Climate Risk & Science News | ESG & Sustainability | OneStop ESG
87 articles · Page 1 of 8
87 articles · Page 1 of 8
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Satellite data have exposed a significant gap between reported and measured methane emissions, with some basins running several times higher than official inventories. At the same time, the EU Methane Regulation is turning import access into a compliance question. For sustainability professionals, the numbers underpinning disclosures and the rules governing gas markets are both shifting.





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Climate change acts as a systemic risk where a single climate shock such as heatwaves, floods, or droughts can trigger disruptions across energy systems, agriculture, water resources, infrastructure, supply chains, and financial markets.
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Climate change acts as a systemic risk where a single climate shock such as heatwaves, floods, or droughts can trigger disruptions across energy systems, agriculture, water resources, infrastructure, supply chains, and financial markets.


Floods, storms, heatwaves, and wildfires are the visible signs of climate change, but they are only the surface. Beneath them lie deeper systemic risks, supply chain disruption, infrastructure damage, insurance instability, and financial market exposure that shape long-term economic stability.
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Climate change acts as a risk multiplier. Extreme weather disrupts agriculture, which destabilizes food supply, drives price shocks, and triggers wider economic and geopolitical pressures. What begins as a physical climate impact quickly cascades into systemic risks affecting markets, supply chains, and global stability.
