- Webcast -
Tuesday, July 9, 2024 4:00 PM
Risk managers should understand how nature loss impacts their business. In this webcast, we outline why nature is a critical new risk area, and how your firm can get started managing those risks.
In April, GARP released the findings from its first global survey of nature risk management across 48 top financial firms with nearly USD 33 trillion of assets. It found that only a few firms are advanced in understanding and managing nature-related risks. The vast majority of firms are still working out how nature loss could impact their portfolio and how they should start identifying and managing it.
This webcast is aimed at those who are new to nature and confused about the terminology and how it might be relevant as a financial risk. We will be looking at:
Maxine Nelson
Senior Vice President, GARP Risk Institute
Jo Paisley
President, GARP Risk Institute
Senior Vice President, GARP Risk Institute
Maxine is a Senior Vice President at the GARP Risk Institute, GARP’s research and thought leadership arm, where she focusses on climate and environmental financial risk management.
She has extensive experience in risk, capital and regulation gained from a wide-ranging variety of roles, including Global Head of Wholesale Risk Analytics and Head of Capital Planning at HSBC, significantly expanding counterparty credit risk management at the UK Financial Services Authority during the last financial crisis, leading the credit risk team at KPMG London, senior credit risk consultant at Oliver Wyman, and embedding operational risk analytics globally at National Australia Bank. Maxine has a degree in mechanical engineering and a PhD about how best to apply probability theory to real world problems.
President, GARP Risk Institute
Jo Paisley is co-President of the GARP Risk Institute, the thought leadership arm of GARP. Set up in early 2018, the Institute works across all risk disciplines, with Jo’s focus to date on climate risk management and scenario analysis, stress testing and operational resilience.
Her career began at the Bank of England where she worked in a variety of roles across macroeconomics, statistics, supervision and risk. Her last role was as a Director of the Supervisory Risk Specialists Division within the Prudential Regulation Authority, where she was heavily involved in the design and execution of the UK’s first concurrent stress test in 2014. She left the Bank in 2015 and joined HSBC as their Global Head of Stress Testing. She has also worked as an independent stress testing consultant, advising firms on how to get the most value out of stress testing.
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