The new Sustainable Finance Strategy; The European Green Bond Standard proposal; Delegated Act on the information to be disclosed by financial and non-financial companies about how sustainable their activities are, based on Article 8 of the EU Taxonomy.
The European Commission has today adopted a number of measures to
increase its level of ambition on sustainable finance. First, the new Sustainable Finance Strategy
sets out several initiatives to tackle climate change, and other
environmental challenges, while increasing investment – and the
inclusiveness of small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) – in the EU's
transition towards a sustainable economy. The European Green Bond Standard
proposal, also adopted today, will create a high-quality voluntary
standard for bonds financing sustainable investment. Finally, the
Commission adopted today a Delegated Act on the information to be
disclosed by financial and non-financial companies about how sustainable
their activities are, based on Article 8 of the EU Taxonomy.
These initiatives highlight the EU's global leadership in setting
international standards for sustainable finance. The Commission intends
to work closely with all international partners, including through the
International Platform on Sustainable Finance, to cooperate on building a
robust international sustainable finance system.
A new Sustainable Finance Strategy
Over the last number of years, the EU has become significantly more
ambitious in tackling climate change. The Commission has already taken
unprecedented steps to build the foundations for sustainable finance.
Sustainability is the central feature of the EU's recovery from the
COVID-19 pandemic and the financial sector will be key in helping to
meet the targets of the European Green Deal.
Today's Strategy includes six sets of actions:
- Extend the existing sustainable finance toolbox to facilitate access to transition finance
- Improve the inclusiveness of small and medium-sized enterprises
(SMEs), and consumers, by giving them the right tools and incentives to
access transition finance.
- Enhance the resilience of the economic and financial system to sustainability risks
- Increase the contribution of the financial sector to sustainability
- Ensure the integrity of the EU financial system and monitor its orderly transition to sustainability
- Develop international sustainable finance initiatives and standards, and support EU partner countries
The Commission will report on the Strategy's implementation by the
end of 2023 and will actively support Member States in their efforts on
sustainable finance.
A European Green Bond Standard (EUGBS)
The Commission has today also proposed a Regulation on a voluntary
European Green Bond Standard (EUGBS). This proposal will create a
high-quality voluntary standard available to all issuers (private and
sovereigns) to help financing sustainable investments. Green bonds are
already used to raise financing in sectors such as energy production and
distribution, resource-efficient housing, and low-carbon transport
infrastructure. There is also a lot of investor appetite for these
bonds. However, there is potential to scale-up and increase the
environmental ambition of the green bond market. The EUGBS will set a
‘gold standard' for how companies and public authorities can use green
bonds to raise funds on capital markets to finance ambitious
investments, while meeting tough sustainability requirements and
protecting investors from greenwashing. In particular:
- Issuers of green bonds will have a robust tool at their disposal to
show they are funding green projects aligned with the EU Taxonomy.
- Investors buying the bonds will be able to more easily see that
their investments are sustainable, thereby reducing the risk of
greenwashing.
The new EUGBS will be open to any issuer of green bonds, including
issuers located outside of the EU. There are four key requirements under
the proposed framework:
- The funds raised by the bond should be allocated fully to projects aligned with the EU Taxonomy;
- There must be full transparency on how bond proceeds are allocated through detailed reporting requirements;
- All EU green bonds must be checked by an external reviewer to ensure
compliance with the Regulation and that funded projects are aligned
with the Taxonomy. Specific, limited flexibility is foreseen here for
sovereign issuers;
- External reviewers providing services to issuers of EU green bonds
must be registered with and supervised by the European Securities
Markets Authority. This will ensure the quality and reliability of their
services and reviews to protect investors and ensure market integrity.
Specific, limited flexibility is foreseen here for sovereign issuers
The core objective is to create a new ‘gold standard' for green bonds
that other market standards can be compared to, and potentially seek
alignment. This standard will aim to address concerns on greenwashing
and protecting market integrity to ensure that legitimate environmental
projects are financed. Following today's adoption, the Commission
proposal will be submitted to the European Parliament and Council as
part of the co-legislative procedure.
Sustainable Finance and EU Taxonomy
Today, the European Commission also adopted the Delegated Act supplementing Article 8 of the Taxonomy Regulation,
which requires financial and non-financial companies to provide
information to investors about the environmental performance of their
assets and economic activities. Markets and investors need clear and
comparable sustainability information to prevent greenwashing. Today's
Delegated Act specifies the content, methodology and presentation of
information to be disclosed by large financial and non-financial
companies on the share of their business, investments or lending
activities that are aligned with the EU Taxonomy.
Non-financial companies will have to disclose the share of their
turnover, capital and operational expenditure associated with
environmentally sustainable economic activities as defined in the
Taxonomy Regulation and the EU Taxonomy Climate Delegated act,
formally adopted on 4 June 2021, as well as any future delegated acts
on other environmental objectives. Financial institutions, mainly large
banks, asset managers, investment firms and insurance/reinsurance
companies, will have to disclose the share of environmentally
sustainable economic activities in the total assets they finance or
invest in.
The Delegated Act will be transmitted for scrutiny by the European
Parliament and the Council for a period of 4 months, extendable once by 2
months.
Members of the College said:
Valdis Dombrovskis, Executive Vice-President for an Economy that Works for People, said: “Today's
Sustainable Finance Strategy is key to generate private finance to
reach our climate targets and tackle other environmental challenges. We
also want to create sustainable funding opportunities for small and
medium-sized companies. We will work with our international partners to
deepen cooperation on sustainable finance, as global challenges call for
global action. We also propose a Green Bond Standard to fight
greenwashing and clearly recognise those bonds that truly represent a
sustainable investment.”
Mairead McGuinness, Commissioner in charge of Financial Services, Financial Stability, and Capital Markets Union, said: “Today's
Strategy sets out our ambitious roadmap on Sustainable Finance for the
years ahead. To achieve our climate targets, we need sustained efforts
to ensure more money flows towards a sustainable economy. Significant
investment is needed to green the economy and create a more inclusive
society, so that everyone can play their part. We must step up global
cooperation on climate and environmental issues because the EU cannot
fight climate change alone – global coordination and action is
essential. In addition, our EU Green Bond Standard proposal will set a
gold standard in the market, and responds to the needs of investors for a
trusted, robust tool when investing sustainably.”
European Commission
© European Commission
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