2020
DOI: 10.1002/wcc.678
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Low‐carbon transition risks for finance

Abstract: The transition to a low‐carbon economy will entail a large‐scale structural change. Some industries will have to expand their relative economic weight, while other industries, especially those directly linked to fossil fuel production and consumption, will have to decline. Such a systemic shift may have major repercussions on the stability of financial systems, via abrupt asset revaluations, defaults on debt, and the creation of bubbles in rising industries. Studies on previous industrial transitions have shed… Show more

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Cited by 199 publications
(122 citation statements)
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“…The new energy geography has deep socio-economic and geopolitical implications, and changes game theoretical interpretations of political dynamics. First, in line with the great waves literature 37,38 and the Just Transition movement, the creative destruction effect of the low-carbon transition underway is likely to generate localised issues of post-industrial decline, particularly in the US, Russia, Canada. This suggests that comprehensive plans for regional redevelopment are likely needed along with economic diversi cation towards new technology sectors including catching up in the race towards low-carbon technology exports.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The new energy geography has deep socio-economic and geopolitical implications, and changes game theoretical interpretations of political dynamics. First, in line with the great waves literature 37,38 and the Just Transition movement, the creative destruction effect of the low-carbon transition underway is likely to generate localised issues of post-industrial decline, particularly in the US, Russia, Canada. This suggests that comprehensive plans for regional redevelopment are likely needed along with economic diversi cation towards new technology sectors including catching up in the race towards low-carbon technology exports.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…First, non-equilibrium models can be used to represent specific channels of contagion of climate-related risks, an area of research still in its infancy (Semieniuk et al, 2020). For instance, Cahen-Fourot et al (2019) rely on network-based theory 5 to assess how stranding an asset in one specific sector can trigger a 'cascade of stranded assets' affecting many other sectors of the economy.…”
Section: Insights and Limitations Of Non-equilibrium Modelsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Also, an observer bias in the selection of the key interconnections is inevitably bound to creep in (Colander & Kupers, 2014, p. 15). As an example, in their evolutionary models of climaterelated risks, Campiglio et al (2018), Monasterolo et al (2019, p. 179) and Semieniuk et al (2020) all see Schumpeterian creative destruction as the main (or even sole) force behind the evolution of our complex and adaptive socioeconomic systems. Yet, other evolutionary forces may be at work in moving along the socioeconomic transition, as further discussed below.…”
Section: Insights and Limitations Of Non-equilibrium Modelsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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