Report — Climate-Ready Building Passport Use Case Data Sharing to Enable Net Zero Insurance

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Executive Summary

The built environment contributes around 40% to greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions in the UK. As over 80% of the buildings in use today will still be in use by 2050, retrofitting the UK’s existing building stock is critical for achieving the UK’s 2050 net zero targets. In the transition to net zero, the insurance industry can play a critical role in helping stakeholders manage and transfer risks, including the built environment sector. Data sharing is one of the biggest barriers to the transition. The Standard for Environment, Risk and Insurance (SERI) project is looking to tackle this issue through creating a secured shared data governance framework with our industrial partners and advisory groups. To enable the development of the framework, we have developed a Climate-Ready Building Passport (C-RBP) concept to demonstrate the commercial value the framework can create and how it assists the insurance industry incentives net zero behaviours. 

The C-RBP concept, developed by the SERI project, is a design for a data service enabled by the decentralised and secured SERI shared data governance framework (cf. A Pathway Towards SERI: Operational and Technical Considerations Report). It aims at providing a means to capture and share data on a building’s life cycle (including both climate change resilience and mitigation data) and enable stakeholders with the data they need on their pathway to GHG reduction goals. The C-RBP insurance market use case utilised the special position of insurance brokers in the insurance value chain to bring key stakeholders, i.e. asset managers and insurers, into the story. It analyses data needs, data sharing and data flow amongst them in a commercial building insurance case to demonstrate the value of C-RBP for the insurance industry and beyond in the net zero transition. 

During our work on the use case development, we have identified a few gaps, challenges and opportunities to innovate net-zero insurance products. The main findings were: