4.8 Article

Assessing the climate change exposure of foreign direct investment

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 13, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-022-28975-5

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Funding

  1. ClimateWorks Foundation [19-1494]

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This study finds that foreign investments globally face lower physical climate risks compared to local companies, but the differences in risks between foreign and local facilities within countries are small. Chinese outward foreign direct investment is significantly more exposed to various physical climate risks across countries compared to other foreign facilities, however, within host countries, the risks of Chinese overseas facilities are comparable to those of non-Chinese foreign investments.
This study deploys newly available data to examine the exposure of multinational companies' overseas investments to physical climate risks. Globally, foreign investments are significantly exposed to lower physical climate risks, compared with local firms across countries. Within countries however, the differences of physical climate risks between foreign and local facilities are small. We also examine China, as it is fast becoming one of the largest sources of outward foreign investment across the globe. We find that foreign direct investment from China is significantly more exposed to water stress, floods, hurricanes and typhoon risks across countries, compared with other foreign facilities. Within host countries however, once again the physical climate risks of Chinese overseas facilities are comparable to those of non-Chinese foreign investments. This study finds that foreign firms tend to shy away from countries with higher physical climate risks than do local firms. Chinese FDI is significantly more exposed to most physical climate risks than non-Chinese FDI across countries.

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