What will be the Federal Reserve's stance on climate-related financial risks in 2025?
Increased focus • 25%
Decreased focus • 25%
Remain the same • 25%
Unclear • 25%
Official speeches or reports from the Federal Reserve
Federal Reserve Withdraws from NGFS Climate Coalition Days Before Trump's Office, Cites Scope Beyond Mandate
Jan 17, 2025, 08:16 PM
The Federal Reserve announced on Friday its withdrawal from the Network of Central Banks and Supervisors for Greening the Financial System (NGFS), a global coalition focused on integrating climate-related financial risks into monetary and regulatory frameworks. The Fed cited that the NGFS's scope had broadened beyond its statutory mandate as the reason for its exit. The decision comes just days before Donald Trump, who has been critical of government-led climate policies, is set to take office. The NGFS was established in 2017 to help central banks and financial supervisors address climate risks. The Fed joined the group in 2020, but Chair Jerome Powell has maintained that the Fed's role in addressing climate change is limited, emphasizing that such policies should be determined by elected government bodies rather than the central bank. Five of the Fed's governors voted in favor of leaving the NGFS, while Governors Michael Barr and Adriana Kugler abstained.
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No Change • 25%
More Aggressive • 25%
Less Aggressive • 25%
Other • 25%
Yes • 50%
No • 50%
No new climate-related policies • 25%
Rejoin NGFS • 25%
Introduce new climate risk regulations • 25%
Other climate-related initiative • 25%
Rejoin NGFS • 25%
No significant policy shift • 25%
Enhance internal climate risk measures • 25%
Launch new coalition • 25%
Yes • 50%
No • 50%
Further withdrawal from climate initiatives • 25%
Status quo maintained • 25%
Increased independence • 25%
Reversal of NGFS exit • 25%
Asset Management • 25%
Other • 25%
Banking • 25%
Insurance • 25%
No significant change in climate policy stance • 25%
Rejoin NGFS • 25%
Join a different climate-focused coalition • 25%
Strengthen internal climate policies independently • 25%
Bank of Japan • 25%
European Central Bank • 25%
Bank of England • 25%
Other • 25%
No • 50%
Yes • 50%
Financial constraints • 25%
Other • 25%
Scope beyond mandate • 25%
Political pressure • 25%