The PZU Group is aware of the fact that the provision of insurance, banking and investment services is an area in which decisions of individual companies may influence client behaviors and is aware of the bearing they may have on the natural environment. In respect of large clients, such as industrial plants, engineering underwriting is performed to enable the insurer to calculate the premiums. A detailed outcome of the underwriting exercise along with full risk assessment and scenarios are presented to the client. The underwriting covers business risks, which are often combined with environmental risks. For this reason, the actions taken by the client to eliminate or reduce certain elements of its risks, even if induced solely by an attempt to suppress insurance costs, contribute to diminishing the risks to the environment or humans.
The PZU Group participates in social dialogue and debates on sustainable development. As part of the Climate Summit (COP24) organized under the auspices of the United Nations, the PZU Group was one of the organizers of the City Day. The panel discussion moderated by PZU was entitled “Diagnosing the current state of the natural environment and forecasting changes in its quality”. The topics of other meetings included decarbonization of urban and road transport, adaptation to climate change in urban centers and challenges associated with climate change.
Climate change risk management in the PZU Group
The PZU Group keeps monitoring the activities and initiatives undertaken by financial institutions and international organizations. Among them are the United Nations (UN), the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) and the European Commission.
A key initiative for European insurers is the Climate Agreement entered into by 195 countries in Paris in 2015. Its provisions include the disclosure and management of risks related to climate change in the financial sector, including recommendations issued by the Task Force on Climate-Related Financial Disclosures (TCFD). In turn, from the perspective of limiting natural disasters, the point of reference is the “Action Plan on the Sendai Framework for Disaster Risk Reduction 2015-2030,a disaster risk-informed approach for all EU policies”.
Regulations requiring that climate change risk be taken into account in the business of financial institutions, including insurance companies, have also been developed by the European Commission. For several years now, organizations doing business in the financial sector have been gradually withdrawing from providing funding or insuring coal and energy companies and projects. It is expected that the financial sector will provide increasing support to real sectors of the economy, especially power generation, transport and industry, in reducing climate change caused by greenhouse gas emissions.
In Poland, the potential impact of climate change in the coming decades will result from a combination of the following two factors:
These two factors, combined with the country’s adaptability, including those of the public sector (central and local governments), companies and citizens, the health condition and the place of residence, will define the resilience of both the country and the PZU Group’s clients to climate change.
The PZU Group takes a number of initiatives to boost the resilience of both country and its clients to climate change.
This is done by:
Source: Prepared based on World Bank (2010), Adapting to climate change in Eastern Europe and Central Asia, Washington D.C.
“It is worth paying attention to the company’s involvement in aid actions such as the provision of aid to people affected by natural disasters.”
The PZU Group regularly updates its databases containing details of weather events that occurred in the last 20 years (augmented with information on floods and cyclones). Furthermore, the PZU Group analyzes damage events broken down by geographies (interactive high resolution floodplain maps for Poland are being developed allowing for various flood scenarios). Early warning systems against floods and other events are also being improved (mass social campaigns and information campaigns are carried out to raise awareness among the Polish population).
Areas to which alerts were most frequently directed in 2018 broken down by weather phenomena
As many as 28,000 cases of damage in winter agricultural crops are reported annually to PZU. Total claims paid on this account may reach nearly PLN 250 million. In order to carry out a proper valuation of such damage, PZU uses an innovative remote sensing method – maps of agricultural crops are superimposed on aerial photographs taken by planes and drones. This activity accelerates the claims handling process. Its additional advantage is that the findings are unbiased.
PZU manages its indirect impact on the natural environment through the insurance products it offers:
Counteracting climate risks | Examples of actions taken by the PZU Group |
Reducing greenhouse gas emissions |
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Adaptation: better understanding of risk factors |
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Adaptation: customizing the product offer to the risk factors |
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Adaptation: innovations to protect the future |
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The PZU Group’s insurance business is aimed at offering insurance products tailored to the needs of both individual and corporate clients in various sectors of the economy. The Group’s highest priority is to properly respond to the current needs of the Polish market and economy in accordance with national and EU regulations (including those safeguarding the principles of fair competition and permitting cooperation only with those business clients whose activity, according to PZU’s knowledge, complies with the applicable laws). The complexity of needs, and - consequently - of the offer, has led PZU do provide, inter alia, insurance cover to entities in the mining and power sectors. Besides traditional operations based on coal, clients from this group also develop their activities in the area of renewable energy sources. The PZU Group plans further development of policy and practices in the area of indirect environmental impact, abiding by sectoral trends and the specificity of Polish economy.
Environmental guarantee
The PZU Environmental Guarantee offers support to businesses, both natural and legal persons. The guarantee is a commitment to pay a specified compensation if the company to which the guarantee has been granted fails to remove adverse environmental effects of its business operations. The beneficiary of this guarantee is the environmental protection authority issuing the relevant administrative instrument giving a permit to use natural resources, e.g. the marshal, provincial governor (voivod) or county governor (starost).
The guarantee offers a form of protection to companies whose activities may have an adverse impact on the environment, e.g.: