Podcast: mental health and the role of the CRO
Energy company CRO discusses how her firm is dealing with workplace stress as lockdowns ease
As well as heightening uncertainty and worry on a personal level, the Covid-19 pandemic increased stress levels at work for many people. For those in the energy trading and risk professions, this was particularly pronounced, as people dealt with unprecedented market volatility and even existential threat at some level – all of this while socially distanced, and often working in less than ideal conditions.
In this podcast, Novera Khan, chief risk officer of German energy firm Uniper, discusses mental health in the workplace.
Even before the pandemic, research showed that poor health was the biggest cause of business disruption across industries globally and that absence due to stress, anxiety and depression lasts on average 40% longer and can be more costly than absence due to physical illness or injury. But it’s not just absences that can be costly – stress can lead to an increase in mistakes or a loss of the crucial level-headedness needed when making commercial decisions. A company that hasn’t addressed mental health effectively is more likely to have employees that continue working when they are over-stressed due to stigmas around speaking out about deteriorating mental health.
Khan talks about Uniper’s experience during the lockdown and how the firm replicated as best as possible the collegiate environment of the trading floor. She talks about the particular stresses on energy firms due to volatile prices and discusses the easing of the lockdown, Uniper’s return-to-work plan and the impact the ‘new normal’ may have on some employees’ mental health.
Index
2:05 To what extent should mental health fall within the remit of the CRO?
2:45 Does mental health awareness vary around the globe and is there still a stigma attached to it in the workplace, especially in trading? Has Covid-19 pushed mental health awareness further up the agenda?
5:28 When Uniper first went into lockdown, did people’s mental health become of greater concern to you?
7:45 What sort of stresses did you see your staff under?
10.01 How were you able to check in and monitor whether people were coping?
12:21 Did you feel the technologies you used created the collegiate environment sufficiently?
14:10 Tell me more about your “digital happy hours”.
15:34 What was the impact on stress levels of people the day oil prices went negative?
20:43 Were you able to create a digital trading floor environment where traders and risk officers could discuss this as they would have done in the office?
22:41 As lockdowns ease, what are Uniper’s plans and what mental health issues do you expect to have to address?
26:03 How will you address the emotional impact of returning to offices for some staff? Will working from home remain a greater option than before lockdown?
29:38 Some employees will return to work still dealing with issues that happened during the lockdown. For example, those that lost loved ones may feel their loss wasn’t registered by their company in the way it would have been normally. Have you given any thought to this matter specifically?
34:52 Could artificial intelligence lead to trade surveillance technologies that could flag up changes in behaviour that might indicate people are not coping well with stress, or would this be considered too obtrusive?
More on Risk management
Energy Risk 2026 Software Rankings: CTRM landscape needs to support resilience
Commodity firms’ software choices across the CTRM landscape are crucial amid current uncertainty
EU can handle energy price pressure – it’s been here before
Reforms made after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine have made region more resilient to energy shocks, officials say
A Hormuz tipping point may be days away
Agent-based model suggests delays and shortages likely to accelerate after four weeks
ENGIE’s Daronnat: pricing flexibility in the German battery market
Head of flexibility and structured origination in Germany discusses the role of FPAs and what risk teams must consider
Next-gen PPA contracts reshaping European power markets
As energy market participants seek new ways of capturing value from volatility, new skills are required to structure and price increasingly complex power purchase agreements
Energy Risk reaction: Impact of Middle East conflict on hedging and longer term risk
Energy Risk talks to Riccardo Rossi at Centrica Energy and Rob McLeod at Hartree Partners about the impact of the Iran crisis so far on firms exposed to energy
Iran strikes a stress test for CCP margin models
CME’s Span2 and Ice’s IRM2 are performing as advertised. The next few days could test their mettle
Energy Risk Debates: the role of the risk manager
Panellists discuss the different roles of the risk manager, how much standardisation there is across firms and whether the role is ever clear