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Network for Greening the Financial System
Finance sector organisation From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The Network for Greening the Financial System (NGFS) is a network of 114 central banks and financial supervisors[1][2] that aims to accelerate the scaling up of green finance and develop recommendations for central banks' role for climate change. The NGFS was created in 2017 and its secretariat is hosted by the Banque de France. Its current chair is Ravi Menon, Managing Director of the Monetary Authority of Singapore.[3] The NGFS has been awarded best green initiative of the year 2020 by Centralbanking.com.[4]
According to its charter,[5] the purpose of the NGFS is "to define, promote and contribute to the development of best practices to be implemented within and outside of the Membership of the NGFS and to conduct or commission analytical work on green finance."
The NGFS was announced at the Paris “One Planet Summit” in December 2017. The network was launched by 8 founding central banks,[6] under the leadership of Banque de France's governor François Villeroy de Galhau, the Dutch Central Bank's Frank Elderson and the Bank of England's former governor Mark Carney.[7]
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Work and activities
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The NGFS organises events and research on climate change.
Recommendations for central banks and supervisory authorities
In 2021, the NGFS identified 9 policy options that could be chosen by central banks to align their monetary policy with climate objectives.[8]
The NGFS work is currently organised around 4 workstreams (WS) and 2 task forces (TF):
- WS “Supervision”, chaired by Mr Tolga Yalkin from the Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions
- WS “Scenario Design and Analysis”, chaired by Mr Livio Stracca from the European Central Bank
- WS “Monetary Policy”, chaired by Mr James Talbot from the Bank of England
- WS “Net Zero for Central Banks”, co-chaired by Mr Paolo Angelini from the Bank of Italy and Ms Simone Robbers from the Reserve Bank of New Zealand
- TF “Nature-Related Risks”, co-chaired by Ms Emmanuelle Assouan from the Bank of France and Ms Saskia de Vries from De Nederlandsche Bank
- TF “Capacity Building and Training”, co-chaired by Ms Madelena Mohamed from the Central Bank of Malaysia and Mr Jeffery Yong from the Bank for International Settlements
Climate scenarios

In June 2020, the NGFS presented its climate scenarios as a common baseline for analysing climate risks to the economy and the financial system. Expanded and updated data were published in the two subsequent years. The scenarios are based on the three integrated assessment models REMIND-MAgPIE (Potsdam Institute for Climate Impact Research), GCAM (University of Maryland) and MESSAGEix-GLOBIOM (International Institute for Applied Systems Analysis). Their results were fed into the NiGEM model (National Institute of Economic and Social Research) to conduct further macroeconomic analyses on inflation or unemployment. In addition, climate data provided by Climate Analytics and the ETH Zurich are published.[9] [10] [11][12][13]
The following six scenarios were examined: "Current Policies" considers only already implemented climate policies, while "NDCs" assumes that the voluntary pledges of Nationally Determined Contributions are met. "Below 2°C" assumes that a two-degree target in line with the Paris Agreement will be met, while "Net Zero 2050" assumes a 1.5-degree target will be achieved through early, globally coordinated climate policies. "Delayed Transition" assumes tighter climate policies only from 2030, while "Divergent Net Zero" envisages regionally and sectorally different climate adaptation.[11]
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Governance and membership
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In 2020, the NGFS comprised 75 members and 13 observers.[14]
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References
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