Adam Farkas, CEO AFME: “Europe’s leadership on sustainable finance has given rise to several ambitious and comprehensive regulatory proposals... the sustainable finance agenda will be critical to mobilise private investment on the scale needed to meet the EU’s sustainability objectives."
AFME has today welcomed the publication by the European Commission of the EU Renewed Sustainable Finance strategy.
Adam Farkas, Chief Executive of AFME, said:
“Europe’s leadership on sustainable finance has given rise to several
ambitious and comprehensive regulatory proposals. Now, the next stages
of the sustainable finance agenda will be critical to mobilise private
investment on the scale needed to meet the EU’s sustainability
objectives.
“A broader, more flexible approach to classifying transition
activities would go a long way to helping to accelerate Europe’s pathway
to achieving net-zero carbon emissions by 2050. The recognition in the
Renewed Strategy that the current EU Taxonomy framework could better
recognise investments for intermediary steps on the pathway towards
sustainability is extremely helpful. A robust transition framework
should include both activities and entities that are already low carbon,
but also be forward-looking and include firms, their assets, and their
activities that demonstrate the commitment and potential for transition
within scientifically determined thresholds.
“Capital markets will need to play a central role in the green transition. We estimate that 35% of the funding needed to meet the Paris Agreement is required from equity, alongside 44% from loans and 21% in bonds.
While the markets for green bonds have seen significant growth in
Europe, climate finance needs to scale across all asset classes. It is
important to take a holistic approach that fosters all products and
asset classes – including equity and securitisation – that can
contribute to mobilising capital resources towards the transition.
“AFME will continue to support a risk sensitive approach to the
integration of ESG factors into prudential regulation and we look
forward to the work programme in this area. Any specific prudential
treatment distinguishing between ‘green’ or ‘brown’ assets needs to be
consistent with the principles of prudential regulation. This should be
done in a dynamic, forward-looking and risk-oriented manner which is
based on experience and scientific data, and agreed at an international
level as far as possible.
“We welcome the commitment for the EU to continue to cooperate with
its partners in international fora to agree on common objectives and
principles for taxonomies. The development of regional taxonomies should
follow a set of common, globally consistent principles and, as such,
the evolution of the EU Taxonomy should take international taxonomy
developments into account. International regulatory convergence in ESG
reporting is particularly important in the further elaboration of the
European reporting framework.”
AFME
© AFME
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