The Association of
the Luxembourg Fund Industry (ALFI) has taken due note of the
observations and conclusions drawn by Greenpeace Luxembourg in its
report “A Climate-Related Analysis of the 100 Largest Investment Funds
in Luxembourg”, published on 27 January 2021.
ALFI is fully committed and supportive of the European
Commission’s Green Deal which aims to channel private investment into
the transition to a climate-neutral, climate-resilient,
resource-efficient and just economy, as a complement to public money.
Today, the investment fund and asset management industry in
Luxembourg and in Europe is in the final run-up to the first major
deadline in the implementation of the European’s Commission’s plan on
financing sustainable growth.
ALFI notes that the report from Greenpeace is silent on the European
Commission’s Green Deal and the regulations which the Commission’s
action plan brings with it.
In Luxembourg, ALFI is likewise supportive of the manifold
initiatives that the government has taken over the recent years to
foster green finance and push investors towards allocating their savings
in ESG and sustainable investment products.
The Luxembourg asset management and fund industry is similarly
engaged in different projects and initiatives to further foster ESG/
sustainable finance. This can be evidenced among others by the growth in
the number of ESG and other similar labels granted by the Luxembourg
labelling agency, LuxFLAG. As at 01 January 2021, LuxFLAG labels 322
investment products with AUM of 135 billion Euros which are domiciled in
10 different jurisdictions and managed by 96 entities located in 16
countries.
As another example, Luxembourg is “the” jurisdiction of choice in the
world for micro-finance funds, with a staggering 76% market share in
Europe both in AUM and number of microfinance funds[1].
This showcases the emergence of an eco-system in Luxembourg with expert
knowledge in ESG funds, sustainable finance and impact investing.
All stakeholders from the private and public sectors, reckon that the
transition towards a climate-neutral and climate-resilient economy is a
long journey and we are only at the beginning of this process.
Implementing European Regulations: SFDR comes first
By 10 March 2021 at the latest, investment funds and asset managers must comply with the main provisions of the SFDR[2].
All investment funds and sub-funds, in fact all financial products
offered to retail and institutional investors, will be required to embed
sustainability in some form and shape.
The baseline and minimum requirement is that all investment funds
shall describe in their offering documents the manner in which
sustainability risks are integrated in their investment decisions. In
addition, the likely impact of sustainability risks on returns must be
disclosed to investors. These investment funds will be categorised as
article 6 products.
Asset managers which will want to offer products in which
sustainability becomes the core focus will have two options. Investment
funds which promote environmental and/ or social characteristics (ESG)[3]
will be categorised as article 8 products. As a second option,
investment funds with a focus on sustainability will qualify as article 9
products.
European Commission’s Plan
SFDR is one of the three key regulations on sustainable finance that
will be implemented over the two coming years. SFDR and the Taxonomy
Regulation are intertwined, as the Taxonomy provides the essential
definitions of what sustainability is all about.
Of particular relevance is obviously article 9 of the Taxonomy Regulation[4]
which sets out 6 environmental objectives, of which two – (a) climate
change mitigation and (b) climate change adaptation, which is the main
focus of the report from Greenpeace Luxembourg – will come first. The
Regulation explicitly refers to the Paris Agreement which was approved
by the European Union on 5 October 2016. It represents a key step
towards the objective of achieving a climate-neutral Union by 2050.
These two Regulations are supplemented by the Benchmark Regulation[5].
Consistent and coherent framework in Europe and beyond
Sustainable finance is a core domain of competency of the European
Union. The above-mentioned texts are regulation which have, or will
have, direct effect in each of the Member States.
Any suggestion that Member States should take additional legislative
initiatives, as the report seems to recommend to the Luxembourg
government and private sector, which would overlap and potentially
contradict European texts, is intuitively counter-productive. There is a
definite need of global standards, at least within Europe and to the
extent possible, worldwide. Climate change mitigation and adaptation are
global issues that must be tackled globally. It is hoped that the
European Union as a bloc will be setting the right direction and that
European standards could develop into international standards.
In contrast, any additional legislation at the level of each of the
Member State bears the risk of preventing all stakeholders from having a
coherent and coordinated approach to sustainability, fragmenting
markets and ultimately not achieving the transition towards a
sustainable economy.
The Luxembourg fund industry has traditionally be a champion of
cross-border distribution in the EU and beyond. Asset managers already
face significant hurdles when distributing investment funds in non-EU
jurisdictions.
Complexity
In order to get started on the first two environmental objectives –
climate change mitigation and climate change adaptation – it is
paramount that information from investee companies be made available.
Article 8 of the Taxonomy Regulation requires companies to publish in
their non-financial statements information to what extent the companies’
activities are fully or partially environmentally sustainable.
On 20 November 2020, the European Commission published a draft of the Commission Delegated Regulation
establishing the technical screening criteria for determining under
which conditions an economic activity qualifies as contributing
substantially to climate change mitigation or climate change adaptation.
Given the very technical nature of the content of the Delegated
Regulation and the fact that it followed on extensive research, work and
recommendations from relevant stakeholders over the past 18 months
(reference being made in particular to the work of the Technical Expert
Group on Sustainable Finance - TEG), ALFI was of the opinion that this
draft already provided a sound basis for market participants to start
working on the implementation of this Regulation which will apply from 1
January 2022. ALFI did not respond to the public consultation. There
were however in excess of 46,000 feedbacks to the European Commission on
this draft Regulation.
The viewpoint of investors
A strategic objective of SFDR and the Taxonomy Regulation is
transparency of products. Investors will be in a position to make
informed decisions when buying financial products. This will drive the
trend towards more sustainable products. A recent study[6] shows that by 2022, 77% of institutional investors will stop buying non-ESG products.
Conclusion
The European’s Commission’s plan on financing sustainable growth is a
unique opportunity for Europe to position itself as leading the
sustainability agenda and driving the transition towards a sustainable
economy.
There is no room for diverging initiatives at the level of Member
States which could only result in more fragmentation whereas climate
change and environmental issues are global by nature.
Once SFDR and the Taxonomy Regulation will have been implemented,
investors will have the necessary information to make informed
decisions.