Washington, D.C. – In case you missed it, U.S.
Senator Pat Toomey (R-Pa.) and all Republicans on the Senate Banking Committee
urged the Federal Reserve to refrain from using its regulatory authority to
further environmental objectives, which is beyond the scope of the Fed’s
mission.
Fox News’s Jonathan Garber wrote:
“We question both the purpose
and efficacy of climate-related banking regulation and scenario analysis,
especially because the Federal Reserve lacks jurisdiction over and expertise in
environmental matters,” wrote Ranking member Sen. Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania
and the other Republican members of the Senate Banking Committee.
The senators expressed their
concerns over the accuracy of climate models that may be used to form the
central bank’s decision and highlighted the difficulty scientists have had in
making accurate climate predictions. They also noted that financial
institutions have no way of knowing the value of their assets in the future.
“This effort is not grounded
in science or economics, but is instead a self-fulfilling prophesy: claim there
are financial risks with energy exploration and other disfavored investments
then use the levers of government—via the unelected bureaucracy—to ban or limit
those activities,” the senators wrote.
The full story is available online here
and below.
GOP Senators Warn Federal Reserve on Climate Change Actions
Fox News
By Jonathan Garber
Republican members of the Senate Banking Committee sent a letter
to Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell warning him against using the central
bank’s regulatory authority to implement climate change regulations, which is
beyond the scope of its mission.
Recent actions taken by the Fed suggest the central bank may be looking
to assert its influence in playing an indirect role in climate change
regulation.
The Fed has over the past year included climate change in its
financial stability report for the first time, joined the Network of Central
Banks and Supervisors for Greening the Financial System, and established a
committee to analyze the potential impact of climate change on financial
institutions, infrastructure and markets.
Additionally, Fed Governor Lael Brainard said last month the
central bank may consider subjecting banks to climate scenario analysis.
“We question both the purpose and efficacy of climate-related
banking regulation and scenario analysis, especially because the Federal
Reserve lacks jurisdiction over and expertise in environmental matters,” wrote Ranking
member Sen. Pat Toomey of Pennsylvania and the other Republican members of the
Senate Banking Committee.
The senators expressed their concerns over the accuracy of climate
models that may be used to form the central bank’s decision and highlighted the
difficulty scientists have had in making accurate climate predictions. They
also noted that financial institutions have no way of knowing the value of
their assets in the future.
“This effort is not grounded in science or economics, but is
instead a self-fulfilling prophesy: claim there are financial risks with energy
exploration and other disfavored investments then use the levers of
government—via the unelected bureaucracy—to ban or limit those activities,” the
senators wrote.
They said banks are in the best position to decide which risks are
the biggest threat to their business, evaluate those risks and respond
accordingly.
"Financial regulation does not and should not seek to guard
against every type of unforeseen event; rather, it should ensure that financial
institutions are resilient and have the capability to withstand unique economic
and financial market stresses as they arise,” the senators wrote.
The Federal Reserve Board of Governors has “received the letter
and plan[s] to respond,” a spokesperson told FOX Business.
The Fed is an independent government agency that is accountable to
the public and Congress. The central bank’s objective is to achieve maximum
employment and stable prices. Monetary policy decisions are supposed to be made
absent of political pressure.
While there is no evidence that anyone from the Biden
administration has exerted undue influence on the Fed to take action on the
environment, the steps taken by the central bank come amid a broader push to
combat climate change.
The Biden administration has made Democratic Rep. Alexandria
Ocasio-Cortez’s Green New Deal, which calls for net-zero carbon emissions by
2050, a “framework” for its policy.
Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, a former Fed chair, on Wednesday
vowed to use the “full power” of the government to combat climate change.
Yellen, who is building a team at the Treasury Department to focus on climate
change, pledged to make the issue a primary focus of her tenure.
Climate actions aren’t limited to the Treasury. Virtually every
aspect of the Biden administration has been directed to focus on the issue.
Biden, in the early days of his administration, signed a flurry of executive
orders aimed at transitioning the U.S. economy away from its reliance on fossil
fuels toward cleaner, renewable energy sources like solar and wind.
Those actions included rejoining the 2016 Paris climate agreement,
revoking the permit for the Keystone XL pipeline, and instituting a temporary
ban on new permits and leases for drilling on federal lands and waters.
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