The French Financial Market Authority (Autorité des marchés financiers, AMF) has published proposals for minimum environmental criteria for financial products in the highest Article 9 and Article 8 categories of the Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation (SFDR).
The AMF puts forward that their recommendations, which could be implemented very quickly in European law, would be a useful addition to the current regulatory framework. They recommend that:
AMF’s calls for fossil fuels to be banned from Article 9 funds, and severely restricted in Article 8 funds, will no doubt cause much debate. For Article 9 funds, which have a sustainable investment objective, the AMF proposes excluding all activities related to fossil infrastructure, with the exception of a very small number of gas power plants and transport infrastructure.
For Article 8 funds, which promote environmental, social and governance-focused investing, the AMF proposes a lighter touch approach. Fossil fuel companies could be included provided they have a "convincing transition plan", which should be accompanied by a plan to exit fossil fuel assets.
These recommendations by the French regulator are another an important step in the battle against greenwashing. Their recommendation for the exclusion of fossil fuels from sustainable funds, is the first by a national regulator in Europe to take such an explicit public position.
Eyes will now be on the European Commission to see if they take the lead so that sustainable funds can no longer contain companies that develop or own fossil fuel projects.
In the US there has been a lot of coverage recently about a little-known group named Consumers’ Research, bankrolled by mysterious donors, which has emerged as a key player in the conservative crusade to prevent Wall Street from factoring climate change into its investment decisions.
On Dec. 1, the group joined 13 state attorneys general in calling for a federal regulatory agency to investigate Vanguard, one of the world’s three biggest financial asset managers. Consumers’ Research accused Vanguard of “meddling with [the] energy industry to achieve progressive political goals at the expense of market efficiency.” Within days, Vanguard announced it was quitting a coalition called the Net Zero Asset Managers Alliance and shelved its own modest pledges to cut the amount of greenhouse gas emissions linked to companies in which it invests. Leaders of Consumers’ Research were apparently surprised and no doubt elated.
To hit back against climate-minded investment companies, Consumers’ Research has worked with Republican politicians in several states. Texas, Louisiana, Florida, West Virginia and Missouri, among others have moved to bar BlackRock and other investment firms from managing all or part of their pensions.
The fossil fuels exclusion investment debate will remain a focus globally. If Europe leads the way with legislation, it will be fascinating to see the response of other jurisdictions.
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