The UK Centre for Greening Finance and Investment (CGFI) is a national centre established to accelerate the adoption and use of climate and environmental data and analytics by financial institutions internationally.
Available DatasetsShowing 4 of 4 results
- CFRF Data/Tools Providers ListThe Climate Financial Risk Forum (CFRF) list of data and tools providers is a collection of currently-available climate risk data, tools and products for financial institutions. It has been created to serve as an illustrative list of current climate risk offerings, highlighting the variety and scope of what is currently available in the marketplace. This is to ultimately support research and decision making around climate risk product procurement. The database has been designed to provide practitioners with relevant information in a digestible and searchable format.1Licence not specified11 months ago
- CFRF Climate Narrative ToolThe tool summarises the relevant climate-related risks and opportunities for banks, insurers and asset managers based on the business activities, products, or risks of the firm and the materiality of different lending exposure types, underwriting classes, asset classes, and economic sectors for the firm. The tool can generate two types of report: an Institutional Report which gives a report tailored to your institution a Sector Report which allows users to see the content for an individual sector1Licence not specified11 months ago
- The Global Systemic Risk Assessment Tool (G-SRAT)The Global Systemic Risk Assessment Tool (G-SRAT) is a data and analytics portal covering hazards, exposure, vulnerability and risk to infrastructure and people around the world. This tool aims to support climate adaptation decision-making by identifying spatial vulnerabilities and risks under current and future climate scenarios.1Licence not specified11 months ago
- CGFI Wind and Flood Risk Correlation ExplorerThe Wind/Flood Risk Correlation Explorer demo displays correlations for wind gust vs precipitation or river flow, as well as correlations between the team’s new Flood Severity and Storm Severity indices.1Licence not specified11 months ago
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