The European Commission will detail in the coming weeks what could be considered a ‘green’ activity, a technical definition that would help to unlock the massive investment needed to achieve the EU’s climate objectives.
The EU reached an agreement on its ‘green’ taxonomy in December 2019.
The landmark deal included the criteria to determine what activities
could be considered as “sustainable”, an attractive label for investors
across the globe.
The taxonomy was seen as a key instrument to mobilise the €350
billion of additional investment Europe needed annually to achieve the
climate neutrality by 2050.
Lawmakers in the European Parliament have approved a compromise on
the EU’s proposed sustainable finance rulebook, ending a bitter fight
with EU member states on whether to recognise nuclear power as “green”.
But this methodology requires further work to become a useful tool
for companies and investors, panellists agreed during a webinar
organised by EURACTIV on 27 October.
As a first step, the European Commission will publish “very soon”
delegated acts containing detailed technical screening criteria for
determining when an economic activity can be labelled as “green”, said Andrea Beltramello, cabinet member of Valdis Dombrovskis, the Commission’s executive vice-president in charge of economy.
These delegated acts will guide companies towards what exactly makes
their sectors green, and will help investors to assess their
sustainability.
These screening criteria are an essential piece of the sustainable
finance framework, given that the Taxonomy regulation did not provide an
exhaustive list of ‘green activities’, but rather established four
conditions they have to meet:
The activity must contribute substantially to one of the six
environmental objectives set out in the regulation; it must not
significantly harm any of the other five environmental objectives; it
must be carried out in compliance with minimum safeguards, mainly in
terms of fundamental labour rights; and it must comply with the
mentioned technical screening criteria.
The coming delegated acts will cover the criteria of two of the six
environmental objectives: climate change mitigation and climate
adaptation. The rest will come next year.
The remaining objectives are sustainable use and protection of water
and marine resources; transition to a circular economy, waste prevention
and recycling; pollution prevention and control; protection of healthy
ecosystems.
The delegated acts will be open for a four-week public consultation
and will be subject to the Parliament and Council’s approval.
“We need to mobilise private investment, also with regulatory means”,
stressed Beltramello, adding that the guidance provided by the taxonomy
will help in this regard.
This taxonomy is a “living creature” that will evolve, he insisted.
One of the issues to look at is whether the taxonomy should help to
define not only what activities are “green”, but also those that are
“neutral” and “brown”.
Helena Viñes, deputy global head of sustainability at BNP Paribas
Asset Management and a member of the EU taxonomy platform, said that the
expert group will explore whether to expand the taxonomy to cover more
activities and also social targets.
She explained that the expert group did not develop a more
comprehensive taxonomy initially because they needed to be pragmatic and
focus on what was relevant.
“We didn’t have the luxury of time”, she explained during the webinar.
Karl Haeusgen, president of Germany’s Mechanical Engineering Industry
Association (VDMA), agreed with the sustainable finance targets and
principles.
But he said there is “some way to go for the details of the taxonomy
itself, and define what is a sustainable technology or product through
the value chain”.
One of the key elements to channel credit and investment away from
polluting areas and toward clean technologies will be having reliable
data.
Reporting on greenhouse gas emissions should become mandatory “as
soon as possible” for companies with more than 250 employees, argues
Michèle Lacroix, an EU expert who helped design the EU’s landmark green
finance taxonomy.
Viñes explained that one of the problems today is the lack of
standardised, reliable and comparable data from companies. She called
for the development of “a global understanding of some of the
environmental metrics”, given that companies seeking investment and
financial actors operate globally.
“Otherwise, it is going to be extremely difficult for financial
institutions to do justice to the different companies,” she said.
Beltramello agreed that “better information” and more standardised
data are needed to help investors find the right projects and put SMEs
on the radar of financial actors.
Martin Hojsík (Renew Europe, Slovakia), who was the European
Parliament’s shadow rapporteur on sustainable finance, agreed that “we
need to have more standardised, indicator-based rules for environmental
reporting”.
But he warned that it would not be easy, given that companies are
very different in terms of their size, their customer base or their
portfolio. Finding the right framework “is going to be the big task”, he
said.
Wolfgang Kuhn, director of financial sector strategies at
ShareAction, recommended expanding the taxonomy also to ‘brown’ sectors,
in order to get rid of polluting industries in mainstream finance.
But he was wary of the “excuse” of having insufficient data to guide
the policy action. “We cannot wait until we have all data, because we
won’t have all the data for moving further”.
The EU’s sustainable finance taxonomy should be systematically
applied to track green investments in the bloc’s next long-term budget
and coronavirus recovery fund, which together amount to €1.8 trillion
over the next seven years, according to a new report launched on
Wednesday (28 October).
EURACTIV
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