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!!Climate Shock: How Climate Change can Trigger the Next Sovereign Debt Crisis 
!Date: March 26, 2026, 13.15 (CET)\\Venue: Congress Hall, Building D-20, Janiszewskiego 8, Wrocław and live stream
!Admission is free, but [prior registration|https://app.evenea.pl/event/stavroszenios/?q=%2Fstavroszenios] is required.
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__Sovereign exposure to climate risk is no longer theoretical: it is priced by financial markets and reflected in credit ratings and debt servicing costs. On Thursday, 26 March 2026, [Stavros A. Zenios|Member/Zenios_Stavros] MAE, Professor of Operations Management and Finance at [Durham University|https://www.durham.ac.uk] and a member of Academia Europaea's [Economics, Business and Management Sciences|Acad_Main/Sections/Economics_Business_and_Management_Sciences] Section since 2025, will deliver a lecture examining how climate risk reshapes public debt dynamics and constrains the fiscal space available to finance climate policy.__
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The exposure of sovereign states to climate risk is no longer a theoretical issue—it is priced in financial markets and increasingly reflected in credit ratings and debt servicing costs. This lecture invites participants to examine how climate change is reshaping public debt dynamics and how advanced modelling frameworks can help policymakers anticipate and manage these risks.
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At the core of the discussion is the integration of integrated assessment models (IAMs) with stochastic debt sustainability analysis (DSA). Linking climate–economy models with fiscally realistic policy frameworks makes it possible to trace how physical damages, transition policies, and macroeconomic adjustments affect public finances. The lecture will demonstrate how such integrated modelling can support assessments of fiscal space and the sustainability of climate-related investments.
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Drawing on the scenario architecture of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change and the transition pathways developed by the Network for Greening the Financial System, the session presents a structured approach to analyzing both physical and transition risks under deep uncertainty. Methods such as scenario trees, narrative scenarios, and model ensembles are used to address risk, ambiguity, and model uncertainty.
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The lecture is organized by __Academia Europaea__ [Wrocław Knowledge Hub|https://acadeuro.wroclaw.pl] and the  [Wrocław University of Science and Technology|https://pwr.edu.pl/en]. 
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!About Stavros A. Zenios

[Stavros A. Zenios|Member/Zenios_Stavros] MAE is Professor of Operations Management and Finance at Durham University. He is also a Non-resident Fellow of Bruegel (Brussels), Professor of Finance and Management Science at the University of Cyprus, and a Member of the National Academy of Cyprus. 
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He authored two books and numerous articles in leading international journals in risk management, financial engineering, and management science. He is currently working on sovereign debt sustainability issues, including the effects of climate change and the pricing of political risks. His work on personal financial planning received the 2006 EURO Excellence in Practice Award, and he also received awards for work on the performance of financial institutions. He was awarded twice Marie Sklodowska-Curie fellowships by the European Commission. His work on financial modeling and robust optimization is cited extensively, and his book Practical Financial Optimization (Blackwell-Wiley) is used in advanced classes in European and North-American Universities. His book with Patrick Harker on the Performance of Financial Institutions (Cambridge University Press) was translated in Chinese, and in 1997 he received the INFORMS prize for his book with Yair Censor Parallel Optimization (Oxford University Press).
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