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    Home > Headlines > G20's financial watchdog lays out climate plan but presses pause amid divisions
    Headlines

    G20's financial watchdog lays out climate plan but presses pause amid divisions

    Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®

    Posted on July 14, 2025

    3 min read

    Last updated: January 22, 2026

    G20's financial watchdog lays out climate plan but presses pause amid divisions - Headlines news and analysis from Global Banking & Finance Review
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    Tags:sustainabilityClimate Changefinancial stabilityinvestment

    Quick Summary

    G20's financial watchdog unveils a climate plan but pauses further work due to U.S. policy divisions, focusing on data sharing and coordination.

    G20 Financial Watchdog Unveils Climate Strategy but Halts Progress

    By Virginia Furness

    LONDON (Reuters) -The G20's financial stability watchdog delivered a new plan on how to tackle climate risks on Monday, but paused further policy work amid a retreat by the United States that has tested efforts to advance a united financial policy on climate-related risks.

    The U.S. has withdrawn from multiple groups dedicated to exploring how flooding and wildfires and big climate-related policy shifts could impact financial stability.

    In its medium-term plan, the G20's Financial Stability Board pledged to step up coordination and data sharing on climate-related financial risk.

    However, it said while progress had been made to integrate climate risks into financial systems, some of its members, who include central bank governors and ministers, were keen to pause further climate work.

    "While many members feel there is a need for more work, some members feel that the work completed to date is sufficient," the FSB said in an update to its 2021 climate roadmap delivered to G20 finance ministers meeting in South Africa.

    "Going forward, the FSB will ... make determinations about what projects, if any, it will undertake."

    U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent was set to skip the G20 meeting, Reuters reported last week. The United States is due to head the G20 group, which it helped found in the aftermath of the global financial crisis, next year.

    The FSB said it would continue to consider climate-related topics each year and would focus on its role as a coordinator of international work on climate risks.

    The watchdog said it did not have plans to do any more significant policy work on integrating climate-related financial risks into its supervisory and regulatory work. Work on this topic is ongoing at many of its member institutions, it said.

    Earlier this year, the FSB published work on the usefulness of transition plans for financial stability and in 2024 presented a stocktake of supervisory and regulatory work on nature-related financial risks.

    "Rather than identifying such vulnerabilities a priority for further work, the FSB will leave that decision up to its annual work programme process," it said in the report.     

    The report detailed progress made since 2023 by international standard setters and global banking regulators like the Basel Committee on climate disclosure.

    It also set out efforts to provide forward-looking data to help banks and companies quantify economic losses from climate shocks such as heatwaves. 

    (Reporting by Virginia FurnessEditing by Ros Russell)

    Key Takeaways

    • •G20's financial watchdog unveils a new climate strategy.
    • •U.S. withdrawal affects unified climate policy efforts.
    • •FSB pauses further climate policy work amid divisions.
    • •Focus remains on data sharing and coordination.
    • •FSB to reconsider climate projects annually.

    Frequently Asked Questions about G20's financial watchdog lays out climate plan but presses pause amid divisions

    1What is the G20's Financial Stability Board's new climate plan?

    The G20's Financial Stability Board has delivered a new plan to tackle climate risks, focusing on coordination and data sharing related to climate-related financial risks.

    2Why did the G20 pause further policy work on climate risks?

    The G20 paused further policy work due to divisions among its members, with some feeling that the work completed to date is sufficient.

    3What role will the FSB continue to play regarding climate risks?

    The FSB will continue to consider climate-related topics annually and focus on its role as a coordinator of international efforts on climate risks.

    4What significant work did the FSB publish earlier this year?

    Earlier this year, the FSB published work on the usefulness of transition plans for financial stability and plans to present a stocktake of supervisory and regulatory work on nature-related financial risks in 2024.

    5How does the FSB plan to address vulnerabilities in climate-related financial risks?

    The FSB will leave the decision to identify vulnerabilities as a priority for further work up to its annual work programme process.

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