CDSB and the World Benchmarking Alliance (WBA) issued recommendations based on discussion in a multi-stakeholder roundtable hosted by the two organisations to strengthen policy coherence between the different legislations and requirements of the EU sustainable finance agenda.
On February 11th, CDSB and WBA co-hosted a stakeholder
roundtable on addressing systematic risk and encouraging sustainability
transparency in the financial system. As a result of the discussions
with representatives from the investor, regulatory, supervisory,
reporting standards and civil society sector, CDSB and WBA developed a
set of recommendations to increase the policy coherence between the
different legislations and requirements within the EU sustainable
finance agenda.
The stakeholder roundtable set out to explore how sustainable finance
risks are considered, documented and reported on within existing
standards and frameworks, and what gap there remains when it comes to
incentivising sustainability action of financial institutions. The event
addressed if the current policy toolbox for the EU financial sector is
sufficient to identify and address the current unsustainable trajectory
and the risk it poses to financial institutions and the economy, as well
as to meet increasing stakeholder expectations on disclosure of the
impacts of the private sector.
The EU has shown strong leadership on sustainable finance policies
and published a first sustainable finance strategy in 2018 with a set of
ambitious policy initiatives and tools. The renewed Sustainable Finance
Strategy, the revision of the Non-Financial Reporting Directive, and
the implementation and broadening of the EU Taxonomy will be important
initiatives to facilitate the necessary transformation needed in the
financial sector.
The recommendations are the following:
- EU sustainable finance policies should be science driven, reflect on
best market practices and look at real world impacts to bridge the
(data) gap between investment practices and global climate and
environmental goals.
- The future sustainable corporate governance initiative of the
European Commission will need to strike a balance between hard law and
flexible approaches (such as comply or explain) to incentivise more
sustainable and responsible business conduct, by choosing the most
effective policy tools (directive, regulation, guidelines…) and the
relevant policy areas to address.
- Regulatory developments on corporate sustainability and responsible
investing requirements need to be supplemented by independent tools such
as benchmarks to help accelerate progress on impact and drive
standardisation.
- Ensure mandatory disclosure of how a company’s sustainability
strategy is integrated into accountability at a senior board level
through specific targets and Key Performance Indicators (KPIs).
- Reporting standards should clearly define the relationship between
non-financial reporting and financial performance to embed societal and
stakeholder expectations in their business practices.
- The European Commission should address the sustainable finance
powers of the European Supervisory Authorities as part of the initiative
foreseen in the Action 16 of the 2020 Capital Markets Union Action Plan
to foster further supervisory convergence.
CDSB
© CDSB
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