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Free advice for º£½ÇÊÓÆµ businesses on meeting new climate risk disclosure regulations

Climate Intelligence company Cervest launches a free ebook to help firms discover, measure and report their climate risk, in line with new º£½ÇÊÓÆµ regulations

The new Cervest climate-related financial disclosures ebook is available to download for FREE online

In 2021, relentless headlines about extreme weather events brought home the reality that climate change is already here. From the extreme cold of Winter Storm Uri in the US and the cold wave in France, to floods in Europe and China, and record-setting heat waves in Western North America, climate volatility impacted lives and livelihoods in every corner of the globe.

For businesses, this spells bad news for bottom lines: a recent CDP report estimates that climate change will cost companies up to $1.3 trillion by 2026. For all businesses, managing climate risk is key to protecting revenues and reputations.

Long-term business resilience will depend on each organization’s ability to see and understand how climate change will impact its assets and operations across different climate scenarios and timeframes – and then adapt to them effectively. This can be easier said than done, so for businesses that don't know where to start, Climate Intelligence (CI) company is ready to offer a helping hand.

Cervest’s brand new ebook advises businesses on how to comply with the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ's new climate-related financial regulations, and effectively report on how climate-based risks will impact their fixed assets. This comprehensive guide is available now to

The guide is timely, as new regulations about climate risk reporting come into force in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ. As of Wednesday, April 6, 2022, some of the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s largest companies and financial institutions are required to publicly disclose the financial impact that climate change will have upon their business in future.

Around 1,300 businesses have been impacted by the new regulations, with this number expected to grow to include all businesses by 2025.

The new climate-change financial disclosure regulations came into effect on Wednesday, April 6, 2022, in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Dr Helen Beddow, climate content and knowledge lead at Cervest, says: "There's a danger of businesses not being able to meet the new º£½ÇÊÓÆµ climate risk disclosure requirements if they don't have the right tools and information to submit an accurate report. This also risks eroding trust among investors, stakeholders and employees.

"Our new ebook is designed to make the new reporting requirements clear and easy to understand. Our flagship product, EarthScan™, also equips organizations with report-ready Climate Intelligence insights into their assets and portfolios - which makes disclosure much more accurate, straightforward and credible."

Getting to grips with climate-related financial disclosure

Cervest's new ebook lays out exactly what companies affected by the new º£½ÇÊÓÆµ regulations should report on, and how to do it. Climate-related financial disclosure is a company’s public assessment of how climate change impacts its short, medium and long-term financial health.

Each company decides which time horizons make the most sense for its business to report on, depending on the nature of its business and their susceptibility to climate-related risk. Cervest’s ebook offers guidance on setting appropriate timescales for your company, across a range of possible future climate scenarios.

Helen Beddow says, "One of the variables when it comes to climate change is that we don't know how drastically the climate will change in future, because we're yet to see the full impact of the climate volatility that’s already locked in from previous carbon emissions.

"Our ebook helps businesses consider various climate scenarios, as required by º£½ÇÊÓÆµ law and recommended by the TCFD (Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosure) guidelines. This means companies can see how the risks facing their assets are likely to change depending on the world’s progress towards climate change goals, such as whether we reach Net Zero emissions by 2040, or succeed in keeping warming to below 1.5ºC.”

Different businesses, different risks

Every business’s climate risk is different, depending on the nature of their operations, the location of their assets, the supply chains they rely on and the duration of their investments. A textile manufacturer in Italy may find its business increasingly vulnerable to material shortages resulting from drought, whereas a hotel on the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ coast may become more susceptible to flooding and rising sea levels.

Understanding exactly what and where your specific vulnerabilities are is the first step towards being able to both tackle them and report on them.

But doing so has been challenging, says Helen Beddow: “The primary reason companies struggle to report on climate-related risks facing individual assets is because climate data is too complex to collate and understand in-house.

Praise for the new e-book

Advertiser content from

“Cervest’s e-book is the most comprehensive online resource on analyzing asset-related climate risk to comply with the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s new disclosure requirements. It’s also an extremely useful guide for businesses looking to understand the impact of climate change on their business and enhance their internal and external ESG reporting.” - Anonymous

“Through simple, step-by-step instructions, Cervest’s e-book teaches businesses how to analyze the risks posed by climate change at the asset level. Covering emissions scenarios, time scales, and the benefits of Climate Intelligence, this resource will be extremely useful for companies that fall under the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ’s new financial disclosure requirements, which came into effect earlier this year.” - Anonymous

“Third-party climate analyses are also usually prohibitively expensive and take a huge amount of time to prepare. They also fail to provide the granular detail that would allow businesses to discover and disclose the climate-related risks faced by individual assets.”

According to , 46 per cent of companies have no visibility on extreme weather events. Whereas 46 per cent are challenged by the complexity of aggregating data, and 43 per cent lack real-time actionable intelligence.

These challenges highlight the benefits of Cervest's unique Climate Intelligence product, EarthScan. Powered by advanced machine learning, AI and climate science, it allows anyone to analyze climate-related risks at asset-level across multiple timescales, climate scenarios and types of hazard (such as drought, wildfire or flooding).

Climate Intelligence at your fingertips

EarthScan can turn businesses' asset-level physical risk into report-ready insights, graphs and charts at the click of a button

Climate Intelligence, accessed through EarthScan, was called “a strategic priority for organizations worldwide” by global analysts IDC in its recent report. The report concludes that: “Companies and governments need climate intelligence and insight to not only manage climate-related risk to their most important assets but also to help them adapt to future risk and find new opportunities as a result.”

EarthScan is an indispensable Climate Intelligence solution for enterprises, helping them integrate climate risk into future plans and workflows, as well as enabling on-demand climate-related financial risk reporting. Downloadable insights include summaries to meet recommendations, on-demand analysis of climate risks to valuable assets, executive summaries and more – with the ability to not only look ahead by decades but also delve half a century into the past.

Cervest's new ebook advises how adopting solutions such as EarthScan creates significant business advantages beyond just reporting, and how getting disclosure report-ready now will reap rewards in increased investor confidence and business resilience.

Climate Intelligence pioneers

By 2023, over than 1,300 of the country’s largest companies and financial institutions will be obligated to publish detailed information about the impact of climate change on their business

Cervest is pioneering, cloud-based Climate Intelligence (CI) on any physical asset, anywhere in the world, that gives enterprises, governments, and financial service providers the most comprehensive view possible of climate risk.

The company has previously released several other free, industry-specific ebooks, targeting the real-estate, manufacturing, and city planning sectors, as well as numerous in-depth Climate Intelligence reports, shareable infographics, and insights from world-leading climate experts.

Approximately 50 per cent of Cervest’s staff are climate scientists, and 40 per cent are data engineers. The team has published more than 200 peer-reviewed papers, and counts a Nobel Prize-winner among its ranks.

The company's mission is to empower everyone to adapt with climate change and build a more resilient future for our planet.