Dear all,

Sorry for the reaction to this message, which I truly hope is "one of a kind" but something tells me I am likely wrong.
If the financial sector indeed needs to consul the intellectual power of the poor university faculty, then it should pay the consulting fees, and certainly not charge 
attendance fees.

Best of luck to them in solving the problems whose main cause is human greed!
Kind regards, 
Vlada Limic 

On Wednesday, July 29, 2020, Monica Billio <billio@unive.it> wrote:

19th INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE

CREDIT 2020

Assessing and Managing Climate Change Risk:

Opportunities for Financial Institutions

Venice, Italy

26 –27 September 2019

COVID-19 update: the CREDIT 2020 Conference is both onsite and online but we are ready to move the conference remotely, if necessary.

GRETA Associati (Venice, Italy), Cattolica Assicurazioni (Verona, Italy), European DataWarehouse (Frankfurt am Main, Germany), CRIF (Bologna, Italy), European Investment Fund (Luxembourg), European Investment Bank (Luxembourg) and Intesa Sanpaolo (Milan, Italy) are co-sponsors of a Conference to be held in Venice on September 24-25, 2020. The objective of the Conference is to bring together academics, practitioners and PhD students working in the area of risk management. The conference will provide an opportunity for participants engaged in research at the forefront of this area to discuss both the causes and implications of recent financial and climate-related events and may, in turn, suggest fruitful and policy-relevant directions for future research. The Conference, organised under the auspices of the Department of Economics and VERA - Venice centre in Economic and Risk Analytics for public policies (University Ca’ Foscari of Venice), ABI - Italian Banking Association, AIAF - Associazione Italiana per l'Analisi Finanziaria and the Joint Research Center, European Commission (Ispra, Italy), is the nineteenth of a series dedicated to various aspects of credit risk.

The UN 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and the adoption of European Commission’s Action Plan on Sustainable Finance mark important international commitments to the objective of a more sustainable economy and society. However, their successful implementation is tightly related to the scaling up of low-carbon investments and divestment from carbon-intensive investments. This, in turn, requires an assessment of the credit risks stemming from investors’ exposure to economic activities and assets that could be stranded by climate change. For instance, regulators’ discussion about the revision of capital requirements aimed to foster green investments (i.e. a green-supporting or a brown-penalising factor) is hampered by the unclear understanding of the implications of a regulatory change on individual institutions and systemic financial risk. Thus, financing the low-carbon transition is primarily a discussion about credit risk.

The financial sector, and in particular the banking and insurance industries need to develop new portfolios’ risk management strategies and to adjust their credit allocation practices to cope with the opportunities and challenges of the low-carbon transition in the economy and finance. All these changes call for a substantial amount of research to improve the knowledge of the mechanisms at play and to design tailored and effective policy tools.

The SCIENTIFIC COMMITTEE consists of:
Monica Billio (Ca’ Foscari University of Venice & GRETA, Programme Chair)
Marina Brogi (Sapienza University of Rome)
Francesca Campolongo (Joint Research Center, European Commission)
Helmut Kraemer-Eis (European Investment Fund)
Rainer Haselmann (Goethe University, Frankfurt)
Irene Monasterolo (Vienna University of Economics and Business)
Steven Ongena (University of Zurich, Swiss Finance Institute, KU Leuven & CEPR)
Roberto Rigobon (MIT Sloan School of Management)
Stephen Schaefer (London Business School)

PROGRAMME

Thursday, September 24 2020

08.30   Registration

09.00   Welcome and Opening Remarks

09.15   Session I: Regulation and Corporate Strategies

  Keynote talk: TBA - Marina Brogi, Sapienza University of Rome

  Exporting Pollution: Where Do Multinational Firms Emit CO2? - Yeejin Jang, University of New South Wales, Sidney (join with Itzhak Ben-David, Stefanie Kleimeier and Michael Viehs)

  National Climate Policies and Corporate Internal Carbon Pricing - Gianfranco Gianfrate, EDHEC Business School, Rubaix (join with Nuno Bento and Joseph Aldy)

11.00   Coffee break

11.30   Session II: Climate Change

  Results presentation of EIBURS Project - Loriana Pelizzon, SAFE-Goethe University Frankfurt & Ca’ Foscari University of Venice

  Climate Change Awareness: Empirical Evidence for the European Union - Claudio Morana, University of Milano-Bicocca, Collegio Carlo Alberto, Turin & Rimini Centre for Economic Analysis (join with Donatella Baiardi)

  Climate Change Concerns and Mortgage Lending - Frank Weikai Li, Singapore Management University (join with Tinghua Duan)

13.00   Lunch

14.15   Session III: Financial System

  The Next Step in Green Bond Financing - Dion Bongaerts, Erasmus University Rotterdam (join with Dirk Schoenmaker)

  Unintended Consequences of the Global Derivatives Market Reform - Pauline Gandré, University Paris Nanterre (join with Mike Mariathasan, Ouarda Merrouche and Steven Ongena)

  Better Fewer, but Better: Stock Returns and the Financial Relevance and Financial Intensity of Materiality - Costanza Consolandi, University of Siena (join with Robert G. Eccles and Giampaolo Gabbi)

15.45   Coffee break and POSTER SESSION

16.45   Session IV Corporate Sustainability and Value

  Layered Goals-Based Portfolio Optimization Utilizing the Production Properties of ESG Bias - Gordon H. Dash, University of Rhode Island (join with Nina Kajiji)

  Corporate Sustainability and Stock Returns: Evidence from Employee Satisfaction - Aaron Yoon, Northwestern University, Chicago (join with Kyle Welch)

  Stranded Fossil Fuel Reserves and Firm Value - Eduardo Schwartz, UCLA Anderson, Los Angeles, Simon Fraser University, Vancouver & NBER

 Social dinner


Friday, September 25 2020

09.00   Session V: Time of ESG and COVID 19

  Are Women Directors Inherently ESG Friendly? Evidence from Board Gender Quotas - Caroline Raskopf, University Paris–Dauphine (join with Edith Ginglinger)

  Assessing the Impact of Compound Covid-19, Climate Change and Financial Risk: What Role for Policy Complementarities? - Irene Monasterolo, Vienna University of Economics and Business & Boston University (join with Nepomuk Dunz, Andrea Mazzocchetti and Marco Raberto)

  ESG Integration at the Time of COVID-19 - Andrea Gasperini, AIAF, Milan (join with Sonia Artuso, Lorena Sorrentino and Ilaria La Torre)

10.30   Coffee break

11.00   Session VI

  Keynote talk: The EU Technical Support to Design, Develop and Implement Reforms - Mario Nava, European Commission, Brussels 

11.30   PANEL Session

12.45   Lunch

14.15   Session VII: Sustainable Investment

  ESG Considerations in Venture Capital and Business Angel Investment Decisions: Evidence from Two Pan-European Surveys - Antonia Botsari, European Investment Fund, Luxembourg (join with Frank Lang)

  Skills and Sentiment in Sustainable Investing - Andreas Brøgger, Copenhagen Business Schooly (join with Alexander Kronies)

  Mind the Gap! Machine Learning, ESG Metrics and Sustainable Investment - Ariel A. G. Lanza, Northwestern University, Chicago (join with Enrico Bernardini and Ivan Faiella)

15.45   Coffee break

16.15   Session VIII

  Keynote talk: How Finance Can Cure Cancer, Solve the Energy Crisis, and Fix Climate Change - Andrew W. Lo, MIT Sloan School of Management, Cambridge

 17.00   Closing Remarks and End of the Conference

 

 

REGISTRATION

To register for the Conference you are requested to complete the registration form that is available on our website (http://www.greta.it/credit/credit2020/credit2020.htm).

 Registration fees are:

PhD Students*:

75 Euro + VAT

Onsite participation**:

200 Euro + VAT

Online participation***:

200 Euro + VAT

 VAT is currently 22%

*  Students will have to provide valid proof of their student status.

** Seats are limited in compliance with the new regulations to contain the spread of COVID-19.

The onsite registration fees cover admission to all scientific sessions, lunches, and coffee service during the Conference.

The onsite registration fees do not fully cover the conference dinner on September 24th, 2020, for which there is an extra charge of 90.00 Euro per person (conference attendees as well as accompanying persons).

The online registration fees cover access to the platform on September 24th and 25th, interactivity with authors and other participants.

More detailed information soon available on the Conference website:

http://www.greta.it/credit/credit2020/credit2020.htm



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