The ClimateWise Principles: Self-Regulating Climate Change Risks in the Insurance Sector

被引:16
|
作者
Thistlethwaite, Jason [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Waterloo, Waterloo, ON N2L 3G1, Canada
关键词
climate change risks; self-regulatory institution; industry commons; institutional obstacles; GOVERNANCE;
D O I
10.1177/0007650311427595
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
In recent years, the private insurance sector has started to incorporate climate change issues into its standard business practices and even begun to lobby governments to regulate and reduce global greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. The establishment of the ClimateWise Principles (ClimateWise) in 2007 embodies this effort. ClimateWise is an example of what scholars studying corporate strategy identify as a self-regulatory institution. To date, however, academic scholarship has failed to explain the emergence and function of ClimateWise, a unique initiative designed to leverage the insurance industry's technical and political authority in governing climate change risks. This article will make the case that ClimateWise emerged in response to strategic incentives to reduce exposure to climate change risks, but that the form of this unusual self-regulatory institution was driven by institutional conditions.
引用
收藏
页码:121 / 147
页数:27
相关论文
共 44 条
  • [21] Adaptation to climate change in the insurance sector: examples from the UK, Germany and the Netherlands
    E. Carina H. Keskitalo
    Gregor Vulturius
    Peter Scholten
    Natural Hazards, 2014, 71 : 315 - 334
  • [22] Climate change, insurance and the buildings sector: technological synergisms between adaptation and mitigation
    Mills, E
    BUILDING RESEARCH AND INFORMATION, 2003, 31 (3-4): : 257 - 277
  • [23] Adaptation to climate change in the insurance sector: examples from the UK, Germany and the Netherlands
    Keskitalo, E. Carina H.
    Vulturius, Gregor
    Scholten, Peter
    NATURAL HAZARDS, 2014, 71 (01) : 315 - 334
  • [24] Climate change and increased risk for the insurance sector: a global perspective and an assessment for the Netherlands
    Botzen, W. J. W.
    van den Bergh, J. C. J. M.
    Bouwer, L. M.
    NATURAL HAZARDS, 2010, 52 (03) : 577 - 598
  • [25] CLIMATE CHANGE RISKS. A SECTOR APPROACH WITH FOCUS ON IRON AND STEEL INDUSTRY
    Ioan, Ildiko
    METALURGIA INTERNATIONAL, 2009, 14 : 134 - 137
  • [26] Governing the health risks of climate change: towards multi-sector responses
    Bowen, Kathryn J.
    Ebi, Kristie L.
    CURRENT OPINION IN ENVIRONMENTAL SUSTAINABILITY, 2015, 12 : 80 - 85
  • [27] A methodological framework and tool for assessing the climate change related risks in the banking sector
    Georgopoulou, Elena
    Mirasgedis, Sebastian
    Sarafidis, Yannis
    Hontou, Vassiliki
    Gakis, Nikos
    Lalas, Dimitri
    Xenoyianni, Foteini
    Kakavoulis, Nikos
    Dimopoulos, Dimitris
    Zavras, Vrassidas
    JOURNAL OF ENVIRONMENTAL PLANNING AND MANAGEMENT, 2015, 58 (05) : 874 - 897
  • [28] Climate Change Risks for the Mediterranean Agri-Food Sector: The Case of Greece
    Georgopoulou, Elena
    Gakis, Nikos
    Kapetanakis, Dimitris
    Voloudakis, Dimitris
    Markaki, Maria
    Sarafidis, Yannis
    Lalas, Dimitris P.
    Laliotis, George P.
    Akamati, Konstantina
    Bizelis, Iosif
    Daskalakis, Markos
    Mirasgedis, Sevastianos
    Tzamtzis, Iordanis
    AGRICULTURE-BASEL, 2024, 14 (05):
  • [29] INSURANCE LAW PRINCIPLES IN AN INTERNATIONAL CONTEXT: COMPENSATING LOSSES CAUSED BY CLIMATE CHANGE
    Brown, Craig
    Seck, Sara
    ALBERTA LAW REVIEW, 2013, 50 (03) : 541 - 576
  • [30] Risk attitudes to low-probability climate change risks: WTP for flood insurance
    Botzen, W. J. W.
    van den Bergh, J. C. J. M.
    JOURNAL OF ECONOMIC BEHAVIOR & ORGANIZATION, 2012, 82 (01) : 151 - 166