Recently, plans by the Commission to significantly soften the original science-based proposals under pressure from member states became known.  If enacted, investments 
in fossil gas or unsustainable forestry, for example, would receive the 
Sustainable Finance label.
 
The planned softening of the rules was clearly criticised by the 
Chair of the Sustainable Finance Platform, Nathan Fabian, in an open letter to the EU Commission yesterday.
 Together with the other leading members of the Platform, he urged 
orientation towards scientific criteria instead of political interests. 
The Platform is the central advisory body of the European Sustainable 
Finance Project. A fortnight ago, nine members of the Platform had 
already announced in a letter to the EU Commission that they would reconsider their membership in the Platform if the planned far-reaching softening were to take place.
 
The European Parliament and the EU states had negotiated for a long 
time and in the end found a compromise. But now, under pressure from 
some member states, the EU Commission could do a U-turn on the concrete 
implementation and weaken the criteria. This would mean that, among 
other things, investments in fossil gas would be considered sustainable 
finance. In an open letter to the responsible Commissioners McGuinness 
and Dombrovskis, initiated by the financial expert Kristina Jeromin and 
the MEP Sven Giegold, more than 1,000 signatories, including 250+ 
experts from the sustainable finance sector, demand credible rules 
instead of the planned weakening. The EU Commission will prepare the 
decision on the crucial delegated acts this week and formally announce 
it next week. Sven Giegold, financial and economic policy spokesperson 
of the Greens/EFA  group comments:
 
“The credibility of the European Green Deal is at stake. Investments 
in fossil gas must not be given a sustainability label. Ursula von der 
Leyen and Frans Timmermans must prevent damage to the Green Deal. After 
the Common Agricultural Policy, the financial sector would be the second
 economic sector in which the goals of the Green Deal are undermined. If
 the EU Commission gives way to pressure from individual member states, 
its ability to enforce the Green Deal will be severely damaged. If the 
EU Commission already buckles under transparency rules for the financial
 sector, the climate rules for the car and construction industries will 
be in even greater danger. The Green Deal is a long obstacle race and 
the EU Commission must not stumble at the smaller hurdles. The EU should
 lead the way in sustainable finance instead of keeping one foot in the 
fossil past. Only a label with credible rules can set the global 
standard for sustainable finance that is urgently needed in view of the 
climate crisis. Caving in to the special interests of some member states
 would seriously damage the growing sustainable finance sector. The 
industry is protesting against this attack on the credibility of 
sustainability criteria. Sustainable finance is a win-win situation for 
the climate and the economy. The EU Commission must not turn it into a 
lose-lose situation. Truly sustainable companies will be penalised if 
the label also applies to gas investments. The EU Commission should 
defend its Green Deal and adopt credible rules for sustainable finance 
products and investments.”
 
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Open letter from Nathan Fabian, Chair of the Sustainable Finance Platform, to the EU Commission:
https://twitter.com/nathanafabian/status/1381633783779229697?s=20
 
Letter from nine members of the Platform for Sustainable Finance to the EU Commission:
https://politico.us8.list-manage.com/track/click?u=e26c1a1c392386a968d02fdbc&id=abc1594340&e=50c161d296
 
Open Letter to the EU Commission – signed by more than 250 experts in the field of Sustainable Finance (keep signing):
https://actionnetwork.org/petitions/open-letter-sustainable-finance-rules/