ESG: The European Green Deal

M
Matheson

Contributor

Established in 1825 in Dublin, Ireland and with offices in Cork, London, New York, Palo Alto and San Francisco, more than 700 people work across Matheson’s six offices, including 96 partners and tax principals and over 470 legal and tax professionals. Matheson services the legal needs of internationally focused companies and financial institutions doing business in and from Ireland. Our clients include over half of the world’s 50 largest banks, 6 of the world’s 10 largest asset managers, 7 of the top 10 global technology brands and we have advised the majority of the Fortune 100.
We have recently written on various topics relating to sustainable finance, including social loan principles, greenwashing and the EU Taxonomy Regulation and the related screening criteria.
European Union Finance and Banking
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We have recently written on various topics relating to sustainable finance, including social loan principles, greenwashing and the EU Taxonomy Regulation and the related screening criteria. Another important development took place when on 21 April 2021 the EC published a communication "Directing Finance Towards the European Green Deal".

The communication discusses various endeavours, including the EU Taxonomy Climate Delegated Act ("ETCDA"), a proposal for a Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive ("CSRD"), revision of the Non-Financial Reporting Directive ("NFRD") and amendments to delegated acts to better reflect sustainability preferences in insurance and investment advice and sustainability considerations in product governance and fiduciary duties.

ETCDA

The ETCDA is intended to be adopted at the end of May and will apply from 1 January 2022. It sets out technical screening criteria for disclosures required under the EU Taxonomy Regulation, designed to determine whether an activity makes a substantial contribution to climate change mitigation and adaptation and does no significant harm to environmental objectives. In our view it should provide a useful guide for financiers and borrowers seeking to ensure that their respective financial products meet the necessary hallmarks to be considered sustainable financing.

Gas and nuclear energy will be covered in a further delegated act, along with agriculture and some manufacturing activities.

CSRD

The CSRD amends the reporting requirements under the NFRD and extends the scope of reporting to all large private companies and all companies listed on EU regulated markets. It also introduces more detailed reporting requirements according to standards, the first draft of which will be adopted later this year. Companies will be required to make the reported information available to the European single access point (which we wrote about here) envisaged in the Capital Markets Union Action Plan (which we wrote about here). The CSRD introduces an assurance obligation with respect to disclosures.

The European Parliament and the Council will now negotiate a final text in parallel with work on the first set of draft sustainability reporting standards. The European Commission estimates that the earliest that companies would apply the standards would be for the financial year 2023.

While inevitably this will lead to certain increased costs for companies to which the CSRD applies it is arguable that codifying the reporting requirements should, in the long term, reduce the expected future costs for those companies of dealing with disperse information demands of investors and stakeholders.

Delegated Acts

Six delegated acts propose various amendments, expected to apply from October 2022:

  • clarifying fiduciary duties on financial firms when assessing sustainability risks;
  • advisors will need to discuss the client's sustainability preferences when assessing a client's suitability for an investment;
  • sustainability factors and sustainability-related objectives will have to be taken into account in the product oversight and governance process.

Originally published 10/05/2021

The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.

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