UNEP FI welcomes the Commission’s consultation and urges the EU to embed sustainability impact into its Renewed Sustainable Finance Strategy. Elodie Feller, UNEP FI Investment Lead, explains why.
In July 2020, the European Commission closed its stakeholder consultation on its Renewed Sustainable Finance Strategy,
which will be adopted by year-end. The Commission’s proposal recognizes
that the scale of investment necessary for a timely, just and
sustainable transition goes beyond the capacity of the public sector and
needs to include the private sector as well. The consultation sets an
ambitious tone and touches on cross-cutting policy areas relevant to the
investment, banking and insurance industries.
UNEP FI welcomes the Commission’s consultation and urges the EU to
embed sustainability impact into its Renewed Sustainable Finance
Strategy. Elodie Feller, UNEP FI Investment Lead, explains why.
As attention turns to planning for the post-COVID recovery and to
preventing future outbreaks, we see a unique opportunity for the
European Commission to demonstrate its leadership and commitment to the European Green Deal,
by encouraging impact analysis and management by financial
institutions, by setting the right sustainability targets, and by
establishing a coherent and clear regulatory direction for the finance
industry to support sustainable recovery efforts.
The European Commission’s ambitions for a sustainable economy have
already led to several constructive developments, such as the EU Taxonomy and the EU Investor Disclosure Regulation.
The EU Taxonomy specifies what level of environmental performance an
economic activity should have if it is going to contribute to Europe’s
environmental objectives. The EU Investor Disclosure Regulation requires
financial institutions and financial advisors to publish a statement on
how they consider the principal adverse impacts of their investment
decisions on people and planet.
These updates demonstrate significant regulatory effort to mandate
performance against sustainability targets. This consultation suggests
that regulatory frameworks in the EU can continue to improve, notably to
fully embed sustainability impact into finance decisions, disclosure
rules and (soft or hard) regulatory instruments to support the
transition towards more sustainable business models.
UNEP FI strongly supports the European Commission’s proposals, both
in terms of the direction being taken and in terms of the specific
proposals that are being made for the Renewed Sustainable Finance
Strategy. In particular with regards to:
- Raising the bar and emphasis on sustainability impacts. Within the
next decade, assessing and managing the sustainability impact of finance
through decision making processes need to be a core part of how finance
institutions provide capital to the real economy.
- The broadening of the Commission’s focus from climate change to a
more holistic approach to sustainability, encompassing the full range of
positive and negative social, economic and environmental impacts.
Finance should align its practices, strategies and capital allocation
with the net-zero carbon objective (see the work of the UN-convened Net Zero Asset Owner Alliance), net gain of biodiversity (see our latest report Beyond Business as Usual: Biodiversity Targets and Finance), and inclusively the realization of the Sustainable Development Goals.
- The explicit focus on the banking sector, given the sector’s
critical role in supporting the transition to the low carbon economy and
the transition towards more sustainable business models. UNEP FI is
supportive of a coherent regulatory framework that incentivizes and
mandates the integration of impact in financial decision-making and also
that influences the shaping of business models and strategies that have
the ability to navigate and achieve the transition. Banks will need the
whole economy to walk the talk to be in turn able to deliver all the expected benefits in terms of shifting capital to the transition.
The UNEP FI consultation response shares expertise and knowledge
gained from initiatives led by its member institutions, with the
objective to provide the Commission with hard evidence and hopefully
confidence that the finance industry’s leadership must be reflected in
their upcoming Renewed Sustainable Finance Strategy.
In responding to this consultation, UNEP FI also urges the European
Commission to use this opportunity to embed investing for sustainability
impact into investment frameworks. Investors that integrate
environmental, social, and governance (ESG) factors in their investment
processes also understand the need to shift their attention to
sustainability impacts. Of course, all investments have positive and
negative impacts – via the companies they invest in, but now these
impacts need to be assessed, measured, managed and reported. The project
A Legal Framework for Impact,
undertaken collaboratively with the Principles for Responsible
Investment (PRI) and The Generation Foundation as well as legal
expertise from Freshfields, will produce legal and policy
recommendations assessing the extent to which legal frameworks currently
enable, impede, or need improvement for investors to drive this shift.
The Principles for Responsible Banking
are now supported by more than 180 banks collectively holding USD 47
trillion in assets, or one third of the global banking sector. The
signatories to these Principles echo the vision above in that they are
required to perform an impact self-assessment of their activities. This
year, the UNEP FI Positive Impact Initiative
launched a Portfolio Impact Analysis Tool as well as a Corporate Impact
Analysis Tool to help banks scrutinize their clients and investee
companies’ impacts based on a common methodology. Also, through the UNEP FI and EBF Working Group,
25 major banks are already piloting the EU Taxonomy. A major report in
Q4 2020 will present case studies and identify gaps and opportunities
for the current EU Taxonomy to apply to banking products.
Despite significant advances, markets and the economy continue to
operate beyond sustainability boundaries. For banks and investors to
significantly help solve the big societal issues we face requires moving
beyond integration of financially material ESG issues alone. We may not
have time for those issues to materialize financially anyway.
The next frontier for sustainable finance to tackle is sustainability
impact and integrating the consideration of sustainability impact into
decision-making processes. Policymakers and regulators, through the
frameworks they influence, must also align with this goal.
The UNEP FI consultation response prioritizes 14 questions across 5 themes:
- The importance of taking a holistic impact approach, which focuses
on the interlinkages between environmental, social and economic factors
and the finance value chain (our responses to Questions 6, 8, 52, 82,
83, 89 and 90 focus on this theme).
- Climate change (Question 10 in particular).
- Biodiversity and ecosystems (Question 11).
- The importance of harmonized and consistent disclosures across the value chain (Question 14).
- The importance of mainstreaming both risk and impact management, in Europe and globally (Questions 60, 77, 91 and 102).
The full response to the consultation is available here.
© UNEP
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