首页|EU's sustainable finance disclosure regulation: does the hybrid reporting regime undermine the goal to reorient capital to climate action?
EU's sustainable finance disclosure regulation: does the hybrid reporting regime undermine the goal to reorient capital to climate action?
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NSTL
Taylor & Francis
Disclosure and reporting are cornerstones of the European Union's sustainable finance agenda with the goals of reorienting capital flows towards climate and other sustainable investments and minimizing greenwashing. A key component of the regulatory framework is the Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation (SFDR), which requires fund managers to calculate and disclose a 'sustainable investment' (SI) percentage, aggregating exposure to activities contributing to climate mitigation and adaptation and the other environmental and social sustainability objectives of the European Union. In turn, financial advisors must use SI percentages when advising customers under the Markets in Financial Instruments Directive II. Defining 'sustainable investments' in a robust and consistent way is crucial to the effectiveness of SFDR. Based on a review of the regulatory texts and financial sector participant observations this policy analysis article explores the overlapping guidelines framing how market participants are allowed to define sustainable investments, and the implications for achieving the goals of the sustainable finance agenda. The analysis suggests that the 'unintentionally hybrid' SFDR regime may perversely incentivize fund managers to forgo the use of the highly detailed EU Taxonomy rules-based approach that precisely defines climate-related 'substantial contributions' and apply the vague principles-based approach found in SFDR Article 2.17. This would allow each financial actor to define and determine independently what constitutes a sustainable investment, circumventing the robust, if imperfect, climate-related rules of the EU Taxonomy. The SFDR regime therefore risks undermining the European Commission's stated goals of increasing capital allocation to sustainable activities and eliminating greenwashing.
EU TaxonomySFDRclimate investmentsustainable financefinancial regulation