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Question 1 of 10
1. Question
Which practical consideration is most relevant when executing Electrification of Vehicles? A multinational corporation is transitioning its global delivery fleet from internal combustion engines to electric vehicles to meet its Science Based Targets (SBTi). During the internal audit of the transition plan, the auditor evaluates the risk that the project may not achieve the projected greenhouse gas (GHG) reduction targets. The auditor must determine which factor most significantly influences the actual net impact on the organization’s carbon footprint.
Correct
Correct: The net reduction in greenhouse gas emissions from vehicle electrification is heavily dependent on a well-to-wheel analysis. While electric vehicles eliminate Scope 1 tailpipe emissions, they increase Scope 2 emissions through electricity consumption. If the regional grid relies heavily on fossil fuels like coal or natural gas, the total lifecycle emissions reduction will be significantly lower than in regions with a high proportion of renewable energy.
Incorrect: The assertion that battery manufacturing reduces Scope 3 emissions is incorrect; in fact, the energy-intensive extraction and processing of battery minerals typically increase upstream Scope 3 emissions compared to internal combustion vehicles. General Circulation Models are designed for long-term, large-scale climate projections and are not appropriate tools for measuring daily mechanical battery efficiency. Carbon capture and storage is a stationary industrial technology and is not a practical or standard application for vehicle chassis to manage battery cooling.
Takeaway: The climate benefit of transitioning to electric vehicles is contingent upon the carbon intensity of the electricity grid and the total lifecycle emissions of the fleet.
Incorrect
Correct: The net reduction in greenhouse gas emissions from vehicle electrification is heavily dependent on a well-to-wheel analysis. While electric vehicles eliminate Scope 1 tailpipe emissions, they increase Scope 2 emissions through electricity consumption. If the regional grid relies heavily on fossil fuels like coal or natural gas, the total lifecycle emissions reduction will be significantly lower than in regions with a high proportion of renewable energy.
Incorrect: The assertion that battery manufacturing reduces Scope 3 emissions is incorrect; in fact, the energy-intensive extraction and processing of battery minerals typically increase upstream Scope 3 emissions compared to internal combustion vehicles. General Circulation Models are designed for long-term, large-scale climate projections and are not appropriate tools for measuring daily mechanical battery efficiency. Carbon capture and storage is a stationary industrial technology and is not a practical or standard application for vehicle chassis to manage battery cooling.
Takeaway: The climate benefit of transitioning to electric vehicles is contingent upon the carbon intensity of the electricity grid and the total lifecycle emissions of the fleet.
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Question 2 of 10
2. Question
During a periodic assessment of Climate Change and the Insurance Industry’s Role as part of regulatory inspection at a wealth manager, auditors observed that the firm’s risk management team had recently updated its catastrophe models for coastal property insurance. The update specifically addressed the long-term solvency of the portfolio under a high-emissions Representative Concentration Pathway (RCP 8.5) over a 30-year horizon. The auditors noted a discrepancy in how the model accounted for the primary drivers of sea level rise, particularly the lag time between atmospheric warming and the resulting impact on global mean sea levels. Which of the following scientific principles regarding sea level rise should the internal auditor expect to see reflected in the firm’s risk assessment to ensure the model accurately captures long-term physical risks?
Correct
Correct: Thermal expansion (steric expansion) is a fundamental driver of sea level rise because water expands as it warms. The ocean has a very high heat capacity and has absorbed over 90% of the excess heat in the climate system. This process, alongside the melting of land-based ice (glaciers and ice sheets in Greenland and Antarctica), contributes to rising sea levels. For an insurance risk model to be robust, it must account for these distinct physical mechanisms and the ‘thermal inertia’ of the ocean, which causes sea levels to continue rising even after atmospheric temperatures stabilize.
Incorrect: The melting of sea ice (Arctic ice) does not significantly contribute to sea level rise because the ice is already floating and displacing its own weight in water, according to Archimedes’ principle. Paleoclimate data is actually highly relevant for model validation and understanding the long-term sensitivity of sea levels to CO2 levels. Linear projections are considered insufficient for risk management because ice sheet dynamics and thermal expansion are non-linear and vary significantly depending on the specific RCP or SSP scenario being modeled.
Takeaway: Effective insurance risk assessment must distinguish between thermal expansion and land-ice melt as non-linear drivers of sea level rise to accurately project long-term coastal vulnerabilities.
Incorrect
Correct: Thermal expansion (steric expansion) is a fundamental driver of sea level rise because water expands as it warms. The ocean has a very high heat capacity and has absorbed over 90% of the excess heat in the climate system. This process, alongside the melting of land-based ice (glaciers and ice sheets in Greenland and Antarctica), contributes to rising sea levels. For an insurance risk model to be robust, it must account for these distinct physical mechanisms and the ‘thermal inertia’ of the ocean, which causes sea levels to continue rising even after atmospheric temperatures stabilize.
Incorrect: The melting of sea ice (Arctic ice) does not significantly contribute to sea level rise because the ice is already floating and displacing its own weight in water, according to Archimedes’ principle. Paleoclimate data is actually highly relevant for model validation and understanding the long-term sensitivity of sea levels to CO2 levels. Linear projections are considered insufficient for risk management because ice sheet dynamics and thermal expansion are non-linear and vary significantly depending on the specific RCP or SSP scenario being modeled.
Takeaway: Effective insurance risk assessment must distinguish between thermal expansion and land-ice melt as non-linear drivers of sea level rise to accurately project long-term coastal vulnerabilities.
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Question 3 of 10
3. Question
A regulatory inspection at a fund administrator focuses on Climate Risk Underwriting in the context of incident response. The examiner notes that the internal audit team recently reviewed the firm’s reliance on paleoclimate reconstructions, such as dendrochronology and ice core data, to calibrate their 30-year catastrophe models for coastal infrastructure investments. During the review of the 2023 Risk Management Framework, the examiner questions the sufficiency of using these historical proxies as the primary basis for assessing future solvency. Which of the following represents the most critical audit finding regarding the limitation of this approach in climate risk underwriting?
Correct
Correct: Paleoclimate evidence, including ice cores and tree rings (dendrochronology), is essential for understanding the Earth’s climate history and natural variability. However, from an underwriting and risk management perspective, the current era is defined by anthropogenic (human-induced) greenhouse gas emissions which have altered the atmospheric composition and radiative forcing at a rate that exceeds historical natural cycles. Therefore, relying solely on the past (paleoclimate data) to predict the future is insufficient; auditors must ensure that forward-looking models like Earth System Models (ESMs) and General Circulation Models (GCMs) are used to incorporate various Representative Concentration Pathways (RCPs).
Incorrect: The assertion that paleoclimate proxies cannot provide data on sea level rise is incorrect, as sediment cores and other proxies are frequently used to reconstruct historical sea levels. The claim that dendrochronology is ‘outdated’ for failing to capture methane cycles is a misunderstanding of its purpose, which is primarily temperature and precipitation reconstruction. Finally, the idea that historical data loses statistical significance specifically at a 50-year horizon for GCMs is a fabricated constraint; the issue is not the timeframe of the data itself, but the change in the underlying drivers of climate change (natural vs. anthropogenic).
Takeaway: Effective climate risk underwriting must supplement historical paleoclimate evidence with forward-looking climate models to account for the unique impacts of anthropogenic radiative forcing.
Incorrect
Correct: Paleoclimate evidence, including ice cores and tree rings (dendrochronology), is essential for understanding the Earth’s climate history and natural variability. However, from an underwriting and risk management perspective, the current era is defined by anthropogenic (human-induced) greenhouse gas emissions which have altered the atmospheric composition and radiative forcing at a rate that exceeds historical natural cycles. Therefore, relying solely on the past (paleoclimate data) to predict the future is insufficient; auditors must ensure that forward-looking models like Earth System Models (ESMs) and General Circulation Models (GCMs) are used to incorporate various Representative Concentration Pathways (RCPs).
Incorrect: The assertion that paleoclimate proxies cannot provide data on sea level rise is incorrect, as sediment cores and other proxies are frequently used to reconstruct historical sea levels. The claim that dendrochronology is ‘outdated’ for failing to capture methane cycles is a misunderstanding of its purpose, which is primarily temperature and precipitation reconstruction. Finally, the idea that historical data loses statistical significance specifically at a 50-year horizon for GCMs is a fabricated constraint; the issue is not the timeframe of the data itself, but the change in the underlying drivers of climate change (natural vs. anthropogenic).
Takeaway: Effective climate risk underwriting must supplement historical paleoclimate evidence with forward-looking climate models to account for the unique impacts of anthropogenic radiative forcing.
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Question 4 of 10
4. Question
The operations team at an audit firm has encountered an exception involving Shareholder Engagement on Climate Issues during regulatory inspection. They report that while the firm’s ESG policy mandates active dialogue with high-emitting portfolio companies, the internal audit of the 2023 engagement cycle revealed that the engagement objectives for a major utility provider failed to incorporate the specific physical risks associated with projected changes in tropical cyclone intensification. The audit team noted that the engagement focused exclusively on Scope 1 emissions reductions without addressing the resilience of coastal infrastructure to sea level rise and storm surges as projected by Earth System Models (ESMs). Which of the following actions should the internal auditor recommend to ensure the shareholder engagement process effectively addresses climate-related financial risks?
Correct
Correct: Effective shareholder engagement on climate issues requires a comprehensive understanding of both transition risks (emissions) and physical risks (extreme weather, sea level rise). By incorporating forward-looking scenarios like Representative Concentration Pathways (RCPs) and Earth System Models (ESMs), auditors ensure that engagement objectives address the actual scientific projections of climate change impacts on a company’s physical infrastructure and long-term value. This aligns with the need to evaluate risk management controls beyond simple compliance.
Incorrect: Focusing only on historical data and current regulations ignores the forward-looking nature of climate risk and the physical impacts projected by climate science. While reporting frameworks are important, they are a means to an end; engagement must address the underlying risks, such as storm tracks and intensity, rather than just the format of the report. Divestment is a portfolio management strategy, not an engagement strategy, and it ignores the auditor’s role in evaluating how the firm manages the risk management processes of the investee through active ownership.
Takeaway: Effective climate-related shareholder engagement must bridge the gap between climate science projections, such as extreme weather intensification, and corporate risk management strategies.
Incorrect
Correct: Effective shareholder engagement on climate issues requires a comprehensive understanding of both transition risks (emissions) and physical risks (extreme weather, sea level rise). By incorporating forward-looking scenarios like Representative Concentration Pathways (RCPs) and Earth System Models (ESMs), auditors ensure that engagement objectives address the actual scientific projections of climate change impacts on a company’s physical infrastructure and long-term value. This aligns with the need to evaluate risk management controls beyond simple compliance.
Incorrect: Focusing only on historical data and current regulations ignores the forward-looking nature of climate risk and the physical impacts projected by climate science. While reporting frameworks are important, they are a means to an end; engagement must address the underlying risks, such as storm tracks and intensity, rather than just the format of the report. Divestment is a portfolio management strategy, not an engagement strategy, and it ignores the auditor’s role in evaluating how the firm manages the risk management processes of the investee through active ownership.
Takeaway: Effective climate-related shareholder engagement must bridge the gap between climate science projections, such as extreme weather intensification, and corporate risk management strategies.
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Question 5 of 10
5. Question
A gap analysis conducted at a fund administrator regarding National Climate Policies as part of onboarding concluded that the current risk assessment framework fails to account for the long-term feedback loops associated with carbon cycle dynamics. Specifically, the internal audit team noted that the administrator’s valuation models for land-use intensive assets do not incorporate the potential for terrestrial carbon sinks to transition into carbon sources under high-warming scenarios. Which of the following scientific concepts best explains why a national policy focusing solely on current anthropogenic emission rates might underestimate the risk of future atmospheric CO2 concentrations?
Correct
Correct: The carbon cycle involves natural reservoirs, such as oceans, soils, and forests, which currently absorb approximately half of anthropogenic CO2 emissions. National policies that only track direct emissions may fail to account for the risk that these sinks can become saturated or, due to climate-induced changes like permafrost thaw or forest dieback, transition into net sources of carbon. This positive feedback loop would significantly increase atmospheric concentrations even if human emissions are reduced, representing a critical risk for long-term asset valuation.
Incorrect: Focusing on the radiative forcing of short-lived pollutants addresses the potency and lifespan of different gases but does not explain the systemic risk of natural carbon reservoir transitions. Reconstructing paleoclimate data through dendrochronology and sediment cores provides historical context for climate variability but does not address the forward-looking risk of carbon sink saturation. The relationship between thermal expansion and ice melt pertains to the mechanisms of sea-level rise rather than the dynamics of the carbon cycle and atmospheric CO2 accumulation.
Takeaway: Climate risk assessments must look beyond direct emission rates to include the potential for natural carbon sinks to become sources due to feedback loops in the carbon cycle.
Incorrect
Correct: The carbon cycle involves natural reservoirs, such as oceans, soils, and forests, which currently absorb approximately half of anthropogenic CO2 emissions. National policies that only track direct emissions may fail to account for the risk that these sinks can become saturated or, due to climate-induced changes like permafrost thaw or forest dieback, transition into net sources of carbon. This positive feedback loop would significantly increase atmospheric concentrations even if human emissions are reduced, representing a critical risk for long-term asset valuation.
Incorrect: Focusing on the radiative forcing of short-lived pollutants addresses the potency and lifespan of different gases but does not explain the systemic risk of natural carbon reservoir transitions. Reconstructing paleoclimate data through dendrochronology and sediment cores provides historical context for climate variability but does not address the forward-looking risk of carbon sink saturation. The relationship between thermal expansion and ice melt pertains to the mechanisms of sea-level rise rather than the dynamics of the carbon cycle and atmospheric CO2 accumulation.
Takeaway: Climate risk assessments must look beyond direct emission rates to include the potential for natural carbon sinks to become sources due to feedback loops in the carbon cycle.
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Question 6 of 10
6. Question
The compliance framework at a wealth manager is being updated to address Corporate Governance and Climate Risk as part of regulatory inspection. A challenge arises because the Board of Directors must determine how to integrate complex climate science, such as Representative Concentration Pathways (RCPs), into their long-term risk appetite statement. During a review of the 2024 strategic plan, the internal audit team notes that the current risk assessment lacks a forward-looking mechanism to evaluate how different greenhouse gas concentration trajectories might impact the valuation of the firm’s infrastructure-heavy portfolio. To align with best practices in corporate governance and climate risk management, which action should the board prioritize?
Correct
Correct: Effective corporate governance in the context of climate risk requires the use of forward-looking scenario analysis. Representative Concentration Pathways (RCPs) are the standard scientific scenarios used to describe different climate futures based on greenhouse gas concentrations. By integrating these into strategic planning, the board fulfills its fiduciary duty to assess long-term risks that are not captured by historical data, allowing for a more resilient investment strategy.
Incorrect: Restricting assessment to direct operational footprints ignores the much larger financed emissions and physical risks inherent in an investment portfolio. Using only a single best-case scenario is a failure of risk management as it ignores the range of uncertainty and potential tail risks associated with higher-warming scenarios like RCP 8.5. Assigning climate science interpretation solely to external relations treats climate risk as a reputational or marketing issue rather than a material financial and strategic risk that requires board-level oversight.
Takeaway: Robust corporate governance requires boards to utilize forward-looking climate scenarios, such as RCPs, to assess the resilience of their core business and investment strategies against diverse future climate outcomes.
Incorrect
Correct: Effective corporate governance in the context of climate risk requires the use of forward-looking scenario analysis. Representative Concentration Pathways (RCPs) are the standard scientific scenarios used to describe different climate futures based on greenhouse gas concentrations. By integrating these into strategic planning, the board fulfills its fiduciary duty to assess long-term risks that are not captured by historical data, allowing for a more resilient investment strategy.
Incorrect: Restricting assessment to direct operational footprints ignores the much larger financed emissions and physical risks inherent in an investment portfolio. Using only a single best-case scenario is a failure of risk management as it ignores the range of uncertainty and potential tail risks associated with higher-warming scenarios like RCP 8.5. Assigning climate science interpretation solely to external relations treats climate risk as a reputational or marketing issue rather than a material financial and strategic risk that requires board-level oversight.
Takeaway: Robust corporate governance requires boards to utilize forward-looking climate scenarios, such as RCPs, to assess the resilience of their core business and investment strategies against diverse future climate outcomes.
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Question 7 of 10
7. Question
Excerpt from a suspicious activity escalation: In work related to Just Transition as part of client suitability at an audit firm, it was noted that a regional energy provider is accelerating the closure of its high-methane-emitting facilities to align with the SSP1-1.9 scenario projections. The internal audit team found that while the technical decommissioning plan is robust, the client has not yet established a mechanism to mitigate the economic displacement of the specialized workforce currently managing these legacy assets. To ensure the audit firm’s assessment of the client’s ESG risk profile is accurate, which approach should the internal auditor advocate for to ensure the client’s transition strategy effectively incorporates the social dimension of the Just Transition framework?
Correct
Correct: A Just Transition requires that the shift to a low-carbon economy is as fair and inclusive as possible to everyone concerned, creating decent work opportunities and leaving no one behind. By establishing a collaborative governance structure that includes labor and community stakeholders, the company ensures that the transition addresses the specific socio-economic needs of the displaced workforce through retraining and local economic development, which is a core pillar of the International Labour Organization (ILO) guidelines.
Incorrect: Reinvesting in CCS to extend asset life may delay decarbonization and does not address the social impact on the workforce. Standardized severance policies, while transparent, do not provide the long-term economic security or career transition support required by Just Transition principles. Automating facilities to reduce labor requirements actively contradicts the goal of maintaining decent work and social stability during the transition process.
Takeaway: A Just Transition necessitates balancing environmental decarbonization goals with social equity through proactive stakeholder engagement and workforce development programs.
Incorrect
Correct: A Just Transition requires that the shift to a low-carbon economy is as fair and inclusive as possible to everyone concerned, creating decent work opportunities and leaving no one behind. By establishing a collaborative governance structure that includes labor and community stakeholders, the company ensures that the transition addresses the specific socio-economic needs of the displaced workforce through retraining and local economic development, which is a core pillar of the International Labour Organization (ILO) guidelines.
Incorrect: Reinvesting in CCS to extend asset life may delay decarbonization and does not address the social impact on the workforce. Standardized severance policies, while transparent, do not provide the long-term economic security or career transition support required by Just Transition principles. Automating facilities to reduce labor requirements actively contradicts the goal of maintaining decent work and social stability during the transition process.
Takeaway: A Just Transition necessitates balancing environmental decarbonization goals with social equity through proactive stakeholder engagement and workforce development programs.
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Question 8 of 10
8. Question
Following an on-site examination at a private bank, regulators raised concerns about Climate Change and Public Health Systems in the context of change management. Their preliminary finding is that the bank’s internal audit function has not adequately assessed the resilience of its commercial lending portfolio against the indirect financial impacts of climate-induced health crises. Specifically, the regulators noted that the bank’s risk models for the 2025-2030 strategic period fail to account for the potential disruption in labor productivity and increased healthcare costs under high-emission scenarios like RCP 8.5. Which of the following actions should the internal audit team prioritize to address this finding and ensure robust change management?
Correct
Correct: The correct approach involves evaluating the integration of epidemiological climate projections derived from Earth System Models (ESMs) into the bank’s credit risk stress-testing framework. This addresses the regulatory finding by ensuring that the bank’s risk assessment processes are scientifically grounded and capable of identifying financial vulnerabilities related to labor productivity and healthcare costs. From an internal audit perspective, this validates the adequacy of the risk management framework and the technical accuracy of the change management process in response to emerging climate risks.
Incorrect: Recommending immediate divestment is a strategic management decision rather than an internal audit function; the auditor’s role is to evaluate the risk assessment process, not to dictate portfolio composition. Focusing on internal human resources policies is incorrect because it ignores the regulator’s specific concern regarding the commercial lending portfolio’s resilience to external economic shocks. Mandating a qualitative description in a sustainability report is insufficient because it fails to address the core finding regarding the inadequacy of the quantitative risk models and stress-testing frameworks used for financial decision-making.
Takeaway: Internal audit must ensure that climate-driven health risks are quantitatively integrated into credit risk frameworks using scientifically recognized models to maintain robust risk management and regulatory compliance.
Incorrect
Correct: The correct approach involves evaluating the integration of epidemiological climate projections derived from Earth System Models (ESMs) into the bank’s credit risk stress-testing framework. This addresses the regulatory finding by ensuring that the bank’s risk assessment processes are scientifically grounded and capable of identifying financial vulnerabilities related to labor productivity and healthcare costs. From an internal audit perspective, this validates the adequacy of the risk management framework and the technical accuracy of the change management process in response to emerging climate risks.
Incorrect: Recommending immediate divestment is a strategic management decision rather than an internal audit function; the auditor’s role is to evaluate the risk assessment process, not to dictate portfolio composition. Focusing on internal human resources policies is incorrect because it ignores the regulator’s specific concern regarding the commercial lending portfolio’s resilience to external economic shocks. Mandating a qualitative description in a sustainability report is insufficient because it fails to address the core finding regarding the inadequacy of the quantitative risk models and stress-testing frameworks used for financial decision-making.
Takeaway: Internal audit must ensure that climate-driven health risks are quantitatively integrated into credit risk frameworks using scientifically recognized models to maintain robust risk management and regulatory compliance.
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Question 9 of 10
9. Question
You have recently joined a broker-dealer as information security manager. Your first major assignment involves Green Building Standards during whistleblowing, and a policy exception request indicates that the firm’s primary data center has deferred the implementation of energy-efficient cooling protocols required by its environmental certification. The whistleblower claims that the resulting increase in Scope 2 greenhouse gas emissions has been intentionally omitted from the annual sustainability report to maintain the firm’s carbon neutral status. When evaluating the risk of this exception, which factor should be prioritized to ensure the integrity of the firm’s climate risk management framework?
Correct
Correct: Internal auditors must prioritize the reliability and integrity of organizational information. In the context of sustainability and climate risk, intentionally omitting Scope 2 emissions (indirect emissions from purchased electricity) to maintain a carbon-neutral claim constitutes greenwashing. This poses significant legal, regulatory, and reputational risks, particularly for financial institutions subject to mandatory ESG disclosure requirements and anti-fraud regulations.
Incorrect
Correct: Internal auditors must prioritize the reliability and integrity of organizational information. In the context of sustainability and climate risk, intentionally omitting Scope 2 emissions (indirect emissions from purchased electricity) to maintain a carbon-neutral claim constitutes greenwashing. This poses significant legal, regulatory, and reputational risks, particularly for financial institutions subject to mandatory ESG disclosure requirements and anti-fraud regulations.
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Question 10 of 10
10. Question
A procedure review at a fintech lender has identified gaps in Supplier Engagement and Collaboration on Climate Action as part of market conduct. The review highlights that the organization lacks a standardized framework for assessing the climate resilience of its critical third-party data center providers. Specifically, the internal audit team found that while 85% of vendors provide annual sustainability reports, these reports lack alignment with the Shared Socioeconomic Pathways (SSPs) used in the lender’s own internal risk modeling. The Chief Risk Officer (CRO) is concerned that this misalignment prevents a consolidated view of physical risks over a 10-year horizon. Which of the following actions should the internal auditor recommend to most effectively bridge the gap between supplier disclosures and the organization’s climate risk assessment framework?
Correct
Correct: Requiring suppliers to align their scenario analysis with the organization’s chosen Shared Socioeconomic Pathways (SSPs) is the most effective way to ensure data interoperability. SSPs provide a range of plausible future climates based on different socioeconomic developments. By aligning these scenarios, the internal auditor ensures that the vendor’s physical risk data (such as flood or heat stress risks to data centers) can be directly integrated into the lender’s own enterprise risk management and stress-testing frameworks, providing a coherent view of long-term resilience.
Incorrect: Mandating net-zero emissions focuses on mitigation but does not address the physical risk data gap or the need for scenario alignment for risk modeling. Increasing the frequency of reporting to a quarterly basis provides more data points but does not fix the underlying methodological misalignment between the vendor’s data and the lender’s models. Replacing internal SSP-based models with vendor-provided metrics is inappropriate as it would likely weaken the organization’s risk management standards and rely on fragmented, non-standardized data from various third parties.
Takeaway: Effective supplier engagement for climate risk requires aligning vendor disclosures with the organization’s specific scenario analysis frameworks to ensure data comparability and integration into risk models.
Incorrect
Correct: Requiring suppliers to align their scenario analysis with the organization’s chosen Shared Socioeconomic Pathways (SSPs) is the most effective way to ensure data interoperability. SSPs provide a range of plausible future climates based on different socioeconomic developments. By aligning these scenarios, the internal auditor ensures that the vendor’s physical risk data (such as flood or heat stress risks to data centers) can be directly integrated into the lender’s own enterprise risk management and stress-testing frameworks, providing a coherent view of long-term resilience.
Incorrect: Mandating net-zero emissions focuses on mitigation but does not address the physical risk data gap or the need for scenario alignment for risk modeling. Increasing the frequency of reporting to a quarterly basis provides more data points but does not fix the underlying methodological misalignment between the vendor’s data and the lender’s models. Replacing internal SSP-based models with vendor-provided metrics is inappropriate as it would likely weaken the organization’s risk management standards and rely on fragmented, non-standardized data from various third parties.
Takeaway: Effective supplier engagement for climate risk requires aligning vendor disclosures with the organization’s specific scenario analysis frameworks to ensure data comparability and integration into risk models.