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Map 2:
Jurisdictions that participated in the data collection
climate-policy relevant by some investors and
not relevant by other investors
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Within a country, physical risk impacts may
vary greatly between regions, municipalities
or even between different postal codes,
depending on for instance the proximity to
the coast or the level of elevation. This is
particularly relevant to the real estate analysis,
as the ND-GAIN and WRI methods rely on
country-wide rankings rather than the climate
quality of a single building.
Specific limitations and assumptions relating to the
classification of equity, corporate bonds, and loans
and mortgages in climate-relevant sectors are
described in subsection 3.4.1.1.
3.3 DATA COLLECTION AND COVERAGE
To support this report, the IAIS collected
quantitative and qualitative information from IAIS
Members. This TCDC is similar to the sector-wide
monitoring data collection of the regular GME, as
it covers data at a sector-wide level (aggregated
data from legal entities within a jurisdiction)
and has both a quantitative and a qualitative
component. The quantitative information is based
on year-end 2019; the qualitative information
represents the situation as of March 2021. The
analysis focuses solely on the insurance sector
investments in the general account (GA); unit-
linked or separate accounts are excluded.
The data collection outcomes in this report should
be interpreted with some caution, since this is
the first time data was collected at the global
level to assess climate-related risks in insurance
investment portfolios and given the best effort
nature of the data collection. At the same time, a
specific data dictionary was developed to ensure
the consistency of data as much as possible,
including across regions.
A total of 32 IAIS Members, representing around
75% of the global insurance market in terms of
gross written premiums, provided data. They are
highlighted in green on the following world map.
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A few jurisdictions shared qualitative information
only. While the quantitative information was directly
available in some jurisdictions, other Members had
difficulties in collecting this information if relying
solely on existing supervisory reporting. As such, a
few Members relied on an ad-hoc data collection
among a subset within their insurance sector to
provide the requested information.
There is also good coverage in terms of the
insurance sector’s asset mix (see Graph 3). For
most jurisdictions, the total insurance sector was
covered – with some exceptions as denoted with
the striped grey bars in the graph. On average, the
five asset classes under analysis account for more
than half of reported total assets, with relatively
better coverage in Europe, South Africa and Latin
America. Assets not covered include items such
Source: IAIS data collections
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