Analysis: Debt in a warm climate: coronavirus and carbon set scene for default

LONDON, Aug 12 (Reuters) – Where COVID-19 has precipitated unprecedented debts, climate change could trigger defaults across a planet which a United Nations panel says is dangerously close to runaway warming.

To avert disaster, countries are committing to carbon cutting steps. But these will be costly and likely to add to a global debt pile which asset manager Janus Henderson estimates ballooned to $62.5 trillion by the end of last year.

With floods and wildfires devastating the world, estimates vary on how much damage warming will inflict on its economy.

But a report earlier this year by BofA put it at $54-69 trillion by 2100, which compares to a valuation of the entire global economy of around $80 trillion. read more

The financial repercussions could manifest themselves in under a decade, a study by index provider FTSE Russell warns.

The first climate-linked credit rating downgrades are set to hit countries soon, the report’s co-author and FTSE Russell’s senior sustainable investment manager, Julien Moussavi, added.

In a worst-case “hot house world” scenario developing countries including Malaysia, South Africa, Mexico and even wealthier economies such as Italy may default on debt by 2050.

In another, where governments are initially slow to react, states including Australia, Poland, Japan and Israel, will be at risk of default and ratings downgrades too, the study concluded.

Reuters Image
Reuters Image

While developing countries are inherently more vulnerable to rising sea levels and drought, richer ones will not escape the climate change fallout, such studies show.

“You can talk about climate change and its impact and it won’t be long before someone talks about Barbados, Fiji, or the Maldives,” Moritz Kraemer, chief economist at Countryrisk.io and former head of sovereign ratings at S&P Global.

“What was a surprise to me is the impact on higher-rated, richer countries,” Kraemer added.

Another study by a group of universities including Cambridge concluded that 63 countries – roughly half the number rated by S&P Global, Moody’s and Fitch – could see credit ratings cut by 2030 because of climate change. read more

China, Chile, Malaysia, and Mexico would be the hardest hit with six notches of downgrades by the end of the century, it said, while the United States, Germany, Canada, Australia, India, and Peru could see around four.

The corresponding increase in borrowing costs would add $137–$205 billion to countries’ combined annual debt service payments by 2100, this study estimated.

Ratings downgrades typically raise borrowing costs, especially if they cause countries to be ejected from bond indexes tracked by funds managing trillions of dollars.

WARNING LIGHT

Developed countries are ramping up spending to temper climate damage, with Germany creating a 30 billion euro recovery fund after recent floods, while Singapore is budgeting the equivalent of $72 billion to protect against rising sea levels in the next century .

For emerging economies, already scarred by COVID-19, the climate crisis will heap on more pressure.

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) warns that a 10 percentage-point rise in climate change vulnerability, as measured by the Notre Dame Global Adaptation Initiative index, is associated with an increase of over 150 basis points in long-term government bond spreads for developing nations.

The average rise across all countries was 30 bps.

The U.N. environment programme estimates that in developing countries, annual adaptation costs will be as much as $300 billion in 2030, rising to $500 billion in 2050.

As a percentage of gross domestic product, sovereign debt is still about 60% in emerging economies, data from the Institute of International Finance (IIF) shows, versus 100% or so in the United States and Britain, and 200% in Japan, .

The rise from pre-pandemic levels of around 52% is a particular concern. European, U.S. and Japanese central banks are essentially underwriting state borrowing, but this is not possible in poor countries, who must ultimately repay debt.

“How do you enable the sort of funding that is required given the high debt levels and the importance of the ratings frameworks?” Sonja Gibbs, director for global capital markets at the IIF said.

Reuters Image

Reporting by Dhara Ranasinghe and Karin Strohecker; Editing by Sujata Rao and Alexander Smith

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

Source: https://www.reuters.com/business/sustainable-business/debt-warm-climate-coronavirus-carbon-set-scene-default-2021-08-12/

World Economic Magazine

Recent Posts

Peli Unveils 9730 Remote Area Lighting System, Redefining Portable Lighting for High-Risk Field Operations

Peli Products has launched the Peli™ 9730 Remote Area Lighting System, a next-generation portable lighting…

8 hours ago

Polaris Brings Back Free Snowmobile Rides Program for February 2026

Polaris Inc. is set to revive its popular Free Snowmobile Rides program in February 2026

8 hours ago

George Quinn Appointed Partner, Fractional Talent at Slone Partners

Slone Partners has appointed George Quinn as Partner, Fractional Talent, strengthening its focus on flexible

1 day ago

Philippe Brochard Appointed Chairman of Advisory Committee at Hanshow

Hanshow has appointed Philippe Brochard as Chairman of its Advisory Committee, strengthening the company’s governance…

1 day ago

Tiiny AI Introduces Pocket Lab, Redefining Personal and Private AI Computing

Tiiny AI’s Pocket Lab makes headlines at CES 2026 with a pocket size personal AI…

2 days ago

Cash buyers, ready homes dominate Dubai’s thriving resale market for ultra-luxury villas

Study by fäm Luxe highlights how Dubai has built ecosystem designed to attract and retain…

3 days ago