Close Menu
    Latest Category
    • Finance
    • Tech
    • EU Law
    • Energy
    • About
    • Contact
    EUbusiness.com | EU news, business and politicsEUbusiness.com | EU news, business and politics
    Login
    • EU News
    • Focus
    • Guides
    • Press
    • Jobs
    • Events
    • Directory
    EUbusiness.com | EU news, business and politicsEUbusiness.com | EU news, business and politics
    Home » European Central Bank introduces climate factor in its collateral framework in new landmark measure
    Environment

    European Central Bank introduces climate factor in its collateral framework in new landmark measure

    Sponsored By: WWF31 July 2025No Comments3 Mins Read
    — Filed under: Press
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    In an effort to address climate-related financial risks, the European Central Bank (ECB) is introducing a climate factor in its collateral framework, starting in the second half of 2026.

    Climate change - Image by Satheesh Sankaran from Pixabay

    This landmark measure will allow the ECB to reduce the value assigned to assets pledged as collateral based on their exposure to climate-related transition risks, thereby strengthening the Eurosystem’s resilience against climate-related transition shocks.

    “At a time when a lot of the climate and environmental ambition is being rolled back, it is encouraging to see the ECB finally incorporating climate into its collateral framework, one of the most powerful levers of monetary policy,”  said Dominyka Nachajute, Sustainable Finance Policy Officer at WWF EU. “Through this move, the ECB is translating its recognition of climate change as a material financial risk into concrete monetary policy implementation. This marks a significant step in integrating forward-looking climate considerations into the heart of the ECB’s risk management and policy toolkit. It also sends a powerful signal to the broader financial community to integrate climate risk into core risk management, underscoring that high-carbon assets are inherently riskier and may face reduced collateral value.”

    The climate factor, the ECB’s in-house set of metrics, will apply to non-financial corporate bonds, adjusting their value based on a score that reflects sector-specific stress, issuer-specific exposure, and asset-specific vulnerability to climate-related financial risks. Assets deemed riskier from a climate perspective could face larger haircuts, leading to greater reductions in collateral value. By adjusting the value of assets pledged as collateral based on their exposure to climate transition risks, the ECB is directly pricing this risk into its core monetary policy operations.

    Now, the ECB must calibrate the climate factor carefully so as to significantly penalise the most environmentally harmful sectors, while rewarding the best environmental performers.

    “While this is a major achievement for climate, it’s equally as vital that nature-related risks are also part of the ECB’s collateral framework, so that all economic vulnerabilities are adequately addressed. Following the ECB’s recent recognition of nature degradation as relevant to monetary policy in its strategy review, this seems like the natural next step,” concluded Dominyka Nachajute.

    Looking ahead, we ask the ECB to explore additional measures, such as excluding harmful assets from the collateral framework altogether, setting concentration limits to the share of environmentally harmful assets allowed in a bank’s collateral portfolio, ensuring that the climate factor covers asset classes beyond non-financial corporate bonds, and working towards integrating nature-related risks and biodiversity loss into the existing collateral framework.

    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    You must be logged in to post a comment.

    eub2
    • Website

    eub2 is the default publisher for EUbusiness.

    Related Content

    Wildfires - Photo by Pixabay

    Failing on climate and nature could make economies uninsurable

    Sponsor: WWF EU10 November 2025
    Carbon Market Watch logo

    Communications officer, Carbon Market Watch, CMW

    Common toad - Image by Franz W. from Pixabay

    EUR 358 million EU LIFE grants to 132 environmental projects across Europe

    Airplane landing - Image by Pixabay

    European airlines agree to modify environmental claims

    Climate change - Image by Satheesh Sankaran from Pixabay

    Commission’s SFDR deregulation draft: a “transition” to climate chaos?

    Sponsor: WWF EU6 November 2025
    Climate change - Photo by Pixabay

    90% on paper, lower than 85% in reality: ministers take a hatchet to climate target

    Sponsor: WWF EU5 November 2025
    LATEST EU NEWS
    Roxana Mînzatu and Glenn Micallef - Photo © European Union 2025

    Brussels sets out roadmap for European culture

    12 November 2025
    Office work - Photo by Arlington Research on Unsplash

    Only 1pct of EU enterprises under foreign control, but have big impact

    12 November 2025
    5G - Photo by Mika Baumeister on Unsplash

    EU boost for 5G gigabit infrastructure comes into force

    12 November 2025
    Euro - ECB-Photo by Mika Baumeister on Unsplash

    Euro holds firm on eurozone growth hopes – Euro currency news daily

    12 November 2025
    Farming tractor - Photo by Jannis Knorr on Pexels

    EU strikes deal to cut red tape for farmers

    11 November 2025

    Subscribe to EUbusiness Week

    Get the latest EU news

    CONTACT INFO

    • EUbusiness Ltd 117 High Street, Chesham Buckinghamshire, HP5 1DE United Kingdom
    • +44(0)20 8058 8232
    • service@eubusiness.com

    INFORMATION

    • About Us
    • Advertising
    • Contact Info

    Services

    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms
    • EU News

    SOCIAL MEDIA

    Facebook
    eubusiness.com © EUbusiness Ltd 2025

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

    Sign In or Register

    Welcome Back!

    Login to your account below.

    Lost password?