EU agrees on sustainable disclosure

European union flag against parliament in Brussels, Belgium

The European Parliament and EU member states worked through the night on Wednesday to reach an agreement on disclosure requirements related to sustainable investments and sustainability risks.

The agreement means that for the first time it is now clear in regulation that ESG is part of investment decision making.

The agreement is being lauded as a significant move towards accountability of investment decisions on the real economy.

In a statement the European Commission said that the new regulation sets out how financial market participants and financial advisors must integrate environmental, social or governance (ESG) risks and opportunities in their processes, as part of their duty to act in the best interest of clients.

It also sets uniform rules on how those financial market participants should inform investors about their compliance with the integration of ESG risks and opportunities.

It argues that this will address information asymmetries on sustainability issues between end investors and financial market participants.

Sponsored Content

The new regulation is built around three main pillars: elimination of greenwashing; regulatory neutrality via a disclosure toolbox to be applied by all financial market operators; and a level playing field.

The EU said that the agreed rules will strengthen and improve the disclosure of information by manufacturers of financial products and financial advisors towards end-investors.This was first proposed by the Commission as part of the Sustainable Finance Action Plan in May 2018 and are part of the EU’s efforts under its sustainable development agenda.

The EU is supporting the transition to a low carbon economy and has been at the forefront of efforts to build a financial system that supports sustainable growth.

The European Commission established a High Level Expert Group on Sustainable Finance to make recommendations. This group included Claudia Kruse, managing director of global responsible investment and governance at APG, and Nathan Fabian, director of the PRI.

Kruse has been active in collaborating with policymakers on sustainability issues, and advocates for the importance of pension fund views being heard in policy development.

In the Netherlands, APG is also chairing a roundtable to see how the finance sector can help reach the country’s carbon transition target.

 

Claudia Kruse will join Sven Gentner, head of the unit for asset management at the European Commission, and Will Martindale, director of policy and research at the PRI, to discuss sustainable finance policy and the role of pension funds at the Fiduciary Investors Symposium at Cambridge University.

 

For more information click here

 

Leave a Comment

La Caisse’s oil exit pays off as renewables portfolio pulls ahead of fossil fuels

La Caisse’s oil exit pays off as renewables portfolio pulls ahead of fossil fuels

Divesting from the oil sector has been a boon for La Caisse’s performance, as the Canadian pension giant says its energy investments have earned billions in value-add compared to the benchmark since the inception of its climate strategy. Head of sustainability Bertrand Millot unpacks the fund’s approach in an interview with Top1000funds.com.

Sort content by

Mandates need innovating to encompass sustainable investing

The credibility of transition plans is under scrutiny because while sustainable investing is booming real world impact is going in the wrong direction. In response investors need to innovate on the nature of investment mandates says Colin le Duc, a founding partner of Generation.

How Canada’s PSP Investments is getting to grips with climate data

In an interview with Herman Bril, PSP Investments’ new head of responsible investment, Top1000funds.com looks at how the fund is collecting and reporting on sustainability information based on a technology-enabled, data-driven approach that spans a bespoke, green taxonomy for climate investing to ESG scores derived from AI.

COP: There might be disappointment, but it’s still the best hope we have

In the post-COP twilight with the initial assessment of pass or fail all written, institutional investors are rightly asking where we are up to at the end of 2022. Fiona Reynolds looks at what has changed and what remains the same.

PRI at a crossroad

PRI’s CEO David Atkin has been conducting workshops with signatories to explore different pathways and seeking views around six themes around accountability, the PRI’s policy work and the diversity of signatories and their different needs. A report will be tabled to board of directors in February with recommendations.

Pooling benefits show at Border to Coast in path to investment excellence

As Border to Coast approaches its 5th birthday chief executive Rachel Elwell reflects on the achievement of building a sustainable organisation, what investment capabilities are still to develop and the priorities for the underlying partner funds.

SDGs remain the roadmap out of crisis

APG's Claudia Kruse reflects that the climate emergency, COVID and conflict has put SDG delivery at risk. But the SDGs remain the best roadmap out of crisis and the investor's Asset Owner Platform has become an important tool supporting its quest to invest with impact.

Previous