Money talks, but it also needs to listen: listen to the demand for change for a financial system that takes account of non-financial issues, from climate change to social inclusion, writes Commissioner Mairead McGuinness.
We are living through unprecedented
times: a pandemic that is forcing us to rethink how we live, work and
play and a climate crisis that needs urgent attention.
The EU’s economy alone is expected to contract more than 8% this year, according to the European Commission.
At the same time, we are in a climate
emergency, as the European Parliament declared in December 2019 –
around the same time as the first signs of the coronavirus were
appearing.
The need for EU solidarity and global collaboration was never greater.
Rightly, the COVID-19 crisis is not
being used by Europe to delay action on climate change and the green
transition. The commitment to the European Green Deal remains strong, to
help us tackle climate and environmental challenges and stimulate
sustainable growth and recovery.
In an historic first, the European Commission has started to borrow to finance the recovery.
The massive sum of 750 billion euros
will be mobilised, in the form of grants and loans, to help member
states come out the other side of this crisis.
The Commission has proposed that 37%
of all recovery funding should be earmarked for green projects. To
support this, President Ursula von der Leyen has proposed that 30% of
the money raised to finance the recovery will come from green bonds.
This will help further mobilise the
financial system to provide the resources to make the recovery and the
climate transition happen. The first signs are promising: the recent
bond issue by the Commission to support EU job markets generated massive
market interest.
Investments integrating environmental and social factors have outperformed the rest of the market during the crisis.
Increasingly pension funds and other
investors are demanding clear statements from companies on how they are
addressing climate, environmental and other non-financial issues.
Pivoting the financial system towards
sustainability is only in its infancy, yet we know that time is not on
our side to avoid the massive destruction of climate change,
environmental degradation and biodiversity loss.
We need a complete rethink.
Sustainable finance needs to become mainstream to have a transformative
impact on society and on the planet, while also generating strong
returns.
Europe is leading the way.
Work on a renewed sustainable finance
strategy is progressing quickly in the European Commission. The
strategy will be launched in early 2021 and will include well-defined
goals with clear deadlines to ensure we stay on the right path. Public
feedback so far confirms broad support for our ambitious plans.
We are already developing the
sustainable finance taxonomy, sustainability disclosures by companies
and investors, climate benchmarks and upcoming measures for green bonds
and ecolabels for investments.
The sustainable finance taxonomy
classifies which activities are green. But we also have to decide how to
help sectors and industries move away from unsustainable practices to
reduce harm.
Some are calling for a negative list
identifying what is unsustainable today. Others warn that this approach
may result in companies and projects struggling to access finance to
transition towards activities with a low and ultimately positive impact
on sustainability. The new Platform on Sustainable Finance is looking
into these issues.
What role is there for transition
technology? Policies should not unfairly punish polluting industries and
the people whose livelihoods depend on them, but rather incentivise and
guide them to clean up their act.
The sustainable finance agenda is not
just green but also social. The COVID crisis focused attention on the
importance of a resilient public health system. It brought into sharp
focus that those in lower paid jobs, often women, are most vulnerable.
Young people, too, are severely impacted. We have to address these
realities in our future investment agenda.
Europe cannot do it alone – we are
working with the International Platform on Sustainable Finance. And we
hope that US President-elect Joe Biden will support the sustainable
finance agenda as part of his clear commitment to tackle climate change.
The EU is committed to climate
neutrality by 2050: only 30 years away. And there is already a much
higher target reduced CO2 emissions by 2030. To get there requires
enormous investments.
There are some neigh-sayers who would
kill this agenda before it begins, pressing instead for a status quo
recovery. This would see money wasted in unsustainable and
climate-damaging practices.
There is no time to lose.
Any business, large or small, that
does not take account of climate and environmental risks in their
operations will soon find that their balance sheet will look very
unbalanced.
A strong regulatory and policy
framework, which the revised Sustainable Finance Strategy will provide,
will ensure that money flows towards sustainable projects.
Going green while in the red is not just possible, but essential.
EURACTIV
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