Estimates of potential losses to the financial sector from physical risks are relatively large. In the housing
market, one paper found that, as of 2019, government-sponsored enterprises Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac
guaranteed $6.88 trillion in home mortgage debt without pricing flood risk into their guarantee fees.
Almost all insured U.S. flood risk is backstopped by the U.S. government through the National Flood
Insurance Program.
There is evidence that investors are already seeking to price climate risks into asset prices. In the roughly
$4 trillion U.S. municipal bond market, one paper concluded that counties more likely to be affected by
Congressional Research Service
https://crsreports.congress.gov
IN11666
CRS INSIGHT
Prepared for Membersand
Committeesof Congress

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