The European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA), the EU’s financial markets regulator and supervisor, has today published an Opinion on the Sustainable Finance Regulatory Framework, setting out possible long-term improvements.
ESMA acknowledges that the EU Sustainable Finance Framework is already well developed and includes safeguards against greenwashing. At the same time, ESMA considers that, in the longer-term, the Framework could further evolve to facilitate investors’ access to sustainable investments and support the effective functioning of the Sustainable Investment Value Chain.
Main recommendations for the European Commission’s consideration:
The EU Taxonomy should become the sole, common reference point for the assessment of sustainability and should be embedded in all Sustainable Finance legislation;
The EU Taxonomy should be completed for all activities that can substantially contribute to environmental sustainability and a social taxonomy developed;
A definition of transition investments should be incorporated into the Framework to provide legal clarity and support the creation of transition-related products;
All financial products should disclose some minimum basic sustainability information, covering environmental and social characteristics;
A product categorisation system should be introduced catering to sustainability and transition, based on a set of clear eligibility criteria and binding transparency obligations;
ESG data products should be brought into the regulatory perimeter, the consistency of ESG metrics continue to be improved, reliability of estimates ensured; and
Consumer and industry testing should be carried out before implementing policy solutions to ensure their feasibility and appropriateness for retail investors.
This Opinion builds on the findings of the ESMA Progress Report on Greenwashing and the Joint ESAs Opinion on the review of the SFDR. The Opinion also represents the last component of ESMA’s reply to the EC Request for input related to greenwashing, next to the Final Report on Greenwashing.